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Daratumumab has been heralded a game changer in Multiple Myeloma (MM) as it drives strong responses, both as a monotherapy and in combination with backbone regimens. Daratumumab is slowly edging towards use as a frontline therapy, but recent approvals currently place it firmly in the relapsed setting.
The SIRIUS clinical trial assessed the efficacy of daratumumab in heavily pre-treated MM patients who had received at least 3 prior lines of therapy including a PI and an IMiD or whose disease was double refractory to both a proteasome inhibitor (PI) and an immunomodulatory drug (IMiD). The median duration of response was 7.6 months, but one patient stood out as his clinical response lasted 3.5 years with the eradication of Minimal Residual Disease (MRD), despite having a del(17p) high-risk cytogenetic profile.
To further understand the reason for such a deep and durable response, the patient was studied by Saad Z. Usmani and colleagues from the Levine Cancer Institute/Carolinas Health Care System, USA, and the case study was published in Experimental Hematology & Oncology in February 2018.
The efficacy of daratumumab monotherapy in an elderly patient who relapsed after five lines of therapy, including ASCT, was described and attributed to a notably increased T-cell population. The first response was observed within a month and sCR was achieved after 194 days and maintained for over 3.5 years. This study therefore further highlights the strong immunomodulatory effect of daratumumab, which includes CD8+ T-cell expansion and increased T-cell clonality, as well as a decrease in regulatory immune cell populations. The question going forward is why certain patients are more likely to have expanded T-cell populations compared to others, and what factors can determine this outcome.
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