Safety and efficacy of combined ruxolitinib and decitabine in accelerated and blast-phase myeloproliferative neoplasms

  • Raajit K. Rampal
  • , John O. Mascarenhas
  • , Heidi E. Kosiorek
  • , Leah Price
  • , Dmitriy Berenzon
  • , Elizabeth Hexner
  • , Camille N. Abboud
  • , Marina Kremyanskaya
  • , Rona Singer Weinberg
  • , Mohamed E. Salama
  • , Kamal Menghrajani
  • , Vesna Najfeld
  • , Lonette Sandy
  • , Mark L. Heaney
  • , Ross L. Levine
  • , Ruben A. Mesa
  • , Amylou C. Dueck
  • , Judith D. Goldberg
  • , Ronald Hoffman

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

58 Scopus citations

Abstract

Myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN), including polycythemia vera, essential thrombocythemia, and primary myelofibrosis, have a propensity to evolve into accelerated and blast-phase disease (MPN-AP/BP), carrying a dismal prognosis. Conventional antileukemia therapy has limited efficacy in this setting. Thus, MPN-AP/BP is an urgent unmet clinical need. Modest responses to hypomethylating agents and single-agent ruxolitinib have been reported. More recently, combination of ruxolitinib and decitabine has demonstrated synergistic in vitro activity in human and murine systems. These observations led us to conduct a phase 1 study to explore the safety of combined decitabine and dose-escalated ruxolitinib in patients with MPN-AP/BP. A total of 21 patients were accrued to this multicenter study. Ruxolitinib was administered at doses of 10, 15, 25, or 50 mg twice daily in combination with decitabine (20 mg/m2 per day for 5 days) in 28-day cycles. The maximum tolerated dose was not reached. The most common reasons for study discontinuation were toxicity/adverse events (37%) and disease progression (21%). Fourteen patients died during study treatment period or follow-up. The median overall survival for patients on study was 7.9 months (95% confidence interval, 4.1-not reached). Among evaluable patients, the overall response rate by protocol-defined criteria (complete remission with incomplete count recovery 1 partial remission) was 9/17 (53%) and by intention-to-treat analysis was 9/21 (42.9%). The combination of decitabine and ruxolitinib was generally well tolerated by patients with MPN-AP/BP and demonstrates potentially promising clinical activity. A phase 2 trial evaluating the efficacy of this combination regimen is ongoing within the Myeloproliferative Disorder Research Consortium.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3572-3580
Number of pages9
JournalBlood advances
Volume2
Issue number24
DOIs
StatePublished - 26 Dec 2018

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