Six weeks after revealing that an interim analysis of a phase 3 trial showed that AstraZeneca’s blood cancer drug Calquence plus chemoimmunotherapy worked in previously untreated mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) patients, the company has put numbers to its claim.
In the ECHO study, adding Calquence to the combination of bendamustine and rituximab (BR) reduced the risk of disease progression or death by 27%. The figure is statistically significant and clinically meaningful, AZ said as it announced trial results Sunday at the European Hematology Association (EHA) Congress in Madrid.
In the study, which includes 299 patients in each arm age 65 and older, the Calquence combo produced a median progression-free survival (PFS) of 66.4 months versus 49.6 months for BR alone.
Additionally, Calquence provided a favorable trend in overall survival (OS), which marks a first-time for a BTK inhibitor. AZ reminded that the data has yet to mature and that OS will continue to be assessed in the ongoing trial as a secondary endpoint.
“We have a positive signal in terms of OS, so it’s a trend, which means that it is not statistically significant. We’re not going to be making any claims on that, but I think it’s very reassuring,” Benjamin Moutier, AZ’s global franchise head of hematology, said in an interview with Fierce Pharma.
Both the OS and PFS improvements were more pronounced when accounting for the effect of COVID-related deaths, as the trial has been conducted since 2017.
Another positive in the study showed complete remission rates of 67% and 53.5% in the Calquence arm and the BR arm, respectively, although overall response showed similar results at 91% and 88%, respectively.
Additionally, the rate of adverse events was relatively consistent from arm to arm.
“BR is the standard of care. And you add [Calquence] on top of BR, you don’t have much more toxicity but you have a much better efficacy,” Moutier said. “If you are a physician and you have an MCL patient it becomes a no-brainer to add Calquence on top of something you are already doing.”
Moutier also pointed out that since more than two-thirds of the patients in the control arm had received a BTK inhibitor in the second line, it provided key “crossover” comparisons with Calquence.
“It seems like it’s actually better for the patients to be treated right away with a BTK [inhibitor],” Moutier said as opposed to limiting its use for relapsing patients.
Calquence’s trial was positive in MCL where the first BTK inhibitor has failed. Last year, AbbVie and Johnson & Johnson pulled their accelerated approval for Imbruvica in MCL after it came up short in OS in a phase 3 trial. Those results were disappointing as Imbruvica also had shown that it slashed the risk of disease progression or death by 25%.
Another BTK inhibitor, BeiGene’s Brukinsa, also has received an accelerated approval in previously treated MCL patients and is being evaluated in a phase 3 trial for first-line use. That study is scheduled for completion in 2027.
While aging Imbruvica—which was originally approved for MCL in 2013—is in decline, with AbbVie reporting worldwide sales falling 21% to $3.6 billion last year, Calquence is picking up some of the slack with its sales reaching $2.5 billion, which was up 22%. Meanwhile, Brukinsa continued its rapid growth in 2023 with a 129% increase in sales to $1.3 billion.
MCL is a rare and aggressive form of non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), often diagnosed in late-stage disease. While patients typically respond to treatment immediately, the relapse rate is high. There are approximately 4,000 new patients diagnosed each year, with an estimated 27,500 living with it today, AZ said.