eJHaem (Jul 2020)

Randomized, placebo‐controlled, phase 3 study of perifosine combined with bortezomib and dexamethasone in patients with relapsed, refractory multiple myeloma previously treated with bortezomib

  • Paul G. Richardson,
  • Arnon Nagler,
  • Dina Ben‐Yehuda,
  • Ashraf Badros,
  • Parameswaran N. Hari,
  • Roman Hajek,
  • Ivan Spicka,
  • Hakan Kaya,
  • Richard LeBlanc,
  • Sung‐Soo Yoon,
  • Kihyun Kim,
  • Joaquin Martinez‐Lopez,
  • Moshe Mittelman,
  • Ofer Shpilberg,
  • Paul Blake,
  • Teru Hideshima,
  • Kathleen Colson,
  • Jacob P. Laubach,
  • Irene M. Ghobrial,
  • Merav Leiba,
  • Moshe E. Gatt,
  • Peter Sportelli,
  • Michael Chen,
  • Kenneth C. Anderson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/jha2.4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 1
pp. 94 – 102

Abstract

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Abstract Perifosine, an investigational, oral, synthetic alkylphospholipid, inhibits signal transduction pathways of relevance in multiple myeloma (MM) including PI3K/Akt. Perifosine demonstrated anti‐MM activity in preclinical studies and encouraging early‐phase clinical activity in combination with bortezomib. A randomized, double‐blind, placebo‐controlled phase 3 study was conducted to evaluate addition of perifosine to bortezomib‐dexamethasone in MM patients with one to four prior therapies who had relapsed following previous bortezomib‐based therapy. The primary endpoint was progression‐free survival (PFS). The study was discontinued at planned interim analysis, with 135 patients enrolled. Median PFS was 22.7 weeks (95% confidence interval 16·0–45·4) in the perifosine arm and 39.0 weeks (18.3–50.1) in the placebo arm (hazard ratio 1.269 [0.817–1.969]; P = .287); overall response rates were 20% and 27%, respectively. Conversely, median overall survival (OS) was 141.9 weeks and 83.3 weeks (hazard ratio 0.734 [0.380–1.419]; P = .356). Overall, 61% and 55% of patients in the perifosine and placebo arms reported grade 3/4 adverse events, including thrombocytopenia (26% vs 14%), anemia (7% vs 8%), hyponatremia (6% vs 8%), and pneumonia (9% vs 3%). These findings demonstrate no PFS benefit from the addition of perifosine to bortezomib‐dexamethasone in this study of relapsed/refractory MM, but comparable safety and OS.

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