ORLANDO-About one
third of "bad prognosis" refractory
B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia
(B-CLL) patients are salvageable
with alemtuzumab(Drug information on alemtuzumab) (Campath-
1H), according to a compassionate
use study presented at the 43rd Annual
Meeting of the American Society
of Hematology (abstract 1538).
Alemtuzumab is a humanized
monoclonal antibody, specifically targeted
at the CD52 antigen, the most
abundant antigen on normal and
malignant lymphocytes, said Kanti R.
Rai, MD, of the Long Island Jewish
Medical Center, New Hyde Park, NY,
and Albert Einstein College of Medicine,
Bronx, NY. Alemtuzumab activates
the complement system and antibody-
dependent cellular cytotoxicity,
causing cell lysis.
In the prior pivotal clinical trial
(Keating MJ et al: Blood 94[suppl
1]:705a, 1999) among 93 patients with
CLL who had failed therapy with
fludarabine (Fludara), the
alemtuzumab response rate had been
33%, Dr. Rai said. "After that pivotal
clinical trial, because alemtuzumab is
not an antibody that is simple to use,
many oncologists wanted to have their
own experience with it before it became
commercially available," he said.
All patients in the compassionate
use study had failed fludarabine
treatment or had relapsed within 6
months after prior alemtuzumab
treatment.
Patients were in WHO performance
status 2 or less and had failed
a median of 5 (range, 1 to 11) prior
chemotherapy regimens. Median
age was 62, and mean time from
initial CLL diagnosis was 5.7 years.
Twenty-two patients had discontinued
prior regimens because of
adverse events, and 26 because of
disease progression.
Patients (n = 136; 74% male)
received alemtuzumab 3 mg by slow
intravenous infusion on day 1, followed
by dose escalation (on days 2
through 5) to 10 mg and eventually
to 30 mg when tolerated. Following
this, all patients received
alemtuzumab maintenance therapy
at 30 mg, three times a week for
a maximum of 12 weeks.
Anti-infection prophylaxis with trimethoprim(Drug information on trimethoprim)/sulfamethoxazole
and famciclovir(Drug information on famciclovir) (Famvir) was mandatory
from day 8 to at least 2
months after the last dose of
alemtuzumab.
Response rates were evaluated according
to 1996 NCI criteria, and
adverse event grading was on a 1 to
4 scale according to NCI toxicity
criteria.
Study Results
The researchers noted complete
responses in 8% of patients and partial
responses in 32%, for an overall
response rate of 40%. At a median
follow-up of 5 months, median progression-
free survival was 7.3
months in the 54 responders and
3.9 months in the overall population.
Overall median survival was
13.4 months among responders and
7.6 months in the group as a whole,
Dr. Rai reported.
There were eight deaths, four attributed
to progressive disease, two
to infections, one to a ruptured
spleen, and one unknown.
Infusion-related events were almost
universally grade 1 or 2 (fever
65%, rigors 71%, nausea 45%) and
occurred mostly in the first 2 weeks
of treatment. Grade 3-4 hematologic
toxicity (neutropenia 22%, thrombocytopenia
23%, anemia 11%) also
occurred mainly in the first 2 weeks.
Infections occurred in 44 patients
(32%). The most common infections
were candida (7 cases, one grade 3),
pneumonia (7 cases, four grade 3-4),
herpes simplex (6 cases, one grade
3), herpes zoster (2 cases), cytomegalovirus
reactivation (2 cases, both
grade 3-4), and one case of grade 4
pseudomonas septicemia.
Dr. Rai concluded that this experience
with compassionate-use
alemtuzumab shows that the agent is
safe and effective in these heavily pretreated,
high-risk B-CLL patients.
"The bottom line is that we confirmed
the pivotal trial findings of
Keating et al that about one third of
bad prognosis patients with B-CLL
are salvageable with Campath-and
that among responders, the duration
of response and survival rates
are very good," Dr. Rai said.
He added, "This is encouraging.
Now we are bringing Campath into
other trials as front-line therapy in
CLL patients whose immune status
is reasonably intact. We give
fludarabine to reduce the tumor burden
and achieve a partial response
and then bring in Campath, hoping
to convert those partial responses to
complete responses."
