Agios leukemia drug
demonstrates impressive response rate: study
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[June 12, 2015] By
Bill Berkrot
(Reuters) - Forty percent of patients, most
with a particularly aggressive form of leukemia, responded to an
experimental Agios Pharmaceuticals Inc drug, including several who
experienced complete remission, according to data presented at a medical
meeting on Friday.
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New data from the ongoing Phase I clinical trial appears to confirm
the early promise seen with the Agios drug, AG-221.
Patients in the study either had the aggressive bone marrow cancer
acute myelogenous leukemia (AML), or the pre-leukemic blood disorder
myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS).
Among 63 patients who responded to the treatment out of 158 who were
evaluated, 26, or 16 percent, had no sign of cancer in the bone
marrow and a return to normal blood cell counts.
Another three patients were in remission without recovery of normal
platelet count, while 16 more had also cleared leukemia from bone
marrow without full restoration of other types of blood cells, such
as infection-fighting neutrophils.
Forty percent response "is remarkably exciting in this kind of
patient population," said Dr. Eytan Stein, from Memorial Sloan
Kettering Cancer Center in New York, who presented the data at the
European Hematology Association meeting in Vienna.
Patients with advanced AML typically have a response rate of under
10 percent, Stein explained. "This drug appears to be transformative
for patients who receive it."
In addition to complete remission categories, 18 patients
experienced partial remission, defined as at least a 50 percent
reduction in leukemia cells with normal platelets and neutrophils.
"If you normalize someone's platelet count and give someone an
immune system with this drug that works to transform leukemia cells
into healthy adult infection-fighting cells, then you have really
done the patient tremendous good," Stein said.
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Of the 14 MDS patients in the trial, half had some form of complete
remission.
Three quarters of those who responded to AG-221 have been on the
drug for at least 6 months, the longest for nearly 16 months, Stein
said. Overall survival data was not available.
The safety profile of AG-221 appears to be similar to what was seen
earlier in the study with fewer patients. Serious adverse side
effects possibly related to the drug were reported in 27 patients.
"There has been no hint of any new safety concerns that I have seen
in the data or the patients that I have treated in the trial," Stein
said.
Agios and partner Celgene Corp are planning a large Phase III AML
study of AG-221.
(Reporting by Bill Berkrot; Editing by James Dalgleish)
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