Abstract 2261

Background:

Plerixafor (AMD3100) is a CXCR4 antagonist that was approved by the FDA for use in combination with G-CSF to mobilize hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) in patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and multiple myeloma. We have previously reported the use of plerixafor alone to mobilize HSPCs for HLA-matched allogeneic transplantation (Blood. 2008;112:990). In this trial, sibling donors were treated with plerixafor at a dose of 0.24 mg/kg by subcutaneous (SC) injection, followed 4 hours later by leukapheresis. To date, 15 of 45 donors (33%) required a second day of leukapheresis to collect the minimum cell dose of ≥ 2.0 × 106 CD34+ cells/kg actual recipient body weight that are required to proceed to transplantation. Based on preliminary data suggesting higher (2-fold) and earlier (1 hr vs. 3 hr) progenitor mobilization in mice after intravenous (IV) dosing of plerixafor, we amended our trial to test the safety and efficacy of IV plerixafor.

Methods:

In our Phase I trial, 21 healthy donors were initially mobilized with increasing doses of IV plerixafor (0.08, 0.16, 0.24, 0.32, 0.40 or 0.48 mg/kg). After 4 days of drug clearance, the same donors were then mobilized with a single SC dose of 0.24 mg/kg plerixafor followed 4 hours later by leukapheresis. In our Phase II study, 28 sibling donors were treated with plerixafor at a dose of 0.32 mg/kg by IV injection, followed 4 hours later by leukapheresis. Successful mobilization was defined as a minimum leukapheresis yield of ≥ 2.0 × 106/kg CD34+ cell/kg actual recipient body weight.

Results:

Peak CD34+ cells/mm3 were observed 4 hours after IV dosing (vs. 6–9 hours after SC dosing) and donors given 0.24 mg/kg IV plerixafor, had significantly higher peak levels of CD34+ cells/mm3 compared to the same donors who received 0.24 mg/kg SC plerixafor. There was a clear dose-response relationship of IV plerixafor on mobilization of CD34+ HSPCs, with the 0.32 mg/kg dose yielding a maximum increase in circulating CD34+ cells of 27 CD34+ cells/mm3 at 4 hours after injection, representing a median eight-fold increase from baseline. Interestingly, the median CD34+ cells/mm3 in donors receiving 0.40 mg/kg (N=3) and 0.48 mg/kg (N=3) was 17 and 24 CD34+ cells/mm3, respectively, not significantly better than the 320 mcg/kg dose at the four hour time-point. We also noted that IV dosing (especially doses >0.24 mg/kg) resulted in prolonged mobilization of CD34+ cells such that levels approached 20 CD34+ cells/mm3 at 24 hours after IV dosing. Pharmacokinetic studies demonstrated that the Cmax of plerixafor following the 0.32 mg/kg IV dose remained below 1.0 μg/mL whereas the 0.40 and 0.48 mg/kg doses resulted in Cmax levels of 1.8–2.2 μg/mL. A total of 28 HLA-identical sibling donor/recipient pairs have been enrolled in the Phase II trial, with all donors mobilized using IV plerixafor at a dose 0.32 mg/kg. At 4 hours after IV plerixafor, the CD34+ cell count rose to a median of 16 CD34+ cells/mm3 (range, 4–46), representing a 6.5-fold increase. The efficacy of CD34+ cell collection following 0.32 mg/kg IV plerixafor was not evaluable in five donors due to incomplete apheresis collections or the extremely large size of one recipient (recipient >200 kg). Six of the remaining 23 donors (26%) did not achieve the minimum cell dose of 2 × 106 CD34+ cells/kg in a single 20 L leukapheresis procedure. This mobilization failure rate of 26% with 0.32 mg/kg IV plerixafor is similar to the failure rate of 33% we observed following administration of 0.24 mg/kg SC plerixafor to healthy donors. Four of the six patients who failed to collect ≥ 2.0 × 106 CD34+ cells/kg after the first mobilization and apheresis procedure reached goal following a second mobilization and collection procedure. No adverse events or acute grade 3 or 4 toxicities have been observed in any of the donors given IV plerixafor doses up to 0.48 mg/kg. We have transplanted 24 of the 28 patients entered in the phase II trial. All but one patient engrafted neutrophils and platelets promptly and only 2 of the 24 (8.3%) transplant recipients have developed clinical evidence of acute GVHD (minimum follow-up of 45 days); 1 had grade II and the other grade III.

Summary:

IV plerixafor increases the magnitude and duration of CD34+ mobilization compared to SC plerixafor in healthy donors. These observations suggest that IV plerixafor may be a more effective mobilization agent with a low side effect profile for allogeneic transplantation.

Disclosures:

Rettig: Genzyme Corp.: Consultancy, Honoraria. DiPersio: Genzyme: Honoraria.

Author notes

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Asterisk with author names denotes non-ASH members.

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