Comparison of Standard-of-Care Idecabtagene Vicleucel and Ciltacabtagene Autoleucel in Relapsed/Refractory Multiple Myeloma.

Journal: Journal Of Clinical Oncology : Official Journal Of The American Society Of Clinical Oncology
Published:
Abstract

Objective: Idecabtagene vicleucel (ide-cel) and ciltacabtagene autoleucel (cilta-cel), two B-cell maturation antigen-directed chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapies have demonstrated remarkable efficacy in relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma (RRMM). We compare safety, efficacy, and survival among patients with RRMM treated with standard-of-care (SOC) ide-cel or cilta-cel.

Methods: Data were from a retrospective chart review of patients with RRMM leukapheresed by December 31, 2022, with the intent to receive SOC ide-cel or cilta-cel at 19 institutions. An inverse probability of treatment weighting (IPTW) approach was used to compare outcomes by therapy type.

Results: A total of 641 patients were leukapheresed by December 31, 2022, with ide-cel (n = 386) and cilta-cel (n = 255). Five hundred eighty-six patients were infused (n = 350 for ide-cel; n = 236 for cilta-cel) with a median follow-up of 12.6 and 13.0 months for ide-cel and cilta-cel, respectively. After IPTW, patient characteristics were well balanced. Cilta-cel was associated with higher likelihood of grade ≥3 cytokine release syndrome (CRS; odds ratio [OR], 6.80 [95% CI, 2.28 to 20.33]), infections (OR, 2.03 [95% CI, 1.41 to 2.92]), second primary malignancies (OR, 1.77 [95% CI, 0.89 to 3.56]), and delayed neurotoxicity (OR, 20.07 [95% CI, 4.46 to 90.20]). Cilta-cel was also associated with better treatment responses (≥complete response: OR, 2.42 [95% CI, 1.63 to 3.60]), longer progression-free survival (hazard ratio [HR], 0.48 [95% CI, 0.36 to 0.63]), and longer overall survival (HR, 0.67 [95% CI, 0.46 to 0.97]). No associations were observed between therapy type and immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome, any CRS, severe cytopenia at days 30 and 90, or nonrelapse mortality. We observed consistent findings when repeating the analyses restricting the ide-cel cohort to patients infused during the same time period as Food and Drug Administration approval for cilta-cel (≥March 2022).

Conclusions: Cilta-cel demonstrated superior efficacy and survival, with higher incidence of certain toxicities, compared with ide-cel.

Authors
Doris Hansen, Lauren Peres, Danai Dima, Alicia Richards, Leyla Shune, Aimaz Afrough, Shonali Midha, Binod Dhakal, Mehmet Kocoglu, Shebli Atrash, Christopher Ferreri, Omar Castaneda, James Davis, Evguenia Bhurtel, Joseph Mcguirk, Charlotte Wagner, Radhika Bansal, Patrick Costello, Kinaya Smith, Alex Lieberman Cribbin, Gabriel De Avila, Sneha Purvey, Hitomi Hosoya, Lekha Mikkilineni, Laura Oswald, Gurbakhash Kaur, Oren Pasvolsky, Mahmoud Gaballa, Megan Herr, Peter Forsberg, Murali Janakiram, Myo Htut, Sireesha Asoori Maringanti, Nilesh Kalariya, Hamza Hashmi, Ran Reshef, Douglas Sborov, Omar Nadeem, Faiz Anwer, Jack Khouri, Shahzad Raza, Djordje Atanackovic, Melissa Alsina, Ciara Freeman, Frederick Locke, Peter Voorhees, Larry Anderson, Shambavi Richard, Thomas Martin, Yi Lin, Krina Patel, Surbhi Sidana
Relevant Conditions

Multiple Myeloma