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PFS improvement will translate to OS, speaker says

Dr Moskowitz said another analysis of OS is planned in 2016.

Safety data

The most common adverse events in the brentuximab arm were peripheral sensory neuropathy (56%), neutropenia (35%), upper respiratory tract infection (26%), fatigue (24%), and peripheral motor neuropathy (23%).

The most common adverse events in the placebo arm were upper respiratory tract infection (23%), fatigue (18%), peripheral sensory neuropathy (16%), cough (16%), and neutropenia (12%).

Eighty-five percent of patients with peripheral neuropathy in the brentuximab arm had a resolution or improvement in symptoms, with a median time to improvement of 23.4 weeks.

Grade 3 or higher adverse events in the brentuximab arm included neutropenia, peripheral sensory neuropathy, peripheral motor neuropathy, nausea, fatigue, and diarrhea.

Grade 3 or higher adverse events in the placebo arm included neutropenia, fatigue, peripheral motor neuropathy, diarrhea, and peripheral sensory neuropathy. No Grade 4 peripheral neuropathy events occurred.

One death occurred within 30 days of brentuximab treatment. The patient died from treatment-related acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) associated with pneumonitis.

Another death occurred on the brentuximab arm at day 40 from ARDS following an episode of treatment-related acute pancreatitis, which had resolved at the time of death.

Nevertheless, Dr Moskowitz characterized brentuximab consolidation as “very well-tolerated” in this patient population.

He concluded, “For patients with a remission duration of less than a year, patients with primary refractory Hodgkin lymphoma, and patients with Hodgkin lymphoma with extranodal involvement, I do believe this will become standard treatment.”