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Impact of prior inotuzumab ozogamicin treatment on brexucabtagene autoleucel outcomes in adults with B-cell ALL.
- Aldoss, Ibrahim;
- Roloff, Gregory;
- Faramand, Rawan;
- Kopmar, Noam;
- Lin, Chenyu;
- Advani, Anjali;
- Dekker, Simone;
- Gupta, Vishal;
- OConnor, Timothy;
- Jeyakumar, Nikeshan;
- Muhsen, Ibrahim;
- Valtis, Yannis;
- Zhang, Amy;
- Miller, Katharine;
- Sutherland, Katherine;
- Dykes, Kaitlyn;
- Ahmed, Mohamed;
- Chen, Evan;
- Zambrano, Hector;
- Bradshaw, Danielle;
- Mercadal, Santiago;
- Schwartz, Marc;
- Tracy, Sean;
- Dholaria, Bhagirathbhai;
- Kubiak, Michal;
- Mukherjee, Akash;
- Majhail, Navneet;
- Battiwalla, Minoo;
- Mountjoy, Luke;
- Malik, Shahbaz;
- Mathews, John;
- Shaughnessy, Paul;
- Logan, Aaron;
- Ladha, Abdullah;
- Stefan, Maryann;
- Guzowski, Caitlin;
- Hoeg, Rasmus;
- Hilal, Talal;
- Moore, Jozal;
- Connor, Matthew;
- ODwyer, Kristen;
- Hill, LaQuisa;
- Tsai, Stephanie;
- Sasine, Joshua;
- Solh, Melhem;
- Lee, Catherine;
- Kota, Vamsi;
- Koura, Divya;
- Veeraputhiran, Muthu;
- Blunk, Betsy;
- Oliai, Caspian;
- Leonard, Jessica;
- Frey, Noelle;
- Park, Jae;
- Luskin, Marlise;
- Bachanova, Veronika;
- Galal, Ahmed;
- Bishop, Michael;
- Stock, Wendy;
- Cassaday, Ryan;
- Pullarkat, Vinod;
- Shah, Bijal;
- Muffly, Lori
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1182/bloodadvances.2024013747Abstract
The effect of prior inotuzumab ozogamicin (InO) treatment on brexucabtagene autoleucel (brexu-cel) outcomes remains unclear in adults with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). We conducted a retrospective multicenter analysis of 189 patients with relapsed/refractory ALL treated with brexu-cel. Over half of the patients received InO before brexu-cel (InO exposed). InO-exposed patients were more heavily pretreated (P = .02) and frequently had active marrow disease before apheresis (P = .03). Response rate and toxicity profile after brexu-cel were comparable for InO-exposed and InO-naïve patients; however, consolidation therapy after brexu-cel response was used at a higher rate in InO-naïve patients (P = .005). With a median follow-up of 11.4 months, InO-exposed patients had inferior progression-free survival (PFS; P = .013) and overall survival (OS; P = .006) in univariate analyses; however, prior InO exposure did not influence PFS (hazard ratio, 1.20; 95% confidence interval, 0.71-2.03) in multivariate models. Within InO-exposed patients, InO responders had superior PFS (P = .002) and OS (P < .0001) relative to InO-refractory patients. The timing of administering InO did not affect brexu-cel outcomes, with comparable PFS (P = .51) and OS (P = .86) for patients receiving InO as bridging therapy or before apheresis. In conclusion, although InO exposure was associated with inferior survival outcomes after brexu-cel in unadjusted analyses, these associations were no longer significant in multivariate analyses, suggesting it is unlikely that InO negatively affects brexu-cel efficacy. Our data instead imply that InO-exposed recipients of brexu-cel tend to be higher-risk patients with intrinsic adverse leukemia biology.
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