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. 2023 Nov 10;6(4):104-113.
doi: 10.31547/bct-2023-010. eCollection 2023 Nov 25.

Long-term Use of Ibrutinib in Japanese Patients with Steroid Dependent/Refractory cGVHD: Final Analysis of Multicenter Study

Affiliations

Long-term Use of Ibrutinib in Japanese Patients with Steroid Dependent/Refractory cGVHD: Final Analysis of Multicenter Study

Masako Toyosaki et al. Blood Cell Ther. .

Abstract

Background: Chronic graft-versus-host disease (cGVHD) is a serious complication after allogeneic stem cell transplantation. Poor prognosis has been shown in patients with cGVHD after the failure of primary steroid-based treatments. A previous report demonstrated the efficacy and safety of ibrutinib in these patients, leading to the approval of ibrutinib for cGVHD in Japan. Here, we report the extended follow-up of patients in this study.

Objectives: To evaluate the safety and efficacy of ibrutinib in Japanese patients with steroid-dependent or refractory cGVHD.

Study design: An open-label, single-arm, multicenter study of ibrutinib in Japanese patients with steroid-dependent or refractory cGVHD (NCT No.: NCT03474679; Clinical Registry No.: CR108443).

Results: At the time of the final data cutoff, 7/19 (36.8%) patients completed the study treatment, and 12/19 (63.2%) patients discontinued ibrutinib. After a median follow-up of 31.11 months (range:1.9 to 38.6 months), the best overall response rate was 84.2% (16/19 patients; 95% CI:60.4%, 96.6%) in all treated populations, with a median time to response of 2.81 (range:1.0 to 27.6) months. Of 15 responders with ≥2 organs involved at baseline, seven (46.7%) had responses in multiple organs. An improvement in the organ response rate was observed for the skin, eye, mouth, and esophagus compared with that in a previous report. The rate of sustained response for ≥20 weeks, ≥32 weeks, and ≥44 weeks were 68.8%, 62.5%, and 50.0%, respectively for 16 responders. The median daily corticosteroid dose requirement tended to decrease over time for all treated analysis sets. Twelve of 19 patients (63.2%) reached a corticosteroid dose of <0.15 mg/kg/day for at least one week, and four (21.1%) discontinued corticosteroid treatment for at least 28 days during the study. The failure-free and overall survival rates at 30 months were 62.7% and 62.0%, respectively. The safety findings of this updated analysis were consistent with the safety profile observed at the time of the primary analysis and the known ibrutinib safety profile. Common grade ≥3 treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) were pneumonia (6/19 [31.6%] patients), platelet count decreased, and cellulitis (3/19 [15.8%] patients each). After the primary analysis, no new TEAEs leading to death, treatment discontinuation, or dose reduction were reported, and no new patients reported major hemorrhage. Cardiac arrhythmia (Grade 2 atrial flutter) was reported in 1/19 (5.3%) patients. No new safety signs were observed despite prolonged ibrutinib exposure.

Conclusions: The final results support previous conclusions, demonstrating a clinically meaningful response and acceptable safety profile of ibrutinib in Japanese patients with steroid-dependent or refractory cGVHD.

Keywords: NIH consensus development project criteria; allogeneic stem cell transplantation; bruton's tyrosine kinase inhibitor; chronic graft-versus-host disease; ibrutinib.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: M.T. received payment or honoraria from Janssen Pharmaceutical, Sanofi, Takeda Pharmaceutical Co., Nippon Shinyaku Co., Beckman Coulter Inc., Novo Nordisk Pharma., Daiichi Sankyo Co., Chugai Pharmaceutical Co., Asahi Kasei Pharma Corp., and Sumitomo Dainippon Pharma Co. for lectures, presentations, speakers' bureaus, manuscript writing, or educational events. M.S. received payment or honoraria for lectures, presentations, speakers' bureaus, manuscript writing, or educational events from Kyowa Kirin Co. Ltd., Chugai, Pfizer, Astellas, Nippon-Shinyaku, Ono, MSD, Bristol-Myers-Squibb, Asahi Kasei, Novartis, Eisai, Otsuka, Sumitomo-Dainippon, Sanofi, Takeda, Celgene, Mochida, Shire, Mundipharma, abbvie, CSL Behring, Sym-Bio, Janssen, AstraZeneca, DAIICHI SANKYO, and GlaxoSmithKline. N.D. received payment or honoraria for lectures, presentations, speakers' bureaus, manuscript writing, or educational events from Novartis Pharma and Janssen Pharma. Y.U. participated in a Data Safety Monitoring Board or Advisory Board with Sanofi and Otsuka Pharmaceutical. M.O. received payment or honoraria for lectures, presentations, speakers bureaus, manuscript writing, or educational events from Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd. N.Y. is an employee of Janssen Pharmaceutical K.K. and holds stock ownership with Johnson & Johnson. T.H. and E.F. are employees of Janssen Pharmaceutical K.K. S.S., T.O., T.I., and T.K. declare no conflict of interest. Disclosure forms provided by the authors are available on the website.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.. Best overall cGVHD response
a 2-sided 95% CI is calculated using the Clopper-Pearson’s exact method. CR, indicates complete response; ORR, overall response rate; PR, partial response; SD, stable disease
Figure 2.
Figure 2.. Median of corticosteroid requirement changes over time

References

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