Abstract

Introduction: Currently there is no consensus on the treatment of relapsed/refractory (r/r) PTCL, and patient prognosis was poor. Golidocitinib is an orally available, JAK1-selective inhibitor currently being evaluated in a multinational, pivotal study in r/r PTCL (JACKPOT8 Part B, NCT04105010). Here we reported the primary analysis of efficacy and safety results of this study. Methods: PTCL patients who had relapsed from or had been refractory/intolerant to ≥1 (but ≤3) prior systemic therapy(ies) were enrolled to receive golidocitinib at 150 mg once daily until disease progression or pre-defined discontinuation criteria were met. The primary endpoint was CT-based objective response rate (ORR) assessed by an independent review committee (IRC) according to Lugano 2014 classification. The efficacy analysis set included patients whose pathological diagnosis of PTCL had been retrospectively confirmed by a central laboratory and who had at least one measurable lesions at baseline. The safety analysis set included all dosed patients. Results: As of 30 November 2022, a total of 104 patients with r/r PTCL were enrolled and dosed with golidocitinib. Baseline characteristics: median age was 58 yrs; 64.4% were male; 20.2% had baseline bone marrow involvement. Major subtypes included NOS (46.2%), AITL (15.4%) and ALCL (9.6%). The median prior lines of therapies were two. All of the patients had been treated with chemotherapies, and 48.1% had been treated with histone deacetylase inhibitors. By the data cut-off (DCO) date, a total of 80 patients had both IRC assessment and central pathology review results available, and thus were included in the efficacy analysis. Among them, 35 patients achieved tumor response (ORR = 43.8%), including 20 patients (25.0%) achieved complete responses. Tumor response was observed in various subtypes, including AITL (56.3%), NOS (45.7%), ALCL (11.1%) and others (44.4%). In patients who relapsed from HDAC inhibitor treatment, 54.8% achieved tumor response. With a median follow-up of 5.5 months for responders, the median duration of response (DoR) has not been reached. Golidocitinib was tolerated in patients with r/r PTCL. By the DCO date, the longest duration on treatment was 15.7 months (still responding). The most common ≥ grade 3 treatment-related adverse events (TRAEs) were hematological in nature, including neutrophil count decreased (26.0%), white blood cell count decreased (25.0%), platelet count decreased (16.3%) and lymphocyte count decreased (16.3%). TRAEs leading to dose interruption, reduction, and discontinuation were 37.5%, 5.8%, and 7.7%, respectively. The majority of TRAEs were reversible or clinically manageable. Conclusions: Golidocitinib demonstrated its potential as a novel targeted therapy for the treatment of r/r PTCL. The updated data will be presented at the conference. Encore Abstract—previously submitted to ASCO 2023 Keywords: aggressive T-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma, molecular targeted therapies Conflicts of interests pertinent to the abstract W. Yu Employment or leadership position: Employed by Dizal Pharmaceutical

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