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Published in: Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology 2/2018

01-02-2018 | Original Article

Pharmacokinetically-targeted dosed everolimus maintenance therapy in lymphoma patients

Authors: L. K. Schoch, A. Asiama, M. Zahurak, S. Shanbhag, J. Hurtt, K. Sawyer, L. J. Swinnen, N. Wagner-Johnston, R. J. Jones, R. F. Ambinder, Douglas E. Gladstone

Published in: Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology | Issue 2/2018

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Abstract

Background

Everolimus, an mTOR inhibitor, is active in refractory lymphomas. However, toxicity with flat dosing limits its usage. Speculatively, pharmacokinetically-targeted dosing could improve tolerability. Therefore, we studied serum-trough dosing with rituximab as maintenance after high-dose cyclophosphamide (HDC) consolidation in lymphoma patients.

Patients/methods

After HDC, everolimus was dosed to serum trough levels (goal 3–15 ng/mL), with quarterly rituximab infusions for 1 year while maintaining < grade II non-hematologic and < grade III hematologic toxicities. Adult patients in first PR/CR with: mantle cell, transformed, double-hit, or high risk chronic lymphocytic leukemia or in second PR for any relapsed B cell lymphoma were eligible. Prophylaxis was given for encapsulated organisms, HSV and PCP. Serum IgG levels were maintained > 500 mg/dL.

Results

49 patients, median age: 59.0 years enrolled; MCL (26), CLL (10), transformed lymphoma (7), and other histologies (6). During the life of the study, the most frequent everolimus dosing has been 2.5 mg daily or 2.5 mg every other day; at these doses, serum levels are within the therapeutic range and non-hematologic toxicity is rare. At a median follow-up of 27.1 months, three patients remain on active therapy. Two patients withdrew secondary to potentially-attributable adverse events including a bacterial pneumonia and a viral pneumonia; this low rate of discontinuation compares well to other long-term everolimus trials. While a 58 and 76% EFS at 30 months for the entire cohort and MCL cohort, respectively, compares similarly to previously published HDC/rituximab data, longer follow-up is required.

Conclusions

Pharmacokinetically-targeted dosing appears to increase everolimus tolerability. This finding may be applicable to other patient populations.
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Metadata
Title
Pharmacokinetically-targeted dosed everolimus maintenance therapy in lymphoma patients
Authors
L. K. Schoch
A. Asiama
M. Zahurak
S. Shanbhag
J. Hurtt
K. Sawyer
L. J. Swinnen
N. Wagner-Johnston
R. J. Jones
R. F. Ambinder
Douglas E. Gladstone
Publication date
01-02-2018
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology / Issue 2/2018
Print ISSN: 0344-5704
Electronic ISSN: 1432-0843
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00280-017-3499-y

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