Mayo Clinic: Use of the targeted agent pacritinib significantly reduced the symptoms and burden of advanced myelofibrosis
in patients, says a Mayo Clinic researcher who co-led PERSIST-1, the
worldwide phase 3 clinical trial that tested the therapy. Specifically,
pacritinib substantially reduced severe enlargement of the spleen, a
typical feature of advanced myelofibrosis, in more than 20 percent of
patients and alleviated debilitating side effects in more than 46
percent. Investigators further found that pacritinib could be used safely in patients with myelofibrosis who have thrombocytopenia,
a life-threating loss of blood platelets that can lead to deadly
bleeding. The only currently approved therapy for myelofibrosis — ruxolitinib — is not recommended in patients who have severe thrombocytopenia.
Ruben A. Mesa, M.D., chair of Hematology and Medical Oncology at Mayo Clinic in Arizona, will present these results at a press conference held during the 2015 American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) annual meeting in Chicago.
“Use
of pacritinib can alleviate the burden and diminish the suffering that
this cancer causes,” says Dr. Mesa. “For many of the patients who used
it, pacritinib is a very good drug. The agent was significantly superior
to other medical treatments.
“It is too early to know if pacritinib has an impact on survival, but that is clearly our expectation,” he adds.
Mayo researchers led by Dr. Mesa were also part of a phase 2 trial
that found pacritinib offered significant benefit in treating the
disorder.
Myelofibrosis is a chronic bone-marrow disorder that can lead to
lowering of blood counts, scarring in the bone marrow, severe symptoms
and enlargement of the spleen. Myelofibrosis can be life threatening for
afflicted patients because of the debilitation the disease causes
and/or progression to acute leukemia, Dr. Mesa says.
Myelofibrosis is one of three blood cancers classified as
myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs), and MPN affects about 350,000
people in the U.S., he says.
In
this study, two-thirds of the 327 patients with primary and secondary
myelofibrosis were treated with pacritinib. The other one-third were
treated with best available therapy (BAT), but were able to cross over
to use of pacritinib if their cancer was largely nonresponsive. BAT was
chosen by the patient’s physician, but did not include ruxolitinib
because many patients were not eligible for it due to existing
thrombocytopenia.
Pacritinib, an oral drug, is known as a JAK2/FLT3 inhibitor. JAK2 is a
protein that acts like an on-off growth switch in blood cells.
“The JAK2 pathway is abnormally turned on in patients, which leads to
this chronic leukemia. This drug turns off that switch,” Dr. Mesa says.
PERSIST-1 investigators found that medium duration of treatment on
the study was 16-plus months, and that by six months, spleen size was
reduced in 25 percent of evaluable patients treated with pacritinib
compared to 6 percent in the BAT group. Almost 80 percent of BAT
patients crossed over to use of pacritinib, and 21 percent of all
pacritinib patients had achieved a reduction in spleen volume of 35
percent or more. Symptoms of the cancer were reduced in more than 46
percent of pacritinib-treated patients compared to 9 percent in patients
given BAT.
Researchers also found that 25 percent of patients who needed blood
transfusions at the beginning of the trial were able to stop the
transfusions.
“This is a very favorable observation,” says Dr. Mesa.