Data Suggest Azacitidine, Nivolumab Is Best Immunotherapy Regimen for MDS

By Patrick Daly - Last Updated: December 20, 2024

Azacitidine and nivolumab (aza-nivo) showed improved responses overall and superior overall survival (OS) between intermediate-risk subgroups when compared with azacitidine and ipilimumab (aza-ipi) in patients with treatment-naive myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), according to a study presented at the 66th American Society of Hematology Annual Meeting & Exposition.

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The triplet combination of azacitidine, ipilimumab, and nivolumab (aza-ipi-nivo) did not significantly improve outcomes and increased toxicity and posttransplant mortality, according to author Ian Bouligny, MD, of the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center.

The analysis included 66 patients aged 18 years and older (median age, 68 years; range, 39–86) who received aza-ipi (n=33), aza-nivo (n=20), or aza-ipi-nivo (n=13).

Among the participants, the majority were transfusion dependent (76%); the most common driver mutation was TP53 (46%; P=.003); the median International Prognostic Scoring System-Molecular (IPSS-M) score was 1.59 (range, –1.55 to 4.08); and a significant proportion of patients had very poor-risk disease (47%; P=.042) according to the revised IPSS (IPSS-R).

Notably, in patients with IPSS-R intermediate risk MDS, aza-nivo was associated with superior OS compared with aza-ipi (not reached vs 25.6 months; P=.049).

The study reported the following overall response rate (ORR), composite complete response rate (CRc), and median OS for each treatment group.

Treatment ORR CRc Median OS (P=.666)
Aza-ipi 27% 13.3% 22.7 months
Aza-nivo 55% 40% 14.3 months
Aza-ipi-nivo 54% 46% 11.8 months

 

The ORR did not differ significantly between groups, whereas the CR rate was significantly improved with aza-nivo compared with aza-ipi (40% vs 7%; P=.009).

Additional analyses suggested IPSS-R intermediate-risk was associated with significantly improved survival compared with high- or very high-risk (77.7 months vs 10.9 months; P<.001), and ava-ipi-nivo was associated with inferior OS after transplant compared with the doublet regimens (13.7 months vs 49.6 months; P=.008).

“Here, we present the mature data of three immunotherapy-based hypomethylating agent combinations…Aza-nivo was associated with improved CR and—for IPSS-R intermediate-risk MDS—OS compared to aza-ipi,” Dr. Bouligny and colleagues summarized.

 

Reference

Bouligny IM, Montalban-Bravo G, Sasaki K, et al. A phase II trial of azacitidine with ipilimumab, nivolumab, or ipilimumab and nivolumab in previously untreated myelodysplastic syndromes. Abstract #4601. Presented at the 66th American Society of Hematology Annual Meeting & Exposition; December 7-10, 2024; San Diego, California.

Post Tags:ASH 2024: MDS
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