Haematologica (Oct 2017)

Vosaroxin in combination with decitabine in newly diagnosed older patients with acute myeloid leukemia or high-risk myelodysplastic syndrome

  • Naval Daver,
  • Hagop Kantarjian,
  • Guillermo Garcia-Manero,
  • Elias Jabbour,
  • Gautam Borthakur,
  • Mark Brandt,
  • Sherry Pierce,
  • Kenneth Vaughan,
  • Jing Ning,
  • Graciela M. Nogueras González,
  • Keyur Patel,
  • Jeffery Jorgensen,
  • Naveen Pemmaraju,
  • Tapan Kadia,
  • Marina Konopleva,
  • Michael Andreeff,
  • Courtney DiNardo,
  • Jorge Cortes,
  • Renee Ward,
  • Adam Craig,
  • Farhad Ravandi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2017.168732
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 102, no. 10

Abstract

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Vosaroxin is an anti-cancer quinolone-derived DNA topoisomerase II inhibitor. We investigated vosaroxin with decitabine in patients ≥60 years of age with newly diagnosed acute myeloid leukemia (n=58) or myelodysplastic syndrome (≥10% blasts) (n=7) in a phase II non-randomized trial. The initial 22 patients received vosaroxin 90 mg/m2 on days 1 and 4 with decitabine 20 mg/m2 on days 1–5 every 4–6 weeks for up to seven cycles. Due to a high incidence of mucositis the subsequent 43 patients were given vosaroxin 70 mg/m2 on days 1 and 4. These 65 patients, with a median age of 69 years (range, 60–78), some of whom with secondary leukemia (22%), adverse karyotype (35%), or TP53 mutation (20%), are evaluable. The overall response rate was 74% including complete remission in 31 (48%), complete remission with incomplete platelet recovery in 11 (17%), and complete remission with incomplete count recovery in six (9%). The median number of cycles to response was one (range, 1–4). Grade 3/4 mucositis was noted in 17% of all patients. The 70 mg/m2 induction dose of vosaroxin was associated with similar rates of overall response (74% versus 73%) and complete remission (51% versus 41%, P=0.44), reduced incidence of mucositis (30% versus 59%, P=0.02), reduced 8-week mortality (9% versus 23%; P=0.14), and improved median overall survival (14.6 months versus 5.5 months, P=0.007). Minimal residual disease-negative status by multiparametric flow-cytometry at response (± 3 months) was achieved in 21 of 39 (54%) evaluable responders and was associated with better median overall survival (34.0 months versus 8.3 months, P=0.023). In conclusion, the combination of vosaroxin with decitabine is effective and well tolerated at a dose of 70 mg/m2 and warrants randomized prospective evaluation. ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01893320