articleJournal of Clinical OncologyJan 24, 2012Closed access

Results From a Pivotal, Open-Label, Phase II Study of Romidepsin in Relapsed or Refractory Peripheral T-Cell Lymphoma After Prior Systemic Therapy

Apple (Israel) · Hospices Civils de Lyon · +13 more institutions

PubMed
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Abstract

Results

Of the 131 patients enrolled, 130 had histologically confirmed PTCL by central review. The median number of prior systemic therapies was two (range, one to eight). The objective response rate was 25% (33 of 130), including 15% (19 of 130) with CR/CRu. Patient characteristics, prior stem-cell transplantation, number or type of prior therapies, or response to last prior therapy did not have an impact on response rate. The median duration of response was 17 months, with the longest response ongoing at 34+ months. Of the 19 patients who achieved CR/CRu, 17 (89%) had not experienced disease progression at a median follow-up of 13.4 months. The most common grade ≥ 3 adverse events were thrombocytopenia (24%), neutropenia (20%), and infections (all types, 19%).

Conclusion

Single-agent romidepsin induced complete and durable responses with manageable toxicity in patients with relapsed or refractory PTCL across all major PTCL subtypes, regardless of the number or type of prior therapies. Results led to US Food and Drug Administration approval of romidepsin in this indication.

Citation impact

672
total citations
FWCI
25.53
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100%
References
27
Citations per year

Authors

18

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Romidepsin
  • Medicine
  • Neutropenia
  • Internal medicine
  • Peripheral T-cell lymphoma
  • Refractory (planetary science)
  • Clinical endpoint
  • Phases of clinical research
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