Cohen Martin H, Johnson John R, Pazdur Richard
Division of Oncology Drug Products, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Rockville, Maryland 20857, USA.
Clin Cancer Res. 2005 Jan 1;11(1):12-9.
Imatinib mesylate (Gleevec, Novartis Pharmaceuticals East Manruer, NJ) received accelerated approval on May 10, 2001 for the treatment of patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) in (a) chronic phase after failure of IFN-alpha therapy, (b) accelerated phase, and (c) blast crisis. The accelerated approval was accompanied by a postmarketing commitment by Novartis Pharmaceuticals to continue patient follow-up to determine duration of treatment response and survival. The present review, based on a safety and efficacy report submitted on December 20, 2002, summarizes data applicable to the conversion of these three CML indications to full approval status.
Chronic phase CML: Five hundred thirty-two chronic phase CML patients who had not benefited from prior IFN therapy were treated at a starting imatinib mesylate dose of 400 mg p.o. qd; dose escalation to 800 mg p.o. qd was allowed. Patients had received a median of 14 months of IFN therapy at doses > or =25 million IU/wk and were all in late chronic phase, with a median time from diagnosis of 32 months. Median duration of imatinib mesylate treatment was 29 months, with 81% of patients treated for > or =24 months (maximum 31.5 months). Initial favorable treatment responses were sustained. An estimated 87.8% of patients who had a major cytogenetic response maintained their response 2 years after their initial response. After 2 years of treatment, an estimated 85.4% of patients were free of progression to accelerated phase or blast crisis, and the estimated overall survival was 90.8% (95% confidence interval, 88.3-93.2). Accelerated phase CML: Patients enrolled totaled 293: 235 with CML accelerated phase, 48 with relapsed/refractory acute lymphocytic leukemia, 2 with relapsed/refractory acute myelocytic leukemia, and 8 with relapsed/refractory CML in lymphoid blast crisis. Patients received imatinib mesylate 400 or 600 mg p.o. qd. Dose escalation was permitted, to a maximum of 800 mg/d, taken as 400 mg bid. Efficacy results were improved in patients receiving imatinib mesylate 600 mg qd versus patients receiving 400 mg qd. The median duration of hematologic response was 29 versus 17 months and the estimated 24-month maintained hematologic response rate was 61% versus 42%. The median survival of patients treated with imatinib mesylate 600 mg qd was not reached versus 20.9 months for patients receiving 400 mg qd. Estimated 24-month survival rate was 66% versus 46%. The median survival in the advanced leukemia population (acute lymphocytic leukemia, acute myelocytic leukemia, and lymphoid blast crisis) was only 5 months, and only two patients are still on treatment. Blast crisis CML: A total of 260 patients were recruited. The imatinib mesylate dose was initially 400 mg qd (37 patients) but was subsequently increased to 600 mg qd (223 patients). Patients receiving imatinib mesylate 600 mg qd had a higher hematologic response rate than did patients receiving 400 mg (33% versus 16%). Major cytogenetic responses occurred in 15% of the 260 study patients. The overall median survival was 6.9 months: 7.1 months for patients treated with imatinib mesylate 600 mg and 4.7 months for patients receiving imatinib mesylate 400 mg. Estimated 12-month survival rate for all study patients was 32.1% and estimated 24-month survival rate was 18.3%.
Imatinib mesylate was generally well tolerated, but relatively frequent reports of common toxicity criteria grade 3/4 neutropenia and thrombocytopenia were encountered. The most frequently reported adverse events included gastrointestinal disturbances, edema, rash, and musculoskeletal complaints. These rarely led to discontinuation of therapy.
The results confirm those of the interim analysis and suggest that imatinib mesylate represents an effective therapeutic agent for the treatment of patients with CML in chronic phase after failure of IFN-alpha therapy, in blast crisis, and in accelerated phase.
甲磺酸伊马替尼(格列卫,诺华制药公司,新泽西州东曼鲁尔)于2001年5月10日获得加速批准,用于治疗慢性髓性白血病(CML)患者,具体适用情况为:(a)α干扰素治疗失败后的慢性期;(b)加速期;(c)急变期。加速批准的同时,诺华制药公司作出上市后承诺,继续对患者进行随访,以确定治疗反应持续时间和生存率。本综述基于2002年12月20日提交的一份安全性和有效性报告,总结了适用于将这三种CML适应症转为完全批准状态的数据。
慢性期CML:532例未从先前干扰素治疗中获益的慢性期CML患者接受了甲磺酸伊马替尼治疗,起始口服剂量为400mg,每日一次;允许剂量增至800mg,每日一次。患者接受干扰素治疗的中位时间为14个月,剂量≥2500万IU/周,均处于慢性期晚期,从诊断到治疗的中位时间为32个月。甲磺酸伊马替尼治疗的中位持续时间为29个月,81%的患者治疗时间≥24个月(最长31.5个月)。初始良好的治疗反应得以维持。估计87.8%获得主要细胞遗传学反应的患者在初始反应后2年仍维持反应。治疗2年后,估计85.4%的患者未进展至加速期或急变期,估计总生存率为90.8%(95%置信区间,88.3 - 93.2)。加速期CML:入组患者共293例,其中235例为CML加速期,48例为复发/难治性急性淋巴细胞白血病,2例为复发/难治性急性髓细胞白血病,8例为淋巴母细胞危象期复发/难治性CML。患者接受甲磺酸伊马替尼400或600mg,每日一次。允许剂量递增,最大剂量为800mg/d,分两次服用,每次400mg。接受甲磺酸伊马替尼600mg每日一次的患者疗效结果优于接受400mg每日一次的患者。血液学反应的中位持续时间分别为29个月和17个月,估计24个月维持血液学反应率分别为61%和42%。接受甲磺酸伊马替尼600mg每日一次治疗患者的中位生存期未达到,而接受400mg每日一次治疗患者的中位生存期为20.9个月。估计24个月生存率分别为66%和46%。晚期白血病患者群体(急性淋巴细胞白血病、急性髓细胞白血病和淋巴母细胞危象)的中位生存期仅为5个月,仅有2例患者仍在接受治疗。急变期CML:共招募260例患者。甲磺酸伊马替尼初始剂量为400mg每日一次(37例患者),随后增至600mg每日一次(223例患者)。接受甲磺酸伊马替尼600mg每日一次的患者血液学反应率高于接受400mg的患者(33%对16%)。260例研究患者中有15%出现主要细胞遗传学反应。总体中位生存期为6.9个月:接受甲磺酸伊马替尼600mg治疗的患者为7.1个月,接受甲磺酸伊马替尼400mg治疗的患者为4.7个月。所有研究患者的估计12个月生存率为32.1%,估计24个月生存率为18.3%。
甲磺酸伊马替尼总体耐受性良好,但相对频繁地出现常见毒性标准3/4级中性粒细胞减少和血小板减少的报告。最常报告的不良事件包括胃肠道不适(胃肠道紊乱)、水肿、皮疹和肌肉骨骼不适。这些很少导致治疗中断。
结果证实了中期分析的结果,表明甲磺酸伊马替尼是治疗α干扰素治疗失败后的慢性期、急变期和加速期CML患者的有效治疗药物。