Commentary
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The SEQUOIA study's 5-year follow-up confirms zanubrutinib's safety profile and low cardiovascular events in treatment-naive chronic lymphocytic leukemia, according to Mazyar Shadman, MD, MPH, of Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center.
The SEQUOIA study's 5-year follow-up of a cohort of patients with treatment-naive chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) without del(17p) demonstrated zanubrutinib’s sustained superior progression-free survival (PFS) compared with bendamustine plus rituximab.1 Zanubrutinib showed a significant improvement in PFS, regardless of IGHV mutation status. The safety profile remains consistent, with low rates of atrial fibrillation and no new safety signals, reinforcing zanubrutinib's role as a standard frontline therapy.
In an interview with The American Journal of Managed Care® (AJMC®), Mazyar Shadman, MD, MPH, associate professor, Clinical Research Division, and medical director, Cellular Immunotherapy, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center, discussed the safety profile of zanubrutinib (Brukinsa, BeiGene) compared with other Bruton tyrosine kinase (BTK) inhibitors.
Shadman presented the 5-year follow-up data at the American Society of Hematology Annual Meeting, held December 7-10, in San Diego, California.
Transcript
AJMC: Can you speak to the importance of zanubrutinib’s safety profile related to cardiovascular events compared with other BTK inhibitors?
Shadman: When we talk about comparing to other BTK inhibitors, we should remember that it's very difficult to talk about it outside of the head-to-head randomized trials. The only study in CLL that we have in terms of comparing zanubrutinib to ibrutinib is ALPINE, and in that study, one of the main secondary end points was cumulative incidence of cardiovascular events.2 Zanubrutinib was associated with a lower rate of AFib [atrial fibrillation] and atrial flutter, lower rate of cardiovascular events, [and] no report of grade 5 cardiac events, which was great. The rate of hypertension was not different compared to ibrutinib, but that did not translate to a higher cardiovascular end point. That's the head-to head trial in CLL.
We have a head-to-head trial in Waldenström [macroglobulinemia] with the ASPEN trial that kind of showed the same.3 In addition to the rate of hypertension, that was also lower compared to ibrutinib. From SEQUOIA, all we can say is that number 1, compared to chemotherapy, the exposure-adjusted risk of AFib, hypertension—the 2 big adverse events of interest cardiac-wise—were pretty similar to the chemotherapy arm and chemotherapy. If you think about it, that would be the background risk for the population that enrolled in this study, which is similar—from the age and comorbidity standpoint—to what we see in practice. The numbers look really close to what you see with non-BTK inhibitor therapy. I think that's important now.
You have to do a head-to-head randomized trial to compare zanubrutinib versus acalabrutinib (Calquence, AstraZeneca) or pirtobrutinib (Jaypirca; Lilly) to make specific comments about the relative cardiac safety, which we don't have that data.
AJMC: Given zanubrutinib and other BTK inhibitors are taken indefinitely for CLL, how does the safety profile take on new importance?
Shadman: At 5 years of follow up, 68% of patients are still taking the drug. There's a very good chance that, with longer follow-up, a high percentage of patients are still taking these drugs. When you talk to a patient before starting zanubrutinib, they want to know how well the drug works, but they also want to know what side effects they should be expecting 3, 4, 5, 6, 10 years later. And that's why data like the long-term follow-up of studies like SEQUOIA are extremely important, and we discussed that we're not seeing any new safety signals, and if anything, the adverse events that we commonly think about are not alarming at this time, with this current follow-up, at least.
References
1. Shadman M, Munir T, Robak T, et al. Sustained superiority of zanubrutinib vs bendamustine + rituximab in treatment-naive chronic lymphocytic leukemia/small lymphocytic lymphoma (TN CLL): 5-year follow-up of cohort 1 from the SEQUOIA study. Presented at: ASH 2024; December 7-10, 2024; San Diego, California. Abstract 3249.
2. Brown JR, Eichhorst B, Hillmen P, et al. Zanubrutinib or ibrutinib in relapsed or refractory chronic lymphocytic leukemia. N Engl J Med. 2023;388(4):319-332. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa2211582
3. Tam CS, Opat S, D’Sa S, et al. A randomized phase 3 trial of zanubrutinib vs ibrutinib in symptomatic Waldenström macroglobulinemia: the ASPEN study. Blood. 2020;136(18):2038-2050. doi:10.1182/blood.2020006844