Acalabrutinib with bendamustine and rituximab is now an FDA-approved treatment for patients with previously untreated mantle cell lymphoma.
The FDA granted approval to acalabrutinib plus BR for the treatment of adult patients with previously untreated MCL who are ineligible for autologous HSCT.1
Findings from the ECHO trial that were presented at the 2024 European Hematology Association Hybrid Congress support this approval. Here, acalabrutinib plus BR reduced the risk of disease progression or death by 27% vs BR alone (HR, 0.73; 95% CI, 0.57-0.94; P =.016). The addition of acalabrutinib also led to nearly 1.5 years of additional median progression-free survival (PFS), with a median PFS of 66.4 months with acalabrutinib plus BR and 49.6 months with BR alone.2,3
There was a positive overall survival (OS) trend observed with acalabrutinib plus BR vs BR alone (HR, 0.86; 95% CI, 0.65-1.13; P =.2743); however, most patients in the BR arm who required a subsequent therapy went on to receive a BTK inhibitor, often acalabrutinib. OS data will continue to be assessed as a key secondary end point.
ECHO randomized patients 1:1 to receive acalabrutinib plus BR (n = 299) or placebo plus BR (n = 299). Acalabrutinib or placebo were administered twice daily orally, with bendamustine administered on days 1 and 2 and rituximab on day 1 for 28-day cycles.3,4
The study’s primary end point was PFS per independent review committee, and secondary end points included investigator-assessed PFS, overall response rate, OS, duration of response, and time to response.
Patients were eligible for study participation if they had pathologically confirmed MCL with documentation of a chromosome translocation t(11;14)(q13;q32) and/or overexpression of cyclin D1 in association with other relevant markers, had not received prior systemic anticancer therapies, were 65 years old or younger, and had an ECOG performance status of 2 or lower. Those with significant cardiovascular disease, malabsorption syndrome, or uncontrolled active infection were not eligible for participation.
Acalabrutinib previously received accelerated approval from the FDA for the treatment of adult patients with MCL following at least 1 prior therapy.5 This accelerated approval is contingent on the results of a confirmatory trial.
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