A phase 1 study of the amino acid modulator pegcrisantaspase and venetoclax for relapsed or refractory acute myeloid leukemia.

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Tác giả: Maria R Baer, Osman M Bah, Jan H Beumer, Dominique R Bollino, Katherine D Caprinolo, Christine C Dougherty, Vu H Duong, Ashkan Emadi, Farin Kamangar, Rena G Lapidus, Tien V Le, Yuchen Liu, Sandrine Niyongere, Sunita Philip, Erin T Strovel, Jinoos Zarrabi

Ngôn ngữ: eng

Ký hiệu phân loại: 297.1248 Sources of Islam

Thông tin xuất bản: United States : Blood , 2025

Mô tả vật lý:

Bộ sưu tập: NCBI

ID: 89449

 Glutamine dependency has been shown to be a metabolic vulnerability in acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Prior studies using several in vivo AML models showed that depletion of plasma glutamine, induced by long-acting crisantaspase (pegcrisantaspase [PegC]) was synergistic with the B-cell lymphoma-2 (BCL-2) inhibitor venetoclax (Ven), resulting in significantly reduced leukemia burden and enhanced survival. Here, we report a phase 1 study of the combination of Ven and PegC (VenPegC) for treating adult patients with relapsed or refractory AML, including patients who had previously received Ven. The primary end points were the incidence of regimen-limiting toxicities (RLTs) and the maximum tolerated dose (MTD). Twenty-five patients received at least 1 PegC dose with Ven, and 18 efficacy-evaluable patients completed at least 1 VenPegC cycle
  12 (67%) had previously received Ven. Hyperbilirubinemia was the RLT and occurred in 60% of patients treated with VenPegC
  20% had grade ≥3 bilirubin elevations. MTD was determined to be Ven 400 mg daily with biweekly PegC 750 IU/m2. The most common treatment-related adverse events of any grade in 25 patients who received VenPegC included antithrombin III decrease (52%), elevated transaminases (36%-48%), fatigue (28%), and hypofibrinogenemia (24%). No thromboembolic or hemorrhagic adverse events or clinical pancreatitis were observed. The overall complete remission rate in efficacy-evaluable patients was 33%. Response correlated with alterations in proteins involved in messenger RNA translation. In patients with RUNX1 mutations, the composite complete remission rate was 100%. This study was registered at www.ClinicalTrials.gov as #NCT04666649.
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