Elotuzumab monotherapy in patients with smouldering multiple myeloma: a phase 2 study
2018
Smouldering multiple myeloma (SMM) is associated with increased risk of progression to multiple myeloma within 2 years, with no approved treatments. Elotuzumab has been shown to promote natural killer (NK) cell stimulation and antibody‐dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) in vitro. CD56dim (CD56dim/CD16+/CD3−/CD45+) NK cells represent the primary subset responsible for elotuzumab‐induced ADCC. In this phase II, non‐randomized study (NCT01441973), patients with SMM received elotuzumab 20 mg/kg intravenously (cycle 1: days 1, 8; monthly thereafter) or 10 mg/kg (cycles 1, 2: weekly; every 2 weeks thereafter). The primary endpoint was the relationship between baseline proportion of bone marrow‐derived CD56dim NK cells and maximal M protein reduction; secondary endpoints included overall response rate (ORR) and progression‐free survival (PFS). Fifteen patients received 20 mg/kg and 16 received 10 mg/kg; combined data arepresented. At database lock (DBL, September 2014), no association was found between baseline CD56dim NK cell proportion and maximal M protein reduction. With minimum 28 months' follow‐up (DBL: January 2016), ORR (90% CI) was 10% (2·7–23·2) and 2‐year PFS rate was 69% (52–81%). Upper respiratory tract infections occurred in 18/31 (58%) patients. Four (13%) patients experienced infusion reactions, all grade 1–2. Elotuzumab plus lenalidomide/dexamethasone is under investigation for SMM.
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