Elotuzumab, lenalidomide, and dexamethasone in RRMM: final overall survival results from the phase 3 randomized ELOQUENT-2 study

  • Meletios A Dimopoulos
  • Sagar Lonial
  • Darrell White
  • Philippe Moreau
  • Katja Weisel
  • Jesus San-Miguel
  • Ofer Shpilberg
  • Sebastian Grosicki
  • Ivan Špička
  • Adam Walter-Croneck
  • Hila Magen
  • Maria-Victoria Mateos
  • Andrew Belch
  • Donna Reece
  • Meral Beksac
  • Andrew Spencer
  • Heather Oakervee
  • Robert Z Orlowski
  • Masafumi Taniwaki
  • Christoph Röllig
  • Hermann Einsele
  • Morio Matsumoto
  • Ka Lung Wu
  • Kenneth C Anderson
  • Ying-Ming Jou
  • Alex Ganetsky
  • Anil K Singhal
  • Paul G Richardson

Related Research units

Abstract

Prolonging overall survival (OS) remains an unmet need in relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma (RRMM). In ELOQUENT-2 (NCT01239797), elotuzumab plus lenalidomide/dexamethasone (ERd) significantly improved progression-free survival (PFS) versus lenalidomide/dexamethasone (Rd) in patients with RRMM and 1-3 prior lines of therapy (LoTs). We report results from the pre-planned final OS analysis after a minimum follow-up of 70.6 months, the longest reported for an antibody-based triplet in RRMM. Overall, 646 patients with RRMM and 1-3 prior LoTs were randomized 1:1 to ERd or Rd. PFS and overall response rate were co-primary endpoints. OS was a key secondary endpoint, with the final analysis planned after 427 deaths. ERd demonstrated a statistically significant 8.7-month improvement in OS versus Rd (median, 48.3 vs 39.6 months; hazard ratio, 0.82 [95.4% Cl, 0.68-1.00]; P = 0.0408 [less than allotted α of 0.046]), which was consistently observed across key predefined subgroups. No additional safety signals with ERd at extended follow-up were reported. ERd is the first antibody-based triplet regimen shown to significantly prolong OS in patients with RRMM and 1-3 prior LoTs. The magnitude of OS benefit was greatest among patients with adverse prognostic factors, including older age, ISS stage III, IMWG high-risk disease, and 2-3 prior LoTs.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN2044-5385
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 04.09.2020
PubMed 32887873