Journal of Hematology & Oncology (Mar 2017)

Chidamide in relapsed or refractory peripheral T cell lymphoma: a multicenter real-world study in China

  • Yuankai Shi,
  • Bo Jia,
  • Wei Xu,
  • Wenyu Li,
  • Ting Liu,
  • Peng Liu,
  • Weili Zhao,
  • Huilai Zhang,
  • Xiuhua Sun,
  • Haiyan Yang,
  • Xi Zhang,
  • Jie Jin,
  • Zhengming Jin,
  • Zhiming Li,
  • Lugui Qiu,
  • Mei Dong,
  • Xiaobing Huang,
  • Yi Luo,
  • Xiaodong Wang,
  • Xin Wang,
  • Jianqiu Wu,
  • Jingyan Xu,
  • Pingyong Yi,
  • Jianfeng Zhou,
  • Hongming He,
  • Lin Liu,
  • Jianzhen Shen,
  • Xiaoqiong Tang,
  • Jinghua Wang,
  • Jianmin Yang,
  • Qingshu Zeng,
  • Zhihui Zhang,
  • Zhen Cai,
  • Xiequn Chen,
  • Kaiyang Ding,
  • Ming Hou,
  • Huiqiang Huang,
  • Xiaoling Li,
  • Rong Liang,
  • Qifa Liu,
  • Yuqin Song,
  • Hang Su,
  • Yuhuan Gao,
  • Lihong Liu,
  • Jianmin Luo,
  • Liping Su,
  • Zimin Sun,
  • Huo Tan,
  • Huaqing Wang,
  • Jingwen Wang,
  • Shuye Wang,
  • Hongyu Zhang,
  • Xiaohong Zhang,
  • Daobin Zhou,
  • Ou Bai,
  • Gang Wu,
  • Liling Zhang,
  • Yizhuo Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13045-017-0439-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
pp. 1 – 5

Abstract

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Abstract The efficacy and safety of chidamide, a new subtype-selective histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitor, have been demonstrated in a pivotal phase II clinical trial, and chidamide has been approved by the China Food and Drug Administration (CFDA) as a treatment for relapsed or refractory peripheral T cell lymphoma (PTCL). This study sought to further evaluate the real-world utilization of chidamide in 383 relapsed or refractory PTCL patients from April 2015 to February 2016 in mainland China. For patients receiving chidamide monotherapy (n = 256), the overall response rate (ORR) and disease control rate (DCR) were 39.06 and 64.45%, respectively. The ORR and DCR were 51.18 and 74.02%, respectively, for patients receiving chidamide combined with chemotherapy (n = 127). For patients receiving chidamide monotherapy and chidamide combined with chemotherapy, the median progression-free survival (PFS) was 129 (95% CI 82 to 194) days for the monotherapy group and 152 (95% CI 93 to 201) days for the combined therapy group (P = 0.3266). Most adverse events (AEs) were of grade 1 to 2. AEs of grade 3 or higher that occurred in ≥5% of patients receiving chidamide monotherapy included thrombocytopenia (10.2%) and neutropenia (6.2%). For patients receiving chidamide combined with chemotherapy, grade 3 to 4 AEs that occurred in ≥5% of patients included thrombocytopenia (18.1%), neutropenia (12.6%), anemia (7.1%), and fatigue (5.5%). This large real-world study demonstrates that chidamide has a favorable efficacy and an acceptable safety profile for refractory and relapsed PTCL patients. Chidamide combined with chemotherapy may be a new treatment choice for refractory and relapsed PTCL patients but requires further investigation.

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