When James Landon received a mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) diagnosis in 2017, he was told his disease was indolent, meaning it was slow growing and didnt need to be treated right away, especially since he was feeling fine.
But that changed in 2019. Landon, 50, an attorney in Tucson, Arizona, started to feel tired all the time. His physicians discovered that his white blood cell count was sky-high and his spleen was enlarged.
The first-line treatment for MCL has long been high doses of chemotherapy, often followed by a stem cell transplant. But when Landon traveled to The University of Texas MD Anderson CancerCenter in Houston to explore his options, he was offered an alternative: an experimental regimen combining the drugs Imbruvica (ibrutinib) and Rituxan (rituximab). Imbruvica blocks a protein called Bruton tyrosine kinase (BTK), which is a driver of MCL, and Rituxan is an antibody that targets overactive B cells of the immune system that have been implicated in the disease.
Five months after starting the combination four Imbruvica pills every morning and once-weekly infusions of Rituxan Landons positron emission tomography (PET) scan showed no evidence of disease. If he stays clear, hell undergo a short course of chemotherapy and then move to a maintenance therapy of one year of Ibrutinib and two of Rituxan.
Having this option has been fantastic, in my opinion, because the drugs so far have worked well for me, with no toxicity, says Landon, who adds that he has plenty of energy to work full time and play with his 10-year-old son.
BTK inhibitors and immunotherapy are among the newer therapeutic options for patients with MCL that are greatly improving the outlook for long-term survival. In addition to these targeted drugs, Tecartus (brexucabtagene autoleucel) the first cell-based gene therapy for MCL in patients who havent responded to or who have relapsed following other kinds of treatment was approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in July and is a one-time personalized treatment made from patients own immune cells.
We now have several good nonchemotherapy options for treating MCL, says Dr. Anthony Nguyen, a professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas School of Medicine and a medical oncologist at Comprehensive Cancer Centers of Nevada. We may be able to tell patients we can treat them without toxic chemotherapy, which can be reassuring, particularly for older patients.
MCL is a subtype of non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) thats characterized by the overproduction of a protein called cyclin D1. In about 85% of patients, that overproduction is caused by a genetic abnormality called reciprocal chromosomal translocation, which can be detected with diagnostic testing of tumor samples. MCL accounts for about 6% of all NHL diagnoses and is more common in men than in women, according to the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society.
The standard first-line treatment for MCL is high-dose chemotherapy, often with a four-medicine regimen called hyper-CVAD, followed by a stem cell transplant with a patients own cells or with those from a donor. The regimen often puts patients into long-term remissions, but the side effects including nausea, mouth ulcers and kidney damage can be difficult or even dangerous, particularly for patients with other illnesses.
The newer medicines and cell therapy were approved by the FDA to treat patients with MCL who dont respond to chemotherapy and transplants or who relapse. But as physicians gain more experience with these therapies, theres a growing interest in using them earlier in the treatment process to not only improve the chances of long-term remissions, but also to improve the quality of life for patients by sparing them from harsh side effects.
The FDA approved the first BTK inhibitor to treat MCL, Imbruvica, in 2013, based on a study showing an overall response rate (meaning the disease responded to treatment) of 68% and a complete response rate (the disappearance of all signs of cancer) of 21%. The average period that patients lived without their disease progressing was more than a year, and side effects were mild stomach upset and fatigue.
The more recently approved BTK inhibitors Calquence (acalabrutinib) and Brukinsa (zanubrutinib) have improved on those response rates. Patients receiving Brukinsa in a late-stage trial, for example, had an overall response rate of 89% and a complete response rate of 59%.
Another targeted treatment, Venclexta (venetoclax) is also being studied in MCL. Venclexta targets the protein BCL2, which promotes cell survival and is abnormally elevated in MCL helping to drive progression of the disease. In a small trial of Venclexta, 75% of patients with relapsed MCL responded to the drug, 21% of whom had complete responses. Theres even more interest in studying BCL2 inhibition in combination with BTK blockers. In a recent study of Venclexta combined with Imbruvica, the median progression-free survival time was 29 months.
This is an extremely promising combination, says Dr. Abhijeet Kumar, assistant professor in the division of hematology and oncology at the University of Arizona College of Medicine. Kumar is an investigator in an ongoing trial of Venclexta and Imbruvica in MCL.
There is, however, a risk of increased side effects when targeted treatments are combined. Imbruvica can cause bleeding, for example, and both drugs can lower neutrophil (a type of white blood cell) counts. Venclexta is also known to cause tumor lysis syndrome, a rapid release of tumor cells into the bloodstream that can endanger the kidneys and other organs. Still, so far, the combination seems to be well-tolerated, Kumar says.
Another two-drug treatment for MCL that has generated enthusiasm among oncologists treating the disease is dubbed R-squared because it combines Rituxan with Revlimid (lenalidomide), a drug that works by boosting the immune systems T cells and natural killer cells, which work together to attack cancer.
In a study of R-squared in 38 patients with newly diagnosed MCL, the progression-free survival rate after three years was 80% and overall survival reached 90%. The response is durable, says Dr. Bijal Shah, an associate member in the department of malignant hematology at Moffitt Cancer Center and one of the study investigators. During the R-squared trial, patients typically stayed on the combination for three years and then took Revlimid alone as long as the disease remained stable.
Similar benefits have been seen with a combination of Velcade (bortezomib), Revlimid and chemotherapy, a regimen called VR-CAP. Velcade is a targeted drug that works by disrupting the growth of MCL cells and prompting them to die.
In a trial of patients with untreated MCL, adding Velcade to Revlimid and chemotherapy extended progression-free survival by 37%. The addition of Velcade more than doubled the median duration of response to 41 months.
Both R-squared and VR-CAP have moved into the frontline treatment setting, Shah says. With that, were able to see really pronounced clinical benefits. Weve seen very long remissions, he says.
Several other combination strategies also are being investigated for MCL, including some that incorporate the drug Treanda (bendamustine), which works by causing DNA damage to cancer cells. In one study, combining Treanda with Rituxan improved progression-free survival rates over chemotherapy in patients with MCL or indolent NHL. More than 15 studies are now underway combining Treanda with Rituxan and other MCL treatments.
Even though targeted and combination treatments have extended survival times in MCL, most patients eventually relapse. Now theres a new option for those patients: Tecartus, a personalized therapy made from a patients own immune cells. The one-time treatment was approved by the FDA to treat patients who have not responded or have relapsed following other kinds of treatment.
Tecartus is a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cell therapy similar to Yescarta (axicabtagene ciloleucel), a CAR-T cell therapy approved by the FDA in 2017 to treat some types of large B-cell lymphomas. Like Yescarta, Tecartus targets CD19, a protein thats prevalent in cancerous B cells. Tecartus is made by extracting T cells from the blood of the patient with MCL and genetically modifying those cells to recognize and attack the cancer. In addition, the cells are put through an enrichment process designed to prevent them from wearing down before they are infused back into the patient.
In the clinical trial that led up to the approval, 87% of patients responded to Tecartus and 62% went into remission. Side effects, which included the immune overreaction known as cytokine release syndrome and neurological events, were manageable during the clinical trial, says Dr. Michael Wang, a professor in the department of lymphoma and myeloma at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center and one of the clinical trial investigators.
Experience with previously approved CAR-T cell treatments led to the widespread use of anti-inflammatory medications such as interleuken-6 inhibitors and steroids to treat cytokine release syndrome, Wang says. We have a variety of supportive measures to manage the side effects, he says.
With the approval of Tecartus, Wang says oncologists can envision a flattening of the survival curve in MCL. Its an option for people who become resistant to targeted therapies and chemotherapy, he says. Its very possible we will be able to put some people into long- term remissions.
Bob Brixner, a 20-year survivor of MCL, has been watching all the new developments with interest. When he received an MCL diagnosis in 2000, he had no choice but to endure chemotherapy followed by a stem cell transplant with his own cells. When he relapsed in 2004, he was prescribed a more intense chemotherapy regimen, followed by a stem cell transplant from an unrelated donor.
Hes grateful the second treatment put him in a long-term remission, but he still remembers the brutal side effects, which included extreme fatigue and a bout with pneumonia. And with the transplants, my immune system didnt come back 100%, says Brixner, 70, a retired Chicago public schoolteacher. Nowadays if I catch a cold, instead of lasting a week, it will last three.
Brixner advises all newly diagnosed patients to ask a lot of questions about their treatment choices and to get a second opinion. I think its really important to be an informed patient, he says, especially since there are so many new choices. Some patients may not have to go through what I did, he says. Im delighted.
Excerpt from:
Advances in the Treatment of Mantle Cell Lymphoma are Greatly Improving the Long-Term Outlook for Patients - Curetoday.com
- Governor Hochul Celebrates the Opening Of New York's First Cell and Gene Therapy Hub at Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center in Buffalo - PR Web - December 19th, 2024
- GenSight Biologics Provides Update on Regulatory Discussions and Financial Situation - Business Wire - December 19th, 2024
- Atsena completes dosing in part A of X-linked retinoschisis gene therapy trial - Healio - December 19th, 2024
- Astellas and Sangamo Therapeutics Announce Capsid License Agreement to Deliver Genomic Medicines for Neurological Diseases - StreetInsider.com - December 19th, 2024
- Ring Therapeutics lays off just under half of staff in 2nd wave of cuts this year, CEO set to step down - Fierce Biotech - December 19th, 2024
- Gov. Hochul celebrates opening of first cell and gene therapy hub in NYS - WIVB.com - News 4 - December 19th, 2024
- Muscular Dystrophy Association and Coalition to Cure - GlobeNewswire - December 19th, 2024
- Atsena Therapeutics Announces Dosing Completed in Part A of - GlobeNewswire - December 19th, 2024
- 'A milestone moment': Roswell Park celebrates opening New York's first cell and gene therapy hub - WKBW 7 News Buffalo - December 19th, 2024
- Gene therapy to prevent stillbirth and premature delivery developed - News-Medical.Net - December 19th, 2024
- Breaking through the blood-brain barrier - Science - December 19th, 2024
- Cell therapy weekly: partnerships for advancing cell and gene therapies - RegMedNet - December 19th, 2024
- Roswell Park Opens Cell, Gene Therapy Hub - WGRZ.com - December 19th, 2024
- Cartherics gets $300k grant to advance Cell and Gene Therapy development - ETHealthWorld - December 19th, 2024
- ELMCRx Solutions Offers Cell & Gene Therapy Support Through Partnership with Emerging Therapy Solutions (ETS) - Business Wire - December 19th, 2024
- Fueling the Future of Gene Therapies with Manufacturing Innovation, Upcoming Webinar Hosted by Xtalks - PR Web - December 19th, 2024
- Concinnity secures 3M Seed funding to advance AI-driven gene therapy safety - Tech.eu - December 19th, 2024
- Viral Vectors-Based Gene Therapy for Non-Human Primates Market to Reach Over USD 92.76 Million by 2034 - EIN News - December 19th, 2024
- The pharma industry's silence on RFK Jr., and efforts by parents to develop gene therapies for their children - STAT - December 19th, 2024
- Tenaya reports positive early data on heart gene therapy - Investing.com - December 19th, 2024
- Unraveling The Complexity Of Cell Therapy: Advancements And Challenges - Life Science Leader Magazine - November 27th, 2024
- Novartis wagers more than $1B on gene therapies for the nervous system - BioPharma Dive - November 27th, 2024
- Gene therapy for geographic atrophy in age-related macular degeneration: current insights - Nature.com - November 27th, 2024
- Novartis buys gene therapy startup Kate Therapeutics, joining pursuit of muscular dystrophy treatment - STAT - November 27th, 2024
- At MGB's gene therapy institute, effort to win first venture capital investments continues - The Business Journals - November 27th, 2024
- Neurogene reports death of Rett patient left in critical condition by high dose of gene therapy - Fierce Biotech - November 27th, 2024
- Alzheimer Disease Awareness Month 2024: Looking Back at a Year of Progress in Cell and Gene Therapy - CGTLive - November 27th, 2024
- Why This Gene-Therapy Companys Stock Is Rising 228% - Yahoo! Voices - November 27th, 2024
- How Minaris is Tackling the Scalability Challenge in Cell and Gene Therapy: A Conversation with CEO, Dr. Hiroto Bando - geneonline - November 27th, 2024
- RNA editing is the next frontier in gene therapy heres what you need to know - The Conversation - November 27th, 2024
- Assessment of gene therapy viral vectors in RPE cells - News-Medical.Net - November 27th, 2024
- Retinal organoids and RPE models for retinal gene therapy development - News-Medical.Net - November 27th, 2024
- China Vows to Bolster Gene Therapy Research in Key Biotech Hub - Bloomberg - November 27th, 2024
- Gene Therapy - Volume 31 Issue 11-12, November 2024 - Nature.com - November 27th, 2024
- Iovance Biotherapeutics Announces the Promotion of Raj Puri, M.D., Ph.D. to Chief Regulatory Officer - GlobeNewswire - November 27th, 2024
- Patient Dies in Gene Therapy Trial, But FDA Permits Neurogene to Proceed With Low Dose - MedCity News - November 27th, 2024
- New CRISPR system pauses genes, rather than turning them off permanently - Livescience.com - November 27th, 2024
- Liver-targeting gene therapy lowers mice whole-body SMA symptoms - SMA News Today - November 27th, 2024
- Bright breakthroughs: Real stories of beating rare disease - Science - November 27th, 2024
- Sarepta Therapeutics Announces Global Licensing and Collaboration Agreement with Arrowhead Pharmaceuticals for Multiple Clinical and Preclinical siRNA... - November 27th, 2024
- A Year of DMD Gene Therapy Trial Failures - AJMC.com Managed Markets Network - November 3rd, 2024
- Hemophilia B: Gene Therapy Shows Promise - Medscape - November 3rd, 2024
- Around the Helix: Cell and Gene Therapy Company Updates October 30, 2024 - CGTLive - November 3rd, 2024
- 2024 PharmaVoice 100s: Cell and Gene Therapy Pioneers - PharmaVoice - November 3rd, 2024
- Cell therapy weekly: support for commercialization of complex therapies - RegMedNet - November 3rd, 2024
- Lexeo shares early data on Alzheimers gene therapy - Endpoints News - November 3rd, 2024
- Medicaid Aiming to Improve Patient Access to High-Cost Therapies - AJMC.com Managed Markets Network - November 3rd, 2024
- The Significance of Gene Therapy in Neuromuscular Medicine at the 2025 MDA Conference: Paul Melmeyer, MPP - Neurology Live - November 3rd, 2024
- OHSU researchers identify gene that could be key to future HIV vaccine - OHSU News - November 3rd, 2024
- Purespring gene therapy reduces kidney scarring in mice and is stably expressed in pigs - Fierce Biotech - November 3rd, 2024
- Data Roundup: October 2024 Features Update for TCR-Based Autologous Cell Therapy in Melanoma, the First Clinical Demonstration of Therapeutic RNA... - November 3rd, 2024
- NewBiologix Launches Xcell to Accelerate, Optimize, and Scale Gene and Cell Therapy Production - Business Wire - November 3rd, 2024
- Vertex Pharmaceuticals and CRISPR Therapeutics Casgevy: the 200 Best Inventions of 2024 - TIME - November 3rd, 2024
- Addressing gene and cell therapy commercialization challenges - TechTarget - November 3rd, 2024
- University of Pennsylvania gene therapy spinout Interius BioTherapeutics doses patient, achieves CAR therapy first - The Business Journals - November 3rd, 2024
- Roche will aim to tackle gene therapy challenges through Dyno deal - The Pharma Letter - November 3rd, 2024
- Behind the Breakthroughs: How to Turn $1,000,000 CAR Ts into Real Medicines - Inside Precision Medicine - November 3rd, 2024
- Terumo automates manufacturing to expand cell & gene therapies - European Pharmaceutical Manufacturer - November 3rd, 2024
- 12-Year-Old Leaves Washington DC Hospital As The First Patient To Receive Approved Gene Therapy For Sickle Cell Disease - AfroTech - November 3rd, 2024
- Lexeo Therapeutics Announces Positive Interim Data for - GlobeNewswire - November 3rd, 2024
- New FDA designations granted to NCATS for rare disease therapies. - NCBI - October 22nd, 2024
- $1.8 Million Awarded to Study the Durability of Gene Therapy - University of Arkansas Newswire - October 22nd, 2024
- By the numbers: US leads charge of cell and gene therapies - BioWorld Online - October 22nd, 2024
- University of Arkansas Researcher Awarded $1.8M for Gene Therapy Study - Arkansas Business - October 22nd, 2024
- Cellectis to Present Data on TALE-Base Editors and Non-Viral Gene Therapy at the ESGCT 31st Annual Congress - StockTitan - October 22nd, 2024
- Around the Helix: Cell and Gene Therapy Company Updates October 16, 2024 - CGTLive - October 22nd, 2024
- Japan mulls ways to boost cell, gene therapy approvals - BioWorld Online - October 22nd, 2024
- A New Type of Gene Therapy Shows Promise for Treating Retinitis Pigmentosa - Managed Healthcare Executive - October 22nd, 2024
- Buy, Sell, Hold: Cell and Gene Therapy - Part 2 - BioPharm International - October 22nd, 2024
- When a Miracle Cure Is Left on the Shelf - Bloomberg - October 22nd, 2024
- Genethon to Showcase the Latest Advances in Gene Therapies for Multiple Diseases at the ESGCT 31 - Business Wire - October 22nd, 2024
- MeiraGTx's gene therapy improves motor function and quality of life in phase 2 Parkinson's trial - Fierce Biotech - October 22nd, 2024
- 5 Sickle Cell Therapies to Watch Following Pfizers Oxbryta Exit - BioSpace - October 22nd, 2024
- Fiocruz and GEMMABio announce partnership for the development of gene therapies - Fiocruz - October 22nd, 2024
- JPMA on Japans Biotech Industry: Cancer, Cardiovascular, and Aging Lead Diseases; Antibody, Cell, and Gene Therapies Top the Innovation List -... - October 22nd, 2024
- Cell and Gene Therapy Clinical Trial Market is expected to reach USD 119.3 Billion by 2032 at a 24.9% of CAGR - PharmiWeb.com - October 22nd, 2024
- Buy, Sell, Hold: Cell and Gene Therapy - Part 3 - Pharmaceutical Technology Magazine - October 22nd, 2024
- The role of quality assurance in accelerating drug development for emerging therapies - pharmaphorum - October 22nd, 2024
- Cellectis to Present Data on TALE-Base Editors and Non-Viral Gene Therapy at the ESGCT 31st Annual Congress - The Manila Times - October 22nd, 2024
- Nucleic Acid and Gene Therapies in Neuromuscular Disorders Market is projected to grow at a CAGR of - PharmiWeb.com - October 22nd, 2024