• HRQoL improved in all 6 patients with APDS receiving selective PI3Kδ inhibitor leniolisib for up to 6 years, with minimal toxicities

  • Patients with APDS receiving leniolisib saw beneficial changes in the mean percentage of lymphocyte subsets and clinical manifestations

Activated phosphoinositide 3-kinase delta syndrome (APDS) is an inborn error of immunity that manifests as immune deficiency and dysregulation; symptoms include frequent infections and lymphoproliferation. In our dose-finding and phase 3 placebo-controlled trials, treatment with the selective PI3Kδ inhibitor leniolisib reduced lymphoproliferation and normalized lymphocyte subsets. Here, we present 6 years of follow-up from the 6 adult patients in the original dose-finding trial receiving leniolisib. We used data from the ongoing open-label extension study, which was supplemented at later time points by investigators, including health-related quality of life assessed through a clinician-reported questionnaire. We observed improvements in health-related quality of life: 5/6 patients experienced an increase in physical capabilities and socialization and a decrease in prescribed medications. Immune subsets improved in all patients: mean transitional B-cell levels decreased from 38.17% to 2.47% and the CD4:CD8 T-cell ratio normalized to 1.11. Manifestations seen before and within the first year of leniolisib exposure, such as infections and gastrointestinal conditions, attenuated following year 2 with few new conditions emerging out to year 6. Thrombocytopenia or lymphopenia remained present in half of patients at year 6. Of 83 adverse events through year 5, 90.36% were grade 1; none were grade 4-5 nor deemed leniolisib-related. Collectively, we saw an enhancement in health-related quality of life as well as durable changes in lymphocyte subsets and clinical manifestations, further supporting the use of leniolisib as a long-term therapeutic option for the treatment of APDS. (Funded by Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation and Pharming Group NV; ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02859727.)

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