Haematologica (Aug 2023)

Immunochemotherapy plus lenalidomide for high-risk mantle cell lymphoma with measurable residual disease evaluation

  • Zachary D. Epstein-Peterson,
  • Esther Drill,
  • Umut Aypar,
  • Connie Lee Batlevi,
  • Philip Caron,
  • Ahmet Dogan,
  • Pamela Drullinsky,
  • John Gerecitano,
  • Paul A. Hamlin,
  • Caleb Ho,
  • Allison Jacob,
  • Ashlee Joseph,
  • Leana Laraque,
  • Matthew J. Matasar,
  • Alison J. Moskowitz,
  • Craig H. Moskowitz,
  • Chelsea Mullins,
  • Colette Owens,
  • Gilles Salles,
  • Heiko Schöder,
  • David J. Straus,
  • Anas Younes,
  • Andrew D. Zelenetz,
  • Anita Kumar

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2023.282898
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 109, no. 4

Abstract

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Chemoimmunotherapy followed by consolidative high-dose therapy with autologous stem cell rescue was a standard upfront treatment for fit patients with mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) in first remission; however, treatment paradigms are evolving in the era of novel therapies. Lenalidomide is an immunomodulatory agent with known efficacy in treating MCL. We conducted a single-center, investigator-initiated, phase II study of immunochemotherapy incorporating lenalidomide, without autologous stem cell transplant consolidation, enriching for patients with high-risk MCL (clinicaltrials gov. Identifier: NCT02633137). Patients received four cycles of lenalidomide-R-CHOP, two cycles of R-HiDAC, and six cycles of R-lenalidomide. The primary endpoint was rate of 3-year progression-free survival. We measured measurable residual disease (MRD) using a next-generation sequencing-based assay after each phase of treatment and at 6 months following end-oftreatment. We enrolled 49 patients of which 47 were response evaluable. By intent-to-treat, rates of overall and complete response were equivalent at 88% (43/49), one patient with stable disease, and two patients had disease progression during study; 3-year progression-free survival was 63% (primary endpoint not met) and differed by TP53 status (78% wild-type vs. 38% ALT; P=0.043). MRD status was prognostic and predicted long-term outcomes following R-HiDAC and at 6 months following end-of-treatment. In a high-dose therapy-sparing, intensive approach, we achieved favorable outcomes in TP53- wild-type MCL, including high-risk cases. We confirmed that sequential MRD assessment is a powerful prognostic tool in patients with MCL.