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Treating classical Hodgkin lymphoma: Spotlight on targeted therapies
with Gilles Salles, Paul Bröckelmann, and Ann S. LaCasce
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On September 13th 2019, it was announced that the phase III CANDOR study comparing daratumumab (D) in combination with carfilzomib (K) and dexamethasone (d, KdD) to Kd alone, met its primary endpoint of progression-free survival (PFS) in patients with relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma (RRMM). The KdD regimen was found to reduce the risk of progression or death by 37% compared to Kd alone.1
The KdD regimen was originally evaluated in a phase Ib study which showed the regimen was well-tolerated and had encouraging PFS rates, including in a lenalidomide-refractory population (read more below).2 These results warranted further investigation in lenalidomide-exposed patients in the phase III CANDOR trial, which, it has been announced, has met its primary endpoint.1
The results of the phase Ib study (NCT01998971) investigating the KdD regimen, were published in Blood in August 2019. Patients were carfilzomib- and daratumumab-naïve (n= 85), had received a median of two prior lines of therapy (1–4) and 60% were refractory to lenalidomide. Daratumumab was administered as a single infusion of 16mg/kg on Day one, cycle one, in 10 patients, and as a split infusion of 8mg/kg on Days one–two of cycle one, in 75 patients.
The study showed KdD induced deep and durable responses, irrespective of whether the patients had been previously treated with lenalidomide.
Read more about the phase Ib results here.
The CANDOR study (NCT03158688) was a phase III randomized, open-label study comparing KdD to Kd regimens in 466 patients with RRMM. Patients had relapsed after one to three prior therapies. The primary endpoint was PFS with secondary endpoints of ORR, rate of minimal residual disease (MRD)-negative complete response, duration of response, overall survival, time to next treatment, time to progression, time to response, persistence of MRD-negativity and quality of life assessments.3
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