In this issue of Blood, Shanafelt et al1 confirm the continued superiority of ibrutinib plus rituximab (IR), compared with the prior standard treatment, fludarabine, cyclophosphamide, and rituximab (FCR), for fit patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). In addition, they report relevant data on the tolerability of continuous treatment with BTK inhibitor.

More than 17 years ago, the FCR chemoimmunotherapy regimen was developed by the MD Anderson Center (Houston, TX)2 and was later shown to be superior to chemotherapy alone.3 Later, extended follow-up data showed that this regimen in younger, fit patients had the potential for long-lasting disease control, possibly even cure, in a subgroup of patients with favorable prognostic profile.4,5 In contrast to FCR, chemoimmunotherapies based on less-intensive chemotherapy backbones, such as chlorambucil or bendamustine, did not show similar long-lasting remissions in more elderly and less fit patients. BTK inhibitors, alone or in combination with anti-CD20 antibodies, had been shown to be superior to those less intensive treatment regimens in elderly or unfit patients with CLL.6,7

In the E1912 study, the ECOG-ACRIN study group reported that, at a median of 34 months, the IR regimen was superior to FCR. Now, a follow-up of nearly 6 years clearly confirms the superiority of IR with respect to progression-free survival (PFS) (5-year PFS rates for IR, 78% and for FCR, 51%; HR [hazard ratio], 0.37; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.27-0.61; P < .0001). Notably, even the subgroup of patients with mutated immunoglobulin heavy chain (IGHV) status, which benefitted most from the FCR regimen,4,5 had an HR of 0.27 (95% CI, 0.1-0.62) for PFS. Although overall survival (OS) for the IR-treated group was still superior with longer follow-up, the difference was less than in the previous report. A subgroup analysis for OS showed that only patients with unmutated IGHV status benefited from IR, a finding limited by the reduced power of this secondary analysis (HR 0.35 for OS in patients without mutated IGHV (95% CI, 0.15-0.80) vs HR 0.72 in those with a mutation (95% CI, 0.15-3.47). The decreasing difference in OS may be related to greater use of targeted agents in relapsed disease than during the first study.8 However, because data for relapse treatment were available only for patients dying of CLL or Richter transformation (see supplemental Table 3A in Shanafelt et al), this hypothesis cannot be confirmed by complete data analysis of all salvage therapies.

The outcome of patients who discontinued ibrutinib treatment because of adverse events was also presented. These data are highly relevant for clinical management. Seventy-seven patients (21.9% of all patients from the IR arm) discontinued BTK inhibitor therapy after a median time of 25.9 months, because of adverse events or complications. The update shows that the median time from ibrutinib discontinuation to disease progression was 25 months. Although the difference was not statistically significant, the tendency was for longer duration of ibrutinib therapy, particularly treatment exceeding 1 year, to result in longer disease-free survival after treatment discontinuation. Moreover, despite the difference in treatment duration, the IR arm was associated with a lower rate of grade 3 and more treatment-related adverse events compared with the FCR arm (73.0% vs 83.5%).

The results of the E1912 trial have to been seen in context with those of the FLAIR study, which was presented at the ASH 2021 meeting.9 This phase 3 trial by the UK CLL study group also compared FCR to IR, but the average age of the patients was older (median age, 63 vs 58 years in the E1912 study). Interestingly, no difference in OS was observed for the FLAIR study, despite a significant difference in PFS with an HR of 0.44 (95% CI, 0.32-0.60) after a median observation time of 52.7 months.9 As Shanafelt and colleagues report, an increasing incidence of cardiac toxicity in a more elderly patient population in the FLAIR study, with 9 lethal cardiac events vs only 1 in the E1912 study, may be one of several reasons responsible for the lack of difference in OS.

Altogether, the update of the E1912 study confirmed that the safe and very efficacious administration of IR in younger patients with CLL is superior to FCR, independent of IGHV status. How continuous therapy compares to time-limited targeted therapies such as venetoclax plus obinutuzumab or venetoclax plus BTK inhibitor will be shown by currently ongoing phase 3 trials.

B.E. received honoraria from Janssen for oral presentations and research grants and served on advisory boards for Janssen and Pharmacyclics.

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