AI Article Synopsis

  • - Ponatinib is a third-generation drug that effectively treats chronic-phase chronic myeloid leukemia (CP-CML) patients who didn't respond to previous second-generation treatments, including those with the tough T315I mutation.
  • - Results from the PACE and OPTIC trials showed that after 24 months, a significant percentage of patients achieved a favorable response (≤1% BCR::ABL1), with overall survival rates being 85% in PACE and 91% in OPTIC.
  • - The OPTIC trial's dose-reduction strategy enhanced safety outcomes without sacrificing effectiveness, resulting in fewer serious side effects compared to PACE while maintaining robust efficacy rates.

Article Abstract

Ponatinib, the only third-generation pan-BCR::ABL1 inhibitor with activity against all known BCR::ABL1 mutations including T315I, has demonstrated deep and durable responses in patients with chronic-phase chronic myeloid leukemia (CP-CML) resistant to prior second-generation (2G) TKI treatment. We present efficacy and safety outcomes from the Ponatinib Philadelphia chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia (Ph+ ALL) and CML Evaluation (PACE) and Optimizing Ponatinib Treatment in CP-CML (OPTIC) trials for this patient population. PACE (NCT01207440) evaluated ponatinib 45 mg/day in CML patients with resistance to prior TKI or T315I. In OPTIC (NCT02467270), patients with CP-CML and resistance to ≥2 prior TKIs or T315I receiving 45 or 30 mg/day reduced their doses to 15 mg/day upon achieving ≤1% BCR::ABL1 or received 15 mg/day continuously. Efficacy and safety outcomes from patients with CP-CML treated with ≥1 2G TKI (PACE, n = 257) and OPTIC (n = 93), 45-mg starting dose cohort, were analyzed for BCR::ABL1 response rates, overall survival (OS), progression-free survival (PFS), and safety. By 24 months, the percentages of patients with ≤1% BCR::ABL1 response, PFS, and OS were 46%, 68%, and 85%, respectively, in PACE and 57%, 80%, and 91%, respectively, in OPTIC. Serious treatment-emergent adverse events and serious treatment-emergent arterial occlusive event rates were 63% and 18% in PACE and 34% and 4% in OPTIC. Ponatinib shows high response rates and robust survival outcomes in patients whose disease failed prior to 2G TKIs, including patients with T315I mutation. The response-based dosing in OPTIC led to improved safety and similar efficacy outcomes compared with PACE.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9804741PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajh.26686DOI Listing

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