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Ajai Chari from Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, US and colleagues conducted a multicenter, open-label, single arm, phase IIb trial to determine the efficacy and safety of treatment with selinexor and dexamethasone for triple-class refractory myeloma.1 This formed part two of the STORM study (which the Multiple Myeloma Hub has previously discussed alongside associated studies here and here).
Exportin 1 (XPO1) is involved in the exportation of nuclear proteins such as tumor suppressor proteins. XPO1 has been found to be over-expressed in multiple myeloma cells and correlates with decreased survival.1 Selinexor, which recently achieved Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval,2 is an inhibitor of XPO1 and has been found to induce apoptosis in myeloma cell lines and animal models.1
The STORM study administered 80 mg selinexor alongside 20 mg dexamethasone on days 1 and 3 of every week for 4-week cycles to assess safety (n=123) and efficacy (n=122).
Chari and colleagues concluded that selinexor (oral) alongside dexamethasone induced a response in just over a quarter of patients who had received many different therapeutic regimens but still had refractory myeloma. The most common toxic effects that were graded as 3 or above included thrombocytopenia without bleeding, anemia, neutropenia without fever, and hyponatremia. Thrombocytopenia, due in part to inhibition of thrombopoietin signaling in early megakaryopoiesis, was reversible and managed by dose interruption and thrombopoietin-receptor agonists. Selinexor preclinical studies show enhancement of IκB, which supports possible future use in combination with proteasome inhibitors, immunomodulatory drugs, and/or sensitization of myeloma cells to anti-CD38 monoclonal antibodies.
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