Treating Mantle Cell Lymphoma: Why Are Patients Benefitting From New Therapies?

Picture1By Peter Martin, MD

Most clinicians and researcher agree since mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) was first described 25 years ago patient outcomes have improved considerably. What remains unknown, however, is why outcomes are improving.

In an international, phase III clinical trial from the European MCL Network that was recently published in The Lancet, investigators demonstrated that progression-free survival could be doubled by the addition of rituximab, dexamethasone, cytarabine, cisplatin (R-DHAP) to standard chemotherapy and autologous stem cell transplantation. Whereas in the early 1990s, data suggested that patients might expect to live for 2-4 years, new findings demonstrated that patients can achieve decade long remissions. The strange thing about this remarkably positive study is that the overall survival was similar in both arms despite significant differences in virtually all other outcome measures. In fact, in the vast majority of MCL related phase III trials, despite great improvements in depth and duration of response, the overall survival of the experimental and control arms is the same.

While we celebrate the successes that each of these studies represents, important questions remain. Why are the patients in the control arms doing so well? Why are patients treated with the older, less effective therapies living as long as patients randomized to receive new therapies, and why are they living longer than patients receiving those therapies a couple decades ago?

Some of these questions can be answered by perception biases and advances in supportive care. For example, if patients in 2016 are being diagnosed with MCL earlier than they might have been diagnosed in the 1990s, they would appear to live longer, a phenomenon known as lead-time bias. Improvements in pathology may also lead to what is known as selection bias. Previously, patients with less aggressive variants of MCL were misdiagnosed as having other kinds of lymphoma, while a more representative sample is included in today’s studies. Similarly, perhaps people enrolled in recent clinical trials are healthier than they were in the past, another form of selection bias. Perhaps supportive care has improved, allowing people to live longer with lymphoma, or tolerate therapies that might have been considered overly aggressive in the past. If any or all of these hypotheses are true, hematologists around the world cannot claim credit for the perceived improvements.

It is clear that people with MCL are living longer with a higher quality of life. They have more options for treatment and these gains are due to clinical trials. In the past decade, the use of rituximab has expanded while bortezomib, temsirolimus, ibrutinib, and lenalidomide, all better tolerated than many historical options, have been approved. If this is true, it suggests that the path to continued improvements relies on the development of new, well-tolerated approaches, and it suggest that front-line therapies without curative potential must evolve to become less toxic so that subsequent lines of therapy remain feasible.

Weill Cornell Lymphoma Program Study on Mantle Cell Lymphoma Has Received a Top 10 Clinical Research Forum Achievement Award from a National Clinical Research Organization

Dr. Jia Ruan examines study participant Russell Meyer. Photo credit: Carlos Rene Perez

Dr. Jia Ruan, lead author of the New England Journal of Medicine  study “Lenalidomide plus Rituximab as Initial Treatment for Mantle-Cell Lymphoma,” was in Washington on April 12 at the Clinical Research Forum fifth annual awards ceremony to receive the Top 10 Clinical Research Achievements Award.  She also presented the study at the opening plenary session during the 2016 Translational Science meeting.

The 10 winning papers were chosen based on their degree of innovation from a pool of more than 40 nominations from 30 research and academic health centers nationwide.

The multi-center phase 2 study showed that a combination therapy lacking many of the typical debilitating effects of traditional cancer treatment could effectively manage mantle cell lymphoma by inducing remissions in the vast majority of patients.

Mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) is a subtype of non-Hodgkin lymphoma that primarily affects elderly individuals. Initial treatment is not standardized and variable, but usually includes chemotherapy regimens that are generally not curative and may not be tolerated by all patients.

In this ongoing study, treatment with biologic combination of lenalidomide and rituximab led to high response rates and durable remissions in patients with previously untreated MCL, providing an effective alternative to conventional chemotherapy for a broad range of patients.

Thirty-eight patients have been treated on the study with induction and maintenance therapy. Among 36 evaluable patients, 92% responded to treatment, 64% of whom achieved complete response. Eighty-five percent of patients have no evidence of disease progression, and 97% remain alive at the two-year mark. The majority of patients reported a high quality of life as measured by quality-of-life instruments throughout treatment. The most common side effect were asymptomatic low white blood cell counts and transient inflammatory symptoms generally reversible with lenalidomide dose adjustment and supportive care.

“With this frontline treatment, we were able to achieve a very high quality and durable response rate without needing to use chemotherapy,” Ruan said. “It’s very meaningful for the patients who have always been told that their disease is without a cure.”

She thanked all of the patients who participated in the trial, as well as her Weill Cornell Medicine co-investigators: John Leonard M.D., Peter Martin M.D., Morton Coleman M.D., Richard Furman M.D., Paul Christos Dr.P.H. M.S., Orel Katz P.A., Jessica Katz P.A., and Amelyn Rodriguez R.N. Additional collaborators included Dr. Bijal Shah from Moffit Cancer Center, Drs. Steven Schuster and Jakub Svoboda from the University of Pennsylvania Abramson Cancer Center, and Dr. Sonali Smith from the University of Chicago Medical Center.

 

Dr. Peter Martin On Future Treatment Options for Mantle Cell Lymphoma

In this video from OncLive, Dr. Peter Martin discusses potential changes in the future treatment of younger patients with mantle cell lymphoma (MCL), as well as new lines of therapy currently being developed for all patients with MCL. These new therapies include Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitors, PI3 kinase inhibitors, Bcl-2 inhibitors, immunomodulatory drugs, and immunotherapy agents.

In the Lymphoma Program our patient care is informed by our clinical research. A full listing of available trials for MCL can be found on our clinical trials website.