AI Article Synopsis

  • - Patients with myelofibrosis suffer from various symptoms due to bone marrow fibrosis and inflammation, and improving these symptoms can enhance their quality of life.
  • - This study analyzed data from two phase III trials of momelotinib (SIMPLIFY-1 and SIMPLIFY-2) to determine a meaningful change threshold (MCT) for symptoms, finding it to be 8 points for treatment-naive patients and 6 points for those previously treated.
  • - Results showed that momelotinib effectively improved patient symptoms, suggesting that the traditional 50% reduction standard used in clinical trials may be too conservative and that momelotinib offers significant benefits compared to other treatments in myelofibrosis patients.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Patients with myelofibrosis develop symptoms due to bone marrow fibrosis, systemic inflammation, and/or organomegaly. Alleviating symptoms improves overall quality of life. Clinical trials have historically defined symptom response as a reduction of at least 50% in Total Symptom Score at week 24 compared with baseline. Whether 50% constitutes a meaningful benefit has not been established. This study determined the meaningful change threshold (MCT) for 2 momelotinib phase III trials, SIMPLIFY-1 and SIMPLIFY-2.

Methods: The absolute and percentage MCT was determined using anchor-based methods applied to the modified Myeloproliferative Neoplasm Symptom Assessment Form v2.0 and Patient Global Impression of Change. MCTs were applied retrospectively to determine responder rates. Generalized estimating equations estimated the treatment-related difference in likelihood of improvement.

Results: In SIMPLIFY-1, a Janus kinase inhibitor-naive population, the MCT was 8 points. In SIMPLIFY-2, a previously Janus kinase inhibitor-treated population, the MCT was 6 points. A 32% MCT was determined in both studies, showing that the historic 50% reduction threshold may be a conservative choice. In SIMPLIFY-1, a similar proportion of patients achieved responder status with 24 weeks of momelotinib or ruxolitinib therapy based on the absolute MCT (39% vs 41%, respectively). In SIMPLIFY-2, a significantly greater proportion of patients treated with momelotinib achieved responder states compared with best available therapy based on absolute and percent change MCTs.

Conclusions: This study demonstrates that momelotinib provided clinically meaningful symptom benefit for patients with myelofibrosis and provides insight into the appropriateness of the symptom change threshold used in historical studies.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jval.2024.01.014DOI Listing

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