ANCHOR: melflufen plus dexamethasone and daratumumab or bortezomib in relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma: final results of a phase I/IIa study
Enrique M. Ocio,
Yvonne A. Efebera,
Roman Hájek,
Jan Straub,
Vladimir Maisnar,
Jean-Richard Eveillard,
Lionel Karlin,
María-Victoria Mateos,
Albert Oriol,
Vincent Ribrag,
Paul G. Richardson,
Stefan Norin,
Jakob Obermüller,
Nicolaas A. Bakker,
Luděk Pour
Affiliations
Enrique M. Ocio
Hospital Universitario Marqués de Valdecilla (IDIVAL), Universidad de Cantabria, Santander
Yvonne A. Efebera
Department of Hematology/Oncology, Division of Blood and Marrow Transplant and Cellular Therapy, OhioHealth, Columbus, OH, USA and OhioHealth, Columbus, OH
Roman Hájek
Department of Hematooncology, University Hospital Ostrava, Ostrava and Faculty of Medicine, University of Ostrava, Ostrava, Czech Republic
Melphalan flufenamide (melflufen), a first-in-class, alkylating peptide-drug conjugate, demonstrated clinical benefit in combination with dexamethasone in triple-class refractory multiple myeloma (MM). The phase I/IIa ANCHOR study evaluated melflufen (30 or 40 mg) and dexamethasone (40 mg with daratumumab; 20 mg followed by 40 mg with bortezomib; dose reduced if aged ≥75 years) in triplet combination with daratumumab (16 mg/kg; daratumumab arm) or bortezomib (1.3 mg/m2; bortezomib arm) in patients with relapsed/refractory MM refractory to an immunomodulatory agent and/or a proteasome inhibitor and who had received one to four prior lines of therapy. Primary objectives were to determine the optimal dose of melflufen in triplet combination (phase I) and overall response rate (phase IIa). In total, 33 patients were treated in the daratumumab arm and 23 patients received therapy in the bortezomib arm. No dose-limiting toxicities were reported at either melflufen dose level with either combination. With both triplet regimens, the most common grade ≥3 treatment-emergent adverse events were thrombocytopenia and neutropenia; thrombocytopenia was the most common treatment-emergent adverse event leading to treatment discontinuation. In the daratumumab arm, patients receiving melflufen 30 mg remained on treatment longer than those receiving the 40-mg dose. In the daratumumab arm, the overall response rate was 73% and median progression-free survival was 12.9 months. Notably, in the bortezomib arm, the overall response rate was 78% and median progression-free survival was 14.7 months. Considering the totality of the data, melflufen 30 mg was established as the recommended dose for use with dexamethasone and daratumumab or bortezomib for future studies in relapsed/refractory MM.