Safety and efficacy of luspatercept for the treatment of anemia in patients with myelofibrosis

Aaron T. Gerds, Claire Harrison, Jean Jacques Kiladjian, Ruben Mesa, Alessandro M. Vannucchi, Rami Komrokji, Prithviraj Bose, Marina Kremyanskaya, Adam J. Mead, Jason Gotlib, Shelonitda Rose, Fabian Sanabria, Niloufar Marsousi, Ana Carolina Giuseppi, Huijing Jiang, Jeanne M. Palmer, Kelly McCaul, Vincent Ribrag, Francesco Passamonti

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

16 Scopus citations

Abstract

The ACE-536-MF-001 trial enrolled patients with myelofibrosis (n = 95) into 4 cohorts: patients in cohorts 1 and 3A were non–transfusion dependent (NTD) and had anemia; patients in cohorts 2 and 3B were transfusion dependent (TD); and patients in cohort 3A/3B had stable ruxolitinib treatment before and during the study. All patients received luspatercept (1.0-1.75 mg/kg, 21-day cycles). Treatment was extended if clinical benefit was observed at day 169. The primary end point was anemia response rate (NTD, ≥1.5 g/dL hemoglobin increase from baseline; TD, transfusion-independence) over any 12-week period during the primary treatment period (weeks 1-24). Overall, 14% of patients in cohorts 1 and 3A, 10% in cohort 2, and 26% in cohort 3B met the primary end point. In cohorts 1 and 3A (NTD), 27% and 50% of patients, respectively, had mean hemoglobin increase of ≥1.5 g/dL from baseline. Among TD patients, ~50% had ≥50% reduction in transfusion burden. Reduction in total symptom score was observed in all cohorts, with the greatest response rate seen in cohort 3A. Overall, 94% of patients had ≥1 adverse event (AE); 47% had ≥1 treatment-related AE (TRAE; 11% grade ≥3), most frequently hypertension (18%), managed with medical intervention. One patient had a serious TRAE leading to luspatercept discontinuation. Nine patients died on treatment (unrelated to study drug). In most patients, ruxolitinib dose and spleen size remained stable. In patients with myelofibrosis, luspatercept improved anemia and transfusion burden across cohorts; the safety profile was consistent with previous studies.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)4511-4522
Number of pages12
JournalBlood advances
Volume8
Issue number17
DOIs
StatePublished - 10 Sep 2024

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