34 results match your criteria: "Vejle Hospital and University of Southern Denmark[Affiliation]"

Daratumumab, Lenalidomide, and Dexamethasone for Multiple Myeloma.

N Engl J Med

October 2016

From the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens (M.A.D.); Institut Català d'Oncologia, Institut Josep Carreras, Hospital Germans Trias I Pujol, Barcelona (A.O.), and Clínica Universidad de Navarra-Centro de Investigación Médica Aplicada, Instituto de Investigación Sanitaria de Navarra, Pamplona (J.S.-M.) - both in Spain; Karolinska Institute and the Department of Medicine, Division of Hematology, Karolinska University Hospital at Huddinge, Stockholm (H.N.); Tom Baker Cancer Centre, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB (N.J.B.), and the Cancer Clinical Research Unit, Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, Toronto (D.R.) - both in Canada; Levine Cancer Institute-Carolinas HealthCare System, Charlotte, NC (S.Z.U.); the Department of Haematology, University College London Hospitals NHS Trust, London (N.R.); the Department of Lymphoma-Myeloma, University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston (R.Z.O.); the Department of Hematology and Stem Cell Transplantation, Poznan University of Medical Sciences, Poznan, Poland (M.K.); the Department of Hematology, Japanese Red Cross Medical Center, Tokyo (K.S.); Vejle Hospital and University of Southern Denmark, Vejle (T.P.), and Genmab, Copenhagen (S.L.) - both in Denmark; the Department of Internal Medicine, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, South Korea (S.-S.Y.); the Hematology Department, Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical Center, Jerusalem (D.B.Y.); Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston (P.G.R.); University Hospital Heidelberg and the German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg, Germany (H.G.); Janssen Research and Development, Spring House, PA (N.Z.K., L.O., C.C., X.Q., M.G., T.A.); and the Department of Hematology, University Hospital Hôtel-Dieu, Nantes, France (P.M.).

Background: Daratumumab showed promising efficacy alone and with lenalidomide and dexamethasone in a phase 1-2 study involving patients with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma.

Methods: In this phase 3 trial, we randomly assigned 569 patients with multiple myeloma who had received one or more previous lines of therapy to receive lenalidomide and dexamethasone either alone (control group) or in combination with daratumumab (daratumumab group). The primary end point was progression-free survival.

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Phase 1/2 study of daratumumab, lenalidomide, and dexamethasone for relapsed multiple myeloma.

Blood

October 2016

LeBow Institute for Myeloma Therapeutics, Jerome Lipper Multiple Myeloma Center, Department of Medical Oncology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.

Daratumumab, a human CD38 immunoglobulin G1 kappa (IgG1κ) monoclonal antibody, has activity as monotherapy in multiple myeloma (MM). This phase 1/2 study investigated daratumumab plus lenalidomide/dexamethasone in refractory and relapsed/refractory MM. Part 1 (dose escalation) evaluated 4 daratumumab doses plus lenalidomide (25 mg/day orally on days 1-21 of each cycle) and dexamethasone (40 mg/week).

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Daratumumab targets CD38-expressing myeloma cells through a variety of immune-mediated mechanisms (complement-dependent cytotoxicity, antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity, and antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis) and direct apoptosis with crosslinking. These mechanisms may also target nonplasma cells that express CD38, which prompted evaluation of daratumumab's effects on CD38-positive immune subpopulations. Peripheral blood (PB) and bone marrow (BM) from patients with relapsed/refractory myeloma from 2 daratumumab monotherapy studies were analyzed before and during therapy and at relapse.

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The efficacy and favorable safety profile of daratumumab monotherapy in multiple myeloma (MM) was previously reported. Here, we present an updated pooled analysis of 148 patients treated with daratumumab 16 mg/kg. Data were combined from part 2 of a first-in-human phase 1/2 study of patients who relapsed after or were refractory to ≥2 prior therapies and a phase 2 study of patients previously treated with ≥3 prior lines of therapy (including a proteasome inhibitor [PI] and an immunomodulatory drug [IMiD]) or were double refractory.

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Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) are a recent addition to multiple myeloma (MM) therapies and a number of mAbs directed at myeloma cell surface molecules are in development. Daratumumab is a CD38 mAb that has demonstrated substantial activity and good tolerability in four phase I, phase I/II and phase II studies as monotherapy, as well as in combination with current standard treatments in MM. The positive results obtained in the relapsed/refractory setting in patients with advanced-stage disease and in a small number of patients with newly diagnosed disease provide the rationale for the investigation of the agent in a number of ongoing phase III trials.

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Introduction: Patients with non-resectable biliary tract cancer have a poor prognosis even if treated with systemic chemotherapy. One hope for improving treatment is through molecular biology and the characterization of specific cancer driving alterations followed by the design of targeted drugs. The epidermal growth factor receptor system is upregulated in many cancers and can be targeted by the protein kinase inhibitor erlotinib.

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Immunotherapeutic strategies are emerging as promising therapeutic approaches in multiple myeloma (MM), with several monoclonal antibodies in advanced stages of clinical development. Of these agents, CD38-targeting antibodies have marked single agent activity in extensively pretreated MM, and preliminary results from studies with relapsed/refractory patients have shown enhanced therapeutic efficacy when daratumumab and isatuximab are combined with other agents. Furthermore, although elotuzumab (anti-SLAMF7) has no single agent activity in advanced MM, randomized trials in relapsed/refractory MM have demonstrated significantly improved progression-free survival when elotuzumab is added to lenalidomide-dexamethasone or bortezomib-dexamethasone.

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Targeting CD38 with Daratumumab Monotherapy in Multiple Myeloma.

N Engl J Med

September 2015

From the Department of Hematology, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht (H.M.L., M.C.M., N.W.C.J.D.), and the Department of Hematology, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam (H.M.L., N.W.C.J.D.) - both in the Netherlands; Vejle Hospital and University of Southern Denmark, Vejle (T.P., J.K.), and Rigshospitalet and University of Copenhagen (P.G., U.L.) and Genmab (N.L., S.L., L.B., N.B.), Copenhagen - all in Denmark; Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston (J.P.L., P.G.R.); Karolinska Institute and the Department of Medicine, Division of Hematology, Karolinska University Hospital at Huddinge, Stockholm (H.N.), and Skåne University Hospital and Lund University, Lund (M.H.) - all in Sweden; Myeloma Unit, Division of Hematology, University of Turin, Turin, Italy (A.P.); Janssen Research and Development, Spring House, PA (T.A., C.M.U., A.K.S.); and Janssen Research and Development, Raritan, NJ (I.K., J.W.).

Background: Multiple myeloma cells uniformly overexpress CD38. We studied daratumumab, a CD38-targeting, human IgG1κ monoclonal antibody, in a phase 1-2 trial involving patients with relapsed myeloma or relapsed myeloma that was refractory to two or more prior lines of therapy.

Methods: In part 1, the dose-escalation phase, we administered daratumumab at doses of 0.

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