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Treatment with subcutaneous epcoritamab-bysp elicited rapid and durable responses, including an encouraging complete response rate, and manageable safety in high-risk patients with relapsed/refractory chronic lymphocytic leukemia.
Treatment with subcutaneous epcoritamab-bysp (Epkinly) monotherapy elicited rapid and durable responses, including an encouraging complete response (CR) rate, and manageable safety in high-risk patients with relapsed/refractory chronic lymphocytic leukemia (R/R CLL), according to primary data from the expansion cohort of the phase 1b/2 EPCORE CLL-1 trial (NCT04623541).1
“Today, I present to you, on behalf of the study investigators, the data of the expansion cohort of 23 patients,” Kater, full professor of clinical haematology, all-cancer immunology, and cancer biology and immunology at the Amsterdam University Medical Center, The Netherlands, said during the presentation.
Data presented at the 2023 International Workshop on CLL showed that responses were seen early, frequently, and appeared durable, with about 83% of responders remaining in response at 9 months. “The objective response rate (ORR) was 82% with a complete response (CR) rate of 33%, which I thought was quite encouraging, especially in difficult-to-treat, high-risk patients with [R/R CLL]” Kater said.
The median time to response was 1.9 months (range, 1.6-3.7) and the median time to CR was 3.6 months (range, 1.6-10.8). At 9 months, the estimated duration of response, progression-free survival, and overall survival was 83%, 67%, and 81%, respectively.
To be included in the trial, patients had to be CD20-positive R/R CLL, have received 2 or more prior lines of systemic therapy, including treatment with or intolerance to a Bruton tyrosine kinase inhibitor, and have an ECOG performance status of 0, 1, or 2.
In the dose expansion cohort (N = 23), patients received subcutaneous epcoritamab at the recommended phase 2 dose of 48 mg. Patients received epcoritamab with step-up dosing with a 0.16 priming dose and 0.8 mg intermediate doses before the first full dose. Corticosteroid prophylaxis was provided to mitigate cytokine release syndrome (CRS).
They underwent efficacy assessment by CT/MRI obtained every 8 weeks through cycle 6, and at 24 weeks thereafter. Treatment continued until disease progression. The primary end point was ORR and secondary end points were CR rate, time to response, and safety/tolerability.
The median age of the patients was 72 years (range, 55-83) and the majority (74%) were male. Seventy percent of patients were IGHV mutated and 65% had a TP53 aberration. In this heavily pretreated population, the median number of prior lines of therapy was 4 (range, 2-10) and 65% had undergone 4 or more prior lines of therapy. All patients were treated with small molecules and BTK inhibitors and 74% discontinued BTK inhibitor therapy because of disease progression. Eighty-three percent had been treated with a BCL-2 inhibitor and 4% had undergone chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy.
Turning to safety, the most common treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) were CRS, thrombocytopenia, and anemia. “Most patients entered the study with pre-existing cytopenias,” Kater said. TEAEs were primarily grade 1 to 2 and 2 TEAEs led to treatment discontinuation. There were 3 fatal TEAEs reported, 1 of which was pneumonia and was treatment-related. “There were no CLL progressions among the responders, however, there were 3 cases of Richter transformation,” Kater said. After deeper analysis, Kater said, “1 of those 3 patients was found to have a T-prolymphocytic leukemia in the marrow prior to the study.”
CRS resolved in all patients, Kater said. The median time to onset after full dose was 7.3 hours (range, 1-99) and median time to resolution was 3 days (range, 1-16). “Importantly, all immune cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome (ICANS) events occurred very early in the context of grade 2 CRS disease,” Kater said. “One patient had clinical tumor lysis syndrome, which was grade 2, and no case of ICANS or tumor lysis led to discontinuation.”
Epcoritamab is a novel subcutaneous CD3 × CD20 bispecific antibody that offers patients previously treated with BTK and BCL-2 inhibitors another treatment option. Previous trials from EPCOR CLL-1 show encouraging efficacy and manageable safety in R/R CLL (dose escalation) and Richter syndrome (dose expansion).2
Overall, Kater said CRS occurrence was predictable, with most cases following the first full dose. Further, no AEs of special interest led to discontinuation, with all cases resolving. He encouraged continued exploration of the agent combined with other therapies, noting that patients with R/R CLL/small lymphocytic lymphoma or Richter syndrome were currently being enrolled.