In this issue of Blood, Röth et al1 report on the results from a phase 3 placebo-controlled study to assess the efficacy and safety of sutimlimab in participants with primary cold agglutinin disease (CAD) without a recent history of blood transfusion (CADENZA). The results of this study demonstrate the efficacy of sutimlimab in treating nontransfusion-dependent patients with CAD.
CAD is a rare autoimmune hemolytic anemia first described nearly 70 years ago. However, despite its early discovery, treatment options for CAD have often been indirect and of limited efficacy. CAD is initiated by binding immunoglobulin M (IgM) autoantibodies to the I antigen on erythrocytes at ≤37°C temperature (cold agglutinins), resulting in agglutination.2 This antibody–antigen complex triggers the activation of the classical complement pathway, leading to marked C3b-mediated extravascular hemolysis (EVH) and, to a lesser degree, C5b-9–mediated intravascular hemolysis (IVH), mostly during acute exacerbations (see figure). Clonal lymphocytes produce these predominantly monoclonal IgM antibodies in the bone marrow of patients with indolent clonal B-cell lymphoproliferative disorder.3 Patients with CAD can present with chronic anemia requiring blood transfusions and periodic acute hemolytic crisis, chronic fatigue, and cold-induced circulatory symptoms such as acrocyanosis, Raynaud-like symptoms, and even gangrene/ulcerations. In addition, some of these patients are at risk of thrombosis.3 It is paramount to distinguish this from transient cold agglutinin syndrome, which occurs secondary to infections (Mycoplasma pneumonia and Epstein-Barr virus) or cancer (aggressive lymphoma).
Immunomodulators have been the first-line agents to reduce clonal lymphoproliferation and monoclonal IgM antibody production. Rituximab to deplete B cells alone induced remission in approximately 50% of patients with a median response time of 1.5 months and a duration of 11 months.4 The addition of fludarabine, a nucleoside analog, to rituximab, as tried in other diseases such as Waldenstrom macroglobulinemia and lymphoma, was used in CAD with improved overall response rates to 76%, including an increased median response duration of 5.5 years. Unfortunately, this regimen was met with grade 3 or 4 hematological toxicity in about 40% of patients.5 A second combination therapy using bendamustine, an alkylating agent, with rituximab showed a similar overall response rate of about 70% with a slightly higher remission rate (40%) with a median response duration of just over 2.5 years. In addition, the rates of neutropenia and infections were slightly lower when compared with the rituximab–fludarabine combination.6 While these approaches can reduce antibody concentrations, none of these approaches directly target the ability of antibodies to induce hemolysis.
Although a key driver in CAD is antibody-mediated complement activation, very few therapeutics have historically been designed to directly modulate complement. This completely changed in recent years. Driven in part by the success of the monoclonal antibody against complement factor C5, eculizumab, an entire array of complement inhibitors is under investigation. The importance of targeting distinct components of the complement cascade is evident by an inadequate treatment response of CAD with eculizumab. A nonrandomized phase 2 study of terminal complement inhibition using eculizumab to block IVH in CAD therapy of chronic cold agglutinin disease with eculizumab (DECADE) demonstrated that C5 inhibition could reduce lactate dehydrogenase concentrations and transfusion dependency in 13 individuals but only resulted in modest improvement in hemoglobin (Hb), likely as a result of ongoing EVH.7
The inability of eculizumab to target proximal complement activation and, therefore, C3b-mediated EVH suggested that proximal complement inhibition may be necessary to effectively treat CAD. As a proof-of-concept study that the proximal classical pathway of complement inhibition may reduce EVH, Shi and colleagues reported that treating plasma samples from patients with CAD using a monoclonal antibody (TNT003) that targeted C1s inhibited the cold agglutinin-mediated C3 fragment deposition on normal erythrocytes, prevented subsequent complement anaphylatoxin (C4a, C3a, and C5a) production and downstream phagocytosis.8 Then sutimlimab, a humanized anti-C1s IgG monoclonal antibody, was studied in a phase 1b and phase 3 open-label, single-arm CARDINAL study.9,10 Both of these studies showed the benefit of C1s inhibition in improving Hb by halting EVH and reducing fatigue. However, the CARDINAL study only included patients who had received transfusion within 6 months before enrollment.
In this paper, Roth and colleagues provide further evidence of the benefit of sutimlimab in CAD. A rigorously performed phase 3 randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial was conducted at 27 sites across 13 countries and involved 42 patients with a confirmed diagnosis of CAD with Hb ≤10 g/dL and excluded patients with a history of blood transfusion within 6 months of screening or a history of >1 transfusion within 12 months. Sutimlimab was shown to meet the study-defined composite endpoint in 73% compared with 15% in the placebo group. This result is significant as all the responders to the drug demonstrated sustained rapid increase in their Hb concentrations by ≥2 g/dL associated with a reduction in hemolysis and improved fatigue scores. This is important as the study protocol prohibited immunomodulator therapies. There was no difference in adverse events between the groups. Of note, 3 patients in the sutimlimab group discontinued the study drug prematurely because of progression of underlying disease, a new diagnosis of lymphoma, and infusion-related reaction.
These findings give insight into the mechanisms of proximal complement pathway inhibition and how early or prompt initiation of complement inhibiting therapy can potentially be beneficial in such diseases. Furthermore, like studies using terminal complement inhibition, complement blockade in this study resulted in the improvement in fatigue, which along with amelioration of chronic anemia, could reflect inhibition of complement-mediated inflammation. While there was no difference in the infections between the groups, treating providers need to remain cautious. Additional real-world studies are needed to more fully define the benefits and risks associated with sutimlimab treatment. Equally important, future clinical trials should identify the patients who would likely benefit from such complement inhibition and how baseline patient characteristics affect the response. However, given the unique ability of sutimlimab to block proximal complement activation, this approach holds promise in providing another avenue of complement inhibition that may be useful not only for CAD but other disease states with complement involvement that are less responsive to more terminal complement inhibitors.
Conflict-of-interest disclosure: S.R.S. is a consultant for Alexion, Novartis, Cellics, and Argenx and receives honoraria for speaking engagements for Grifols. S.C. is a scientific advisor to Agios, Alexion, Daichi Sankyo, Forma Therapeutics, Novartis, and Takeda Pharmaceuticals and receives research funds from Novartis and Global Blood Therapeutics.
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