Abstract

Ibrutinib is a first-in-class Bruton kinase inhibitor against B-cell neoplasms including Waldenström macroglobulinemia (WM). This study evaluated the efficacy and safety of ibrutinib-rituximab in Japanese patients with WM. Patients received ibrutinib 420mg orally once daily plus weekly rituximab 375mg/m2 IV (8 infusions total). The primary end point was major response rate (MRR; PR or better) by Independent Review Committee assessment. Secondary endpoints were progression-free survival (PFS), safety, pharmacokinetics, and biomarkers. Primary analysis was conducted in 16 patients [baseline, treatment naïve: 8 (50.0%); relapsed/refractory WM: 8 (50.0%)] who received ibrutinib-rituximab, after all patients completed Week 57 or end of treatment. At primary analysis, MRR was 87.5% [14/16 patients; 95% CI: 61.7, 98.4%; p < 0.0001 (null hypothesis: 32% response rate)]. At final analysis (median study intervention duration: 34.4months, median follow-up: 35.0months), MRR was unchanged at 87.5%, but VGPR [6/16 (37.5%)] and PR [8/16 (50.0%)] improved. Prior treatment status did not affect response. At final analysis, median PFS was not reached [36-month PFS rate: 86% (95% CI: 55, 96%)]. No critical safety signals were reported. This study demonstrated a positive benefit/risk profile of ibrutinib-rituximab in Japanese patients with WM, consistent with the iNNOVATE study.

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