Differentiation syndrome associated with treatment with IDH2 inhibitor enasidenib - pooled analysis from clinical trials
Pau Montesinos, Amir T. Fathi, Stéphane de Botton, Eytan M. Stein, Amer M. Zeidan, Yue Zhu, Thomas Prebet, Carlos Enrique Vigil, Iryna Bluemmert, Xin Yu, Courtney D DiNardo- Hematology
Treatment with enasidenib, a selective mutant-IDH2 inhibitor, has been associated with the development of differentiation syndrome (DS) in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Studies on the incidence and clinical features of DS are limited in this setting, and diagnosis is challenging due to non-specific symptoms. This study assessed the incidence, diagnostic criteria, risk factors, and correlation with clinical response of DS based on the pooled analysis of 4 clinical trials in patients with IDH2-mutated AML treated with enasidenib as monotherapy, or in combination with azacitidine or with chemotherapy. Across the total AML population, 10.4% (67/643) had ≥1 any-grade DS event, with highest incidence in patients who received enasidenib plus azacitidine and lowest incidence in patients who received enasidenib plus chemotherapy (17.6% [13/74] and 2.2% [2/93]). The most common symptoms of DS were dyspnea/hypoxia (80.6%) and pulmonary infiltrate (73.1%). Median time to onset of first DS event across all studies was 32 days (range: 4-129 days). Most patients (88.1%) received systemic steroids for treatment of DS. Evaluation of baseline risk factors for DS identified higher levels of bone marrow blasts and lactate dehydrogenase as independent factors associated with increased grade 3-5 DS risk. Overall, these results suggest that DS associated with IDH inhibition is manageable, given the benefits of enasidenib treatment in IDH2-mutated AML. We further characterized enasidenib-related DS in these patients and identified risk factors, which could be used for DS management in clinical practice. Clinical Trials #: NCT01915498, NCT02577406, NCT02677922, NCT02632708