Results of a Phase II Study of Bortezomib in Patients with Relapsed or Refractory Indolent Lymphoma.

Nicholas Di Bella, Raymond Taetle,Kathryn S. Kolibaba,Thomas E Boyd,Robert N Raju,David N Barrera, Ernest Cochran, Philip Dien, David Hakimian,Roger M. Lyons, Peter J Schlegel,Svetislava J Vukelja, Julie Boston,Kristi A Boehm,Yunfei Wang,Lina Asmar

Blood(2008)

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Abstract
This study was designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of bortezomib as monotherapy in patients (pts) with indolent B-cell lymphoma who have relapsed following, or who are refractory to, rituximab therapy. A total of 60 patients enrolled and 59 were treated with 1.3 mg/m2 of bortezomib (IV bolus over 3–5 secs) Days 1, 4, 8, and 11 for up to eight 21-day cycles; pts with a CR could receive 4 additional cycles. Pts with 6 mos following rituximab. By histology: follicular pts had CR or CRu (2/38, 5.3%) and PR (3/38, 7.9%); marginal zone pts had CRu (1/6, 16.7%) and no PR, and small lymphocytic pts (n=11) had no CRu or PR. We did not see any correlation between the FLIPI score and response in pts with follicular NHL. Median time to response was 2.2 mos (range 1.2–4.0) and duration of response was 7.5 mos (2.7–23.6). 1-yr survival was 71% and 2-yr survival was 46%. Median survival was 21.3 mos (range, 1.3–30.8), median PFS was 5.2 mos (range, 1.0– 27.7), and median TTP was 5.2 mos (range, 0.2–27.7). Median event-free survival was 2.0 mos (range, 0.1–27.7). For the 6 pts receiving maintenance cycles (median of 4; range, 2–10) the median PFS was 11.1 mos (range, 9.0–19.1). The most frequent treatment-related Grade 3–4 AEs included: thrombocytopenia (22%), fatigue (10%), neutropenia (8.5%), and neuropathy and diarrhea (6.8%, each). Reasons off treatment include: 24 (40%) disease progression; 19 (32%) AEs, primarily fatigue, neuropathy, nausea, diarrhea, or thrombocytopenia; 8 (13%) investigator request; 4 (7%) patient request; 2 (3%) other, 1 (2%) normal completion. 2 pts (3%) remain on treatment. Causes of death (n=23) were disease progression (n=19) and 1 each MDS, pneumonia, pneumonitis, and unknown (no autopsy performed). In conclusion, this study (the largest to date) reports the activity of single-agent bortezomib in low grade lymphoma. It demonstrates activity primarily in marginal zone (CBR = 50%) and in follicular lymphoma (CBR = 38%). We saw no activity in small lymphocytic disease; however, the sample size was small in this subset (n=11). As previously reported, the main toxicities were thrombocytopenia, fatigue, and neuropathy. Thus bortezomib should be considered a new, active agent for low-grade lymphoma. Maintenance resulted in increased PFS and should be explored further. Results of an ongoing phase 3 study in 670 pts comparing bortezomib combined with rituximab vs rituximab alone will be of interest in planning future studies for this disease. This research was supported, in part, from a research grant from Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
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