Division of Hematology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Clinical Research Division, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, WA, USA.
Leukemia. 2020 Mar;34(3):671-681. doi: 10.1038/s41375-019-0704-5. Epub 2020 Jan 8.
Since 2017 the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved glasdegib, venetoclax, ivosidenib, midostaurin, CPX- 351, and gemtuzumab ozogamicin (GO) to treat persons with newly diagnosed acute myeloid leukemia. The European Medicines Agency (EMA) has done likewise for midostaurin, CPX-351, and GO. While increasing options for persons, particularly older ones, for whom current therapy is unsatisfactory, or simply not given, these approvals raise several concerns. Although the venetoclax and glasdegib approvals were for persons considered "unfit" for intensive induction, the criteria for fitness were not well defined (age ≥75 per se being insufficient) and are frequently subjective, making it likely that many subjects in the venetoclax and glasdegib registration trials were fit for intensive induction; for example, none had performance status 3-4. Fitness must be assessed together with the potential efficacy of a proposed therapy. We note the modest complete remission rates and durations in the venetoclax + hypomethylating agent trial. Although these formed the basis for FDA approval, it is unclear that better results might not have obtained with more intense induction, as several studies, with considerably longer-follow up, have suggested. Hence, we question the venetoclax (and glasdegib) approvals absent randomized comparisons with intense induction. Given the uncertain relation in older individuals between survival and complete remission (CR), much less responses less than CR, we are skeptical of the sole use of these responses in the ivosidenib and venetoclax approvals; we also question the use of survival, without event-free survival, in the glasdegib approval. Noting the midostaurin and CPX-351 approvals included populations not participating in the registration studies we suggest means to address this issue as well as those involving fitness, randomization, and endpoints.
自 2017 年以来,美国食品和药物管理局(FDA)已批准glasdegib、venetoclax、ivosidenib、midostaurin、CPX-351 和 gemtuzumab ozogamicin(GO)用于治疗新诊断的急性髓细胞白血病患者。欧洲药品管理局(EMA)也为 midostaurin、CPX-351 和 GO 做了同样的批准。虽然这些批准为那些当前治疗效果不理想或根本不接受治疗的患者,特别是老年人,提供了更多的选择,但也引发了一些关注。尽管 venetoclax 和 glasdegib 的批准是针对那些被认为“不适合”强化诱导的患者,但适合性的标准没有得到很好的定义(年龄≥75 岁本身并不足够),而且经常是主观的,这使得 venetoclax 和 glasdegib 注册试验中的许多受试者可能适合强化诱导;例如,没有一个人的表现状态为 3-4 级。适合性必须与拟议疗法的潜在疗效一起评估。我们注意到 venetoclax+低甲基化剂试验中的完全缓解率和缓解持续时间都较低。尽管这些是 FDA 批准的基础,但由于几项研究表明,更强化的诱导可能会获得更好的结果,因此尚不清楚 venetoclax (和 glasdegib)的批准是否没有与强化诱导进行随机对照。鉴于在年龄较大的个体中,生存与完全缓解(CR)之间的关系不确定,CR 以下的反应更少,我们对 ivosidenib 和 venetoclax 批准中仅使用这些反应持怀疑态度;我们也对 glasdegib 批准中仅使用生存而不使用无事件生存提出质疑。考虑到 midostaurin 和 CPX-351 的批准包括未参与注册研究的人群,我们建议采取一些措施来解决这个问题,包括适合性、随机化和终点。