Seattle Genetics announced the publication of data from the ECHELON-1 phase 3 clinical trial online in the journal Clinical Cancer Research. The publication, titled “Brentuximab Vedotin Plus Chemotherapy in North American Patients with Newly Diagnosed Stage III or IV Hodgkin Lymphoma,” reports data from the North American patient population from ECHELON-1 evaluating ADCETRIS in combination with AVD in newly diagnosed stage III or IV classical Hodgkin lymphoma. These data were previously presented in a poster presentation at the 2018 American Society of Clinical Oncology Annual Meeting. In March 2018, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved ADCETRIS in combination with AVD for the treatment of adult patients with previously untreated stage III or IV classical HL based on the positive results of the ECHELON-1 phase 3 clinical trial. ADCETRIS is an antibody-drug conjugate directed to CD30, a defining marker of classical HL that plays a role in tumor growth and survival. Of the 1,334 advanced stage classical HL patients who participated in the ECHELON-1 clinical trial, 497 patients were treated in North America, with 250 patients in the ADCETRIS plus AVD arm and 247 patients in the ABVD control arm. The manuscript presents the North American results which include: A pre-specified sensitivity analysis showed per Independent Review Facility (IRF) assessment, the two-year modified progression-free survival rate for patients in the ADCETRIS plus AVD arm was 84.3 percent compared to 73.7 percent in the control arm, which corresponds to a difference of 10.6 percent. On the ADCETRIS plus AVD arm, peripheral neuropathy events were observed in 80 percent of patients compared to 56 percent on the ABVD arm. In the ADCETRIS plus AVD arm, the majority of peripheral neuropathy events were Grade 1 or 2. Grade 3 events were reported in 17 percent of patients. In the ABVD arm, Grade 3 events were reported in less than one percent of patients. There were no Grade 4 events on either arm. Across both arms of the study, approximately 75 percent of the patients with peripheral neuropathy reported resolution or improvement at last follow-up. Febrile neutropenia during treatment was reported in 20 percent of patients in the ADCETRIS plus AVD arm compared with nine percent in the ABVD arm. In the ADCETRIS plus AVD arm, 14 percent received primary prophylactic G-CSF within five days of starting treatment and nine percent reported febrile neutropenia. Pulmonary toxicity was reported in three percent of patients in the ADCETRIS plus AVD arm versus ten percent of patients in the ABVD arm. Grade greater than or equal to3 events were reported in two percent versus six percent of patients, in the ADCETRIS plus AVD and ABVD arms, respectively.
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