Ivosidenib (AG120)

Phase Ib/II Investigator Initiated Study of the IDH1-Mutant Inhibitor Ivosidenib (AG120) With the BCL2 Inhibitor Venetoclax +/- Azacitidine in IDH1-Mutated Hematologic Malignancies

What's the purpose of the trial?

This phase Ib/II trial studies the side effects and best dose of venetoclax and how well it works when given together with ivosidenib with or without azacitidine, in treating patients with IDH1-mutated hematologic malignancies. Venetoclax and ivosidenib may stop the growth of cancer cells by blocking some of the enzymes needed for cell growth. Drugs used in chemotherapy, such as azacitidine, work in different ways to stop the growth of cancer cells, either by killing the cells, by stopping them from dividing, or by stopping them from spreading. Giving ivosidenib and venetoclax with azacitidine may work better in treating patients with hematologic malignancies compared to ivosidenib and venetoclax alone.
Trial status

Accepting patients

Phase
Phase 1/2
Enrollment
64
Last Updated
1 month ago
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Experimental Treatments

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  • Azacitidine is a type of chemotherapy called a hypomethylating agent that interferes with the growth and spread of cancer cells in the body. 
  • Ivosidenib is a small molecule inhibitor that is approved for use in acute myeloid leukemia and cholangiocarcinoma.
  • Venetoclax is a BCL-2 inhibitor that may work by blocking the action of the BCL-2 protein on some cancer cells which can lead to cell death. 

Arms / Cohorts

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Accepting patients

Venetoclax + Ivosidenib + Azacitidine

Published Results

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A phase Ib/II study of ivosidenib with venetoclax +/- azacitidine in IDH1-mutated myeloid malignancies

25 evaluable patients (DL1: 6, DL2: 6, DL3: 13) enrolled with a median follow-up of 16.1 months. Median age was 67 (range: 44-84). 84% (N=21) of patients had AML (ND: N=13 [TN: 8, sAML: 5], R/R: N=8), while 16% (N=4) had MDS. ELN risk was intermediate and adverse in 16% (N=4) and 56% (N=14). Median IDH1 VAF at enrollment was 22.7% (range: 5.1%-47.8%). Two patients had received a prior IDH1 inhibitor. The ORR was 92% (DL1: 67%, DL2: 100%, DL3: 100%). Composite CR (CRc: CR+CRi+CRh) was 84% (DL1: 67%, DL2: 100%, DL3: 85%) including 92% (TN: 100%, sAML: 80%), 63%, and 100% of patients with ND-AML, R/R-AML, or MDS. Median number of cycles received was 4 (DL1: 8.5, DL2: 6, DL3: 4) with ongoing responses in 62% (DL1: 33%, DL2: 50%, DL3: 82%) at 1-year. 8 patients transitioned to SCT (DL1: 0, DL2: 2, DL3: 6), and 8 patients remain on study (DL1: 2, DL2: 1, DL3: 5). 1-year OS was 68% for the entire study population (DL1: 50%, DL2: 67%, DL3: 78%), 71% in ND-AML (TN: 86%, sAML: 60%), 50% in R/R-AML, and 100% in MDS. Measurable residual disease negative CRc by multiparameter flow cytometry was attained in 60% (ND-AML: 67%, R/R-AML: 60%, MDS: 33%) correlating with improved OS (median OS: NR vs. 8.5 months, p-value: 0.038). Common grade 3/4 adverse events included febrile neutropenia (28%) and pneumonia (24%). Tumor lysis and differentiation syndrome occurred in two and four patients; all cases resolved with medical management.

3 years ago Read more

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