637. Myelodysplastic Syndromes—Clinical Studies: Targeting Gene Mutations in MDS

Conclusion cited from the abstract: Results from this first-in-human multicenter prospective clinical trial of a splicing modulator in myeloid neoplasms demonstrate dose-dependent target engagement and predictable PK profile of H3B-8800, and safety even with prolonged dosing. Although no objective CR or PR were achieved, decreased RBC or platelet transfusion requirements were observed in 12 (14%) of enrolled patients.

 

674

Conclusion cited from the abstract: 

Olutasidenib has shown favorable safety profile and clinical activity in IDH1m MDS, with an overall response rate (ORR) rate of 59% (95% CI: 33-82%) and durable disease control. Phase 2 is ongoing at 150 mg BID single agent and in combination with AZA.

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Conclusion cited from the abstract: 

TP53 is a natural candidate for incorporation in molecularly informed risk stratification schemas (molecular IPSS-R). We show that TP53 state rather than mutation alone is an independent diagnostic and prognostic biomarker in MDS. We propose that ascertainment of TP53 state is critical in prospective clinical sequencing for risk estimation, disease monitoring and future correlative research into predictors of response to established and investigational therapies.

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676

Conclusion cited from the abstract: APR-246+AZA is a well-tolerated combination with high response rates in mTP53 MDS/AML. Response durations are promising accompanied by a high fraction of cytogenetic and deep molecular remissions leading to encouraging outcomes post-HSCT. These data support the ongoing, randomized phase 3 study of APR-246+AZA versus AZA alone in mTP53 MDS (NCT03745716).

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Conclusion cited from the abstract: In this very high-risk elderly population of TP53m MDS and AML, generally with complex karyotype, a promising 56% CR rate at 6 cycles was reached in the evaluable population with AZA+ APR 246 combination, with deep molecular remission in all CR patients. We observed manageable neurologic AEs, mainly in elderly patients with reduced renal function, who therefore require close monitoring and dose reduction if necessary. An update regarding safety and efficacy in the 53 patients, including survival data, will be available at the meeting. A phase III international trial comparing AZA alone and AZA+ APR 246 in TP53m MDS is ongoing.

 

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Conclusion cited from the abstract: Enasidenib is well tolerated and shows promising efficacy in IDH2-mutated high-risk MDS. The ORR was 67%, including 100% in newly diagnosed pts receiving the combination of azacitidine plus enasidenib and 50% ORR in HMA-failure pts receiving enasidenib alone. The study continues to accrue and updated results will be presented at ASH.

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