• A total of 38% of patients who achieved CR (13 of 34) on brentuximab vedotin have remained in remission for >5 years and may be cured.

  • Nine of the 13 patients (9% of all enrolled patients) have remained in long-term remission without a consolidative allogeneic transplant.

Presented here are the 5-year end-of-study results from the pivotal phase 2 trial of brentuximab vedotin in patients with relapsed/refractory (R/R) Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) after failed hematopoietic autologous stem cell transplantation. At 5 years, the overall patient population (N = 102) had an estimated overall survival (OS) rate of 41% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 31-51) and progression-free survival (PFS) rate of 22% (95% CI: 13-31). Patients who achieved a complete response (CR) to brentuximab vedotin (N = 34) had estimated OS and PFS rates of 64% (95% CI: 48-80%) and 52% (95% CI: 34-69%), respectively. The median OS and PFS were not reached in CR patients, with 13 patients (38% of all CR patients) remaining in follow-up and in remission at study closure. Of the 13 patients, 4 received consolidative hematopoietic allogeneic stem cell transplant, and 9 (9% of all enrolled patients) remain in sustained CR without receiving any further anticancer therapy after treatment with brentuximab vedotin. Of the patients who experienced treatment-emergent peripheral neuropathy, 88% experienced either resolution (73%) or improvement (14%) in symptoms. These 5-year follow-up data demonstrate that a subset of patients with R/R HL who obtained CR with single-agent brentuximab vedotin achieved long-term disease control and may potentially be cured. The trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT00848926.

Brentuximab vedotin (ADCETRIS; Aptuit [Glasgow] Ltd., Glasgow, United Kingdom) is an anti-CD30 antibody conjugated by a protease-cleavable linker to the microtubule-disrupting agent monomethyl auristatin E (MMAE). Targeted delivery of MMAE to CD30-expressing tumor cells is the primary mechanism of action.1  Additional mechanisms of tumor cell killing that may contribute to the clinical activity of brentuximab vedotin include antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis, immunogenic cell death, and the bystander effect.2-6 

We previously reported the primary results for the pivotal trial of brentuximab vedotin in 102 patients with relapsed/refractory (R/R) Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) after failed autologous stem cell transplantation (auto-SCT),7  with a complete response (CR) rate of 34% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 25.2-44.4) and objective response rate of 75% (95% CI: 64.9-82.6) per independent review. Brentuximab vedotin received accelerated US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for patients with R/R HL after auto-SCT or failure of ≥2 prior therapies.

In the pre–brentuximab vedotin era, options were limited and outcomes were poor for HL patients who relapsed or progressed after auto-SCT, with median overall survival (OS) ranging from 10.5 to 27.6 months.8,9  Reduced intensity conditioning (RIC) allogeneic SCT (allo-SCT) strategies have been studied, but toxicity is high and relapses are common, with 2- to 3-year nonrelapse mortality and median progression-free survival (PFS) ranging from 13% to 23% and 20% to 30%, respectively,10-13  and a 5-year OS of 28%.13 

Previous reports from the pivotal phase 2 trial of brentuximab vedotin demonstrated both significant efficacy and 3-year disease control in heavily pretreated R/R HL patients.7,14  Herein, we present the final end-of study results per investigator assessment.

Complete descriptions of the study design and statistical analyses have been reported.7  Patients received 1.8 mg/kg brentuximab vedotin via outpatient intravenous infusion over 30 minutes, once every 3 weeks, for up to 16 cycles. Clinical response was determined by independent central review and by investigators using the Revised Response Criteria for Malignant Lymphoma.15  Response duration was calculated from the first objective tumor response (CR or partial response [PR]) to tumor progression or death due to any cause, and PFS was calculated from the start of treatment to tumor progression or death. Patients were censored at their last radiologic or clinical assessment that documented the absence of progressive disease. OS was calculated from the start of study treatment to date of death due to any cause and was censored at the last date the patient was known to be alive.

To capture all peripheral neuropathy (PN) events, an analysis was performed using the standard Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities. Grade of severity was determined per the National Cancer Institute Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events, version 3.

Prior to study initiation, the protocol, informed consent form, and any advertisements for patient recruitment were approved by each site’s institutional review board or independent ethics committee.

At the time of study closure, which occurred ∼5 years from the last patient’s end of treatment visit, 15 patients remained on study and in remission without the start of new therapy other than consolidative allo-SCT. These 15 patients had a median observation time of 69.5 months (range, 66.5-72.9 months). The median observation time for all enrolled patients (N = 102) from first dose was 35.1 months (range, 1.8-72.9 months). The median OS and PFS were 40.5 (95% CI: 28.7-61.9) and 9.3 months (95% CI: 7.1-12.2), respectively (Figure 1A-B), and the estimated 5-year OS and PFS rates were 41% (95% CI: 31-51) and 22% (95% CI: 13-31), respectively.

Figure 1

Summary of 5-year follow-up results. OS and PFS were analyzed using Kaplan-Meier methodology and are shown (A-B) overall and (C-D) by best response. All censored patients are indicated by dots on the Kaplan-Meier curve. Patients followed through study closure and in remission without the start of new therapy other than allo-SCT are indicated by red dots (N = 15). (E) Observation time for the subset of 15 patients still in remission and in follow-up at study closure. Patients are shaded according to their best response with brentuximab vedotin. Six patients received a consolidative allo-SCT, and 9 patients received no further therapy after completing brentuximab vedotin. (F-G) OS and PFS are shown for the patients who achieved a CR on brentuximab vedotin (N = 34) as the subset of patients who received a consolidative allo-SCT (N = 6) or did not (N = 28). All censored patients are indicated by dots on the Kaplan-Meier curve.

Figure 1

Summary of 5-year follow-up results. OS and PFS were analyzed using Kaplan-Meier methodology and are shown (A-B) overall and (C-D) by best response. All censored patients are indicated by dots on the Kaplan-Meier curve. Patients followed through study closure and in remission without the start of new therapy other than allo-SCT are indicated by red dots (N = 15). (E) Observation time for the subset of 15 patients still in remission and in follow-up at study closure. Patients are shaded according to their best response with brentuximab vedotin. Six patients received a consolidative allo-SCT, and 9 patients received no further therapy after completing brentuximab vedotin. (F-G) OS and PFS are shown for the patients who achieved a CR on brentuximab vedotin (N = 34) as the subset of patients who received a consolidative allo-SCT (N = 6) or did not (N = 28). All censored patients are indicated by dots on the Kaplan-Meier curve.

Close modal

Of the 102 enrolled patients, 77 (75%) received ≥1 anticancer therapy following brentuximab vedotin. Forty-four of the 77 patients received multiagent therapy, 42 received single-agent therapy, and 22 underwent stem cell transplant, 8 of whom received consolidative allo-SCT. Excluding consolidative allo-SCT, the median number of subsequent treatments received was 3 (range, 1-10). Thirteen of the 77 received brentuximab vedotin retreatment (10 as single-agent and 3 in a multiagent regimen), and 6 patients received treatment with a programmed death 1 pathway inhibitor (5 as single agent and 1 in a combination therapy), as summarized in supplemental Table 1, available on the Blood Web site. Brentuximab vedotin retreatment results, including a second response in 60% (30% CR) of HL patients with median response duration of 9.2 months, have been described previously.16 

Per investigator, 34 of the 102 enrolled patients (33%) achieved a CR on the study, and improved outcomes were observed for this group. The median response duration was not reached in this subset (95% CI: 20.5, nonestimable [range, 2 to 71.6+]), the estimated 5-year OS rate was 64% (95% CI: 48-80), and PFS was 52% (95% CI: 34-69) (Figure 1C-D). Of the 15 patients in remission at study closure, 13 had achieved CR (having received a median 14 cycles of brentuximab vedotin) and 2 achieved a PR (median, 6.5 cycles) as their best response. The 2 PR patients converted to CR after allo-SCT (Figure 1E). Relative to their most recent prior therapy, 12 of these patients had relapsed, and 3 had refractory disease. Nine patients had primary refractory disease defined as failure to achieve CR or relapse within 3 months of frontline therapy.

Of the 13 CR patients that remained in follow-up and in remission, 4 patients underwent a consolidative allo-SCT, and 9 (26% of all CR patients) received no further cancer treatment after brentuximab vedotin. Characterization of these 9 patients with sustained remission and the patients who achieved CR but subsequently relapsed without having received a consolidative allo-SCT are provided in Table 1. Patients with sustained CR tended to be younger and with more extranodal disease relative to patients who did not achieve CR, and had a shorter interval from both initial diagnosis and most recent relapse to initiation of treatment with brentuximab vedotin.14  By-patient demographics and disease characteristics for these 9 patients are provided in supplemental Table 2.

Of the 34 CR patients, there were 6 total that underwent a consolidative allo-SCT as their next therapy subsequent to brentuximab vedotin. The estimated 5-year PFS and OS rates are 67% (95% CI: 29-100) and 83% (95% CI: 54-100) for these 6 patients, and 48% (95% CI: 28-68) and 60% (95% CI: 41-78) for the other 28 nontransplant CR patients (Figure 1F-G), respectively. As there were only 6 patients that underwent consolidative allo-SCT on this study, further studies are needed to define which patients may benefit from this therapy. Among the 6, 2 patients died and 4 remained in CR at study closure. Of the 28 patients who did not receive consolidative allo-SCT, 14 were known to have relapsed lymphoma, 10 remained in remission (1 of whom received consolidative radiation which was considered a new treatment), and 4 came off study prior to closure due to other reasons.

PN is the most common adverse effect associated with accumulated exposure to brentuximab vedotin. Patients on the pivotal trial who experienced PN symptoms were followed for improvement and/or resolution until ∼3 years into long-term follow-up. Of the 56 patients (55% of enrolled patients) who experienced PN, 49 (88%) experienced resolution or improvement, with 41 (73%) reporting complete resolution and 8 (14%) reporting some improvement at last assessment. Of the 15 patients with ongoing neuropathy at last follow-up, 11 patients had grade 1 severity and 4 patients had grade 2. Overall, patients experienced resolution or improvement of symptoms from 1 week to >1 year after onset. Of the 15 patients in remission at study closure, 10 experienced PN, with 9 experiencing complete resolution. Larger experiences with brentuximab vedotin have been described in recent reports and support PN and neutropenia as the most common adverse effects associated with this therapy.17,18 

In these final results, we report that 9% (9 of 102) of the enrolled study population has achieved long-term remission exceeding 5 years in response to single-agent brentuximab vedotin without any additional therapy. Given that the historical outcomes are poor for HL patients who relapse after auto-SCT, these results provide a new perspective on prognosis for this patient population in the brentuximab vedotin era. For patients who achieve CR in response to brentuximab vedotin, the notion that RIC allo-SCT is the only option for long-term disease control is challenged. These results show that CR patients have a 5-year OS of 64% and PFS of 52%, with the majority not undergoing allo-SCT (28 vs 6), and 9 of 28 experiencing durable remissions in the absence of allo-SCT. Furthermore, the reported toxicities were manageable, with the most common toxicity of PN demonstrating a high rate of resolution. Encouragingly, the rate continues to increase over time, with 88% of patients demonstrating complete resolution or improvement at 5 years vs 80% at last report.7 

In summary, these end-of-study survival outcomes and freedom-from-progression results demonstrate that, among patients with R/R HL, a substantial fraction of patients who obtained CR with single-agent brentuximab vedotin have achieved long-term disease control and may potentially be cured.

Presented in part at the 57th annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology, Orlando, FL, December 5-8, 2015.

The online version of this article contains a data supplement.

The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. Therefore, and solely to indicate this fact, this article is hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 USC section 1734.

The authors thank Katrina Sebolt (Seattle Genetics, Inc) for assistance in manuscript preparation.

Direct funding for this research was issued by Seattle Genetics, Inc through the joint financial support of Seattle Genetics, Inc and Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc, a wholly owned subsidiary of Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited. A.K.G. is a Scholar in Clinical Research of the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society and is supported by National Institutes of Health (NIH) National Cancer Institute (NCI) grants P01CA44991 and K24CA184039, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center/University of Washington Cancer Consortium Cancer Center support grant P30 CA015704, and gifts from Frank and Betty Vandermeer. R.C. is a Tim Nesvig Lymphoma Fellow and supported by the NIH NCI awards K12CA001727 and P30CA033572 and a Cancer Clinical Investigator Team Leadership Awardees award.

The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.

Contribution: R.C., A.K.G., E.K.L., D.H., and A.F. contributed to the analysis and interpretation of the data and wrote the manuscript; R.C., A.K.G., S.E.S., S.M.A., J.D.R., K.J.S., J.M.C., A.E., and A.Y. contributed to the acquisition of the data; S.E.S., S.M.A., J.D.R., K.J.S., J.M.C., A.E., and A.Y. critically reviewed the manuscript; and all authors contributed to the concept and design of the study and approved the final version of the manuscript.

Conflict-of-interest disclosure: Seattle Genetics, Inc provided research funding to the institutions of R.C., A.K.G., S.E.S., S.M.A., J.D.R., K.J.S., J.M.C., A.E., and A.Y. R.C., A.K.G., and K.J.S. have acted as consultants for Seattle Genetics, Inc, and A.K.G., A.Y., A.E., and K.J.S. have received honoraria from Seattle Genetics, Inc. A.Y. has been a member of Seattle Genetics, Inc advisory/scientific boards. R.C. and K.J.S. participated in a Seattle Genetics, Inc speakers’ bureau and received travel expenses from Seattle Genetics, Inc. E.K.L. and A.F. are employees of and have equity ownership in Seattle Genetics, Inc. Takeda Pharmaceuticals International Co has provided research funding to the institutions of J.M.C., K.J.S., A.E., and A.K.G. A.E., A.K.G., and A.Y. have received honoraria from Takeda Pharmaceuticals International Co. D.H. is an employee and has equity ownership in Takeda Pharmaceuticals International Co.

Correspondence: Robert Chen, City of Hope, 1500 E. Duarte Rd, Duarte, CA 91010; e-mail: rchen@coh.org.

1
Sutherland
 
MS
Sanderson
 
RJ
Gordon
 
KA
et al. 
Lysosomal trafficking and cysteine protease metabolism confer target-specific cytotoxicity by peptide-linked anti-CD30-auristatin conjugates.
J Biol Chem
2006
, vol. 
281
 
15
(pg. 
10540
-
10547
)
2
Oflazoglu
 
E
Stone
 
IJ
Gordon
 
KA
et al. 
Macrophages contribute to the antitumor activity of the anti-CD30 antibody SGN-30.
Blood
2007
, vol. 
110
 
13
(pg. 
4370
-
4372
)
3
Kim
 
YH
Tavallaee
 
M
Sundram
 
U
et al. 
Phase II investigator-initiated study of brentuximab vedotin in Mycosis Fungoides and Sezary Syndrome with variable CD30 expression level: A multi-institution collaborative project.
J Clin Oncol
2015
, vol. 
33
 
32
(pg. 
3750
-
3758
)
4
Müller
 
P
Martin
 
K
Theurich
 
S
et al. 
Microtubule-depolymerizing agents used in antibody-drug conjugates induce antitumor immunity by stimulation of dendritic cells.
Cancer Immunol Res
2014
, vol. 
2
 
8
(pg. 
741
-
755
)
5
Gardai
 
SJ
Epp
 
A
Law
 
C-L
Brentuximab vedotin-mediated immunogenic cell death [abstract].
Cancer Res
2015
 
75(15 Suppl). Abstract 2469
6
Li
 
F
Zhang
 
X
Emmerton
 
K
et al. 
Relationship between in vivo antitumor activity of ADC and payload release in preclinical models [abstract].
Cancer Res
2014
 
74(19 Suppl). Abstract 3694
7
Younes
 
A
Gopal
 
AK
Smith
 
SE
et al. 
Results of a pivotal phase II study of brentuximab vedotin for patients with relapsed or refractory Hodgkin’s lymphoma.
J Clin Oncol
2012
, vol. 
30
 
18
(pg. 
2183
-
2189
)
8
Arai
 
S
Fanale
 
M
DeVos
 
S
et al. 
Defining a Hodgkin lymphoma population for novel therapeutics after relapse from autologous hematopoietic cell transplant.
Leuk Lymphoma
2013
, vol. 
54
 
11
(pg. 
2531
-
2533
)
9
Crump
 
M
Management of Hodgkin lymphoma in relapse after autologous stem cell transplant.
Hematology Am Soc Hematol Educ Program
2008
, vol. 
2008
 (pg. 
326
-
333
)
10
Burroughs
 
LM
O’Donnell
 
PV
Sandmaier
 
BM
et al. 
Comparison of outcomes of HLA-matched related, unrelated, or HLA-haploidentical related hematopoietic cell transplantation following nonmyeloablative conditioning for relapsed or refractory Hodgkin lymphoma.
Biol Blood Marrow Transplant
2008
, vol. 
14
 
11
(pg. 
1279
-
1287
)
11
Anderlini
 
P
Saliba
 
R
Acholonu
 
S
et al. 
Reduced-intensity allogeneic stem cell transplantation in relapsed and refractory Hodgkin’s disease: low transplant-related mortality and impact of intensity of conditioning regimen.
Bone Marrow Transplant
2005
, vol. 
35
 
10
(pg. 
943
-
951
)
12
Chen
 
R
Palmer
 
JM
Popplewell
 
L
et al. 
Reduced intensity allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation can induce durable remission in heavily pretreated relapsed Hodgkin lymphoma.
Ann Hematol
2011
, vol. 
90
 
7
(pg. 
803
-
808
)
13
Sureda
 
A
Robinson
 
S
Canals
 
C
et al. 
Reduced-intensity conditioning compared with conventional allogeneic stem-cell transplantation in relapsed or refractory Hodgkin’s lymphoma: an analysis from the Lymphoma Working Party of the European Group for Blood and Marrow Transplantation.
J Clin Oncol
2008
, vol. 
26
 
3
(pg. 
455
-
462
)
14
Gopal
 
AK
Chen
 
R
Smith
 
SE
et al. 
Durable remissions in a pivotal phase 2 study of brentuximab vedotin in relapsed or refractory Hodgkin lymphoma.
Blood
2015
, vol. 
125
 
8
(pg. 
1236
-
1243
)
15
Cheson
 
BD
Pfistner
 
B
Juweid
 
ME
et al. 
International Harmonization Project on Lymphoma
Revised response criteria for malignant lymphoma.
J Clin Oncol
2007
, vol. 
25
 
5
(pg. 
579
-
586
)
16
Bartlett
 
NL
Chen
 
R
Fanale
 
MA
et al. 
Retreatment with brentuximab vedotin in patients with CD30-positive hematologic malignancies.
J Hematol Oncol
2014
, vol. 
7
 
1
pg. 
24
 
17
Zinzani
 
PL
Sasse
 
S
Radford
 
J
Shonukan
 
O
Bonthapally
 
V
Experience of brentuximab vedotin in relapsed/refractory Hodgkin lymphoma and relapsed/refractory systemic anaplastic large-cell lymphoma in the Named Patient Program: Review of the literature.
Crit Rev Oncol Hematol
2015
, vol. 
95
 
3
(pg. 
359
-
369
)
18
Perrot
 
A
Monjanel
 
H
Bouabdallah
 
R
et al. 
Lymphoma Study Association (LYSA)
Impact of post-brentuximab vedotin consolidation on relapsed/refractory CD30+ Hodgkin lymphomas: a large retrospective study on 240 patients enrolled in the French Named-Patient Program.
Haematologica
2016
, vol. 
101
 
4
(pg. 
466
-
473
)

Author notes

*

R.C. and A.K.G. are co-first authors.

Supplemental data

Sign in via your Institution