Haematologica (Jul 2020)

Lenalidomide-based induction and maintenance in elderly newly diagnosed multiple myeloma patients: updated results of the EMN01 randomized trial

  • Sara Bringhen,
  • Mattia D’Agostino,
  • Laura Paris,
  • Stelvio Ballanti,
  • Norbert Pescosta,
  • Stefano Spada,
  • Sara Pezzatti,
  • Mariella Grasso,
  • Delia Rota-Scalabrini,
  • Luca De Rosa,
  • Vincenzo Pavone,
  • Giulia Gazzera,
  • Sara Aquino,
  • Marco Poggiu,
  • Armando Santoro,
  • Massimo Gentile,
  • Luca Baldini,
  • Maria Teresa Petrucci,
  • Patrizia Tosi,
  • Roberto Marasca,
  • Claudia Cellini,
  • Antonio Palumbo,
  • Patrizia Falco,
  • Roman Hájek,
  • Mario Boccadoro,
  • Alessandra Larocca

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2019.226407
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 105, no. 7

Abstract

Read online

n the EMN01 trial, the addition of an alkylator (melphalan or cyclophosphamide) to lenalidomide-steroid induction therapy was prospectively evaluated in transplant-ineligible patients with multiple myeloma. After induction, patients were randomly assigned to maintenance treatment with lenalidomide alone or with prednisone continuously. The analysis presented here (median follow-up of 71 months) is focused on maintenance treatment and on subgroup analyses defined according to the International Myeloma Working Group Frailty Score. Of the 654 evaluable patients, 217 were in the lenalidomide-dexamethasone arm, 217 in the melphalan-prednisone-lenalidomide arm and 220 in the cyclophosphamide-prednisone-lenalidomide arm. With regards to the Frailty Score, 284 (43%) patients were fit, 205 (31%) were intermediate-fit and 165 (25%) were frail. After induction, 402 patients were eligible for maintenance therapy (lenalidomide arm, n=204; lenalidomide-prednisone arm, n=198). After a median duration of maintenance of 22.0 months, progression-free survival from the start of maintenance was 22.2 months with lenalidomide-prednisone vs. 18.6 months with lenalidomide (hazard ratio 0.85, P=0.14), with no differences across frailty subgroups. The most frequent grade ≥3 toxicity was neutropenia (10% of lenalidomide-prednisone and 21% of lenalidomide patients; P=0.001). Grade ≥3 non-hematologic adverse events were rare (