Cancers (Jan 2022)

Treatment with Idelalisib in Patients with Relapsed or Refractory Follicular Lymphoma: The Observational Italian Multicenter FolIdela Study

  • Beatrice Casadei,
  • Lisa Argnani,
  • Alessandro Broccoli,
  • Caterina Patti,
  • Piero Maria Stefani,
  • Antonio Cuneo,
  • Gloria Margiotta Casaluci,
  • Carlo Visco,
  • Guido Gini,
  • Fabrizio Pane,
  • Francesco D’Alò,
  • Debora Luzi,
  • Maria Cantonetti,
  • Samantha Pozzi,
  • Gerardo Musuraca,
  • Chiara Rosignoli,
  • Annalisa Arcari,
  • Sofya Kovalchuk,
  • Monica Tani,
  • Maria Chiara Tisi,
  • Mario Petrini,
  • Vittorio Stefoni,
  • Pier Luigi Zinzani

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14030654
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 3
p. 654

Abstract

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Follicular lymphoma (FL) is an indolent hematological disease, often responsive to the first line of treatment, but characterized by repeated relapses. The therapeutic algorithm for relapsed/refractory FL patients comprises phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase inhibitors. Idelalisib showed anticancer activity, while inducing a significant rate of toxicities. Since the evidence in the literature on its use in normal clinical practice is scarce, a retrospective multicenter study was conducted to evaluate effectiveness and tolerability in a real-life context. Seventy-two patients with a median age at diagnosis of 57.2 years—mostly with an advanced stage (88.9%) and relapsed to the most recent therapy (79.1%)—were enrolled. The median number of prior therapies was three (20.8% refractory to the last therapy before idelalisib). With a median number of 4 months of treatment, the overall response rate was 41.7% (20.8% complete responses). Median disease-free survival and overall survival were achieved at 8.4 months and at 4 years, respectively. Forty-four percent of patients experienced at least one drug-related toxicity: 6.9% hematological ones and 43% non-hematological. The study confirmed that idelalisib has anticancer effectiveness and an acceptable safety profile in relapsed/refractory FL with unfavorable prognostic characteristics, even in the context of normal clinical practice.

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