AI Article Synopsis

  • - A phase IIIb study assessed the safety of obinutuzumab, a treatment for chronic lymphocytic leukemia, given alone or combined with various chemotherapy options, involving 972 patients from October 2013 to March 2016.
  • - The study found that 80.3% of patients experienced grade ≥3 adverse events, with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and pneumonia being the most common, and infusion-related reactions were reported in 65.4% of patients.
  • - Despite the reported toxicities, overall response rates surpassed 80% for patients receiving obinutuzumab with chemotherapy after three months, suggesting that the treatment is effective and manageable for this patient group.

Article Abstract

The safety of obinutuzumab, alone or with chemotherapy, was studied in a non-randomized, open-label, non-comparative, phase IIIb study (GREEN) in previously untreated or relapsed/refractory chronic lymphocytic leukemia. Patients received obinutuzumab 1000 mg alone or with chemotherapy (investigator's choice of fludarabine-cyclophosphamide for fit patients, chlorambucil for unfit patients, or bendamustine for any patient) on days 1, 8 and 15 of cycle 1, and day 1 of cycles 2-6 (28-day cycles), with the cycle 1/day 1 dose administered over two days. The primary end point was safety/tolerability. Between October 2013 and March 2016, 972 patients were enrolled and 971 treated (126 with obinutuzumab monotherapy, 193 with obinutuzumab-fludarabine-cyclophosphamide, 114 with obinutuzumab-chlorambucil, and 538 with obinutuzumab-bendamustine). Grade ≥3 adverse events occurred in 80.3% of patients, and included neutropenia (49.9%), thrombocytopenia (16.4%), anemia (9.6%), and pneumonia (9.0%); rates were similar in first-line and relapsed/refractory patients, and in first-line fit and unfit patients. Using expanded definitions, infusion-related reactions were observed in 65.4% of patients (grade ≥3, 19.9%; mainly seen during the first obinutuzumab infusion), tumor lysis syndrome in 6.4% [clinical and laboratory; highest incidence with obinutuzumab-bendamustine (9.3%)], and infections in 53.7% (grade ≥3, 20.1%). Serious and fatal adverse events were seen in 53.1% and 7.3% of patients, respectively. In first-line patients, overall response rates at three months post treatment exceeded 80% for all obinutuzumab-chemotherapy combinations. In the largest trial of obinutuzumab to date, toxicities were generally manageable in this broad patient population. Safety data were consistent with previous reports, and response rates were high. ().

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6278964PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2017.186387DOI Listing

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