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Leukemia and Lymphoma 2009-Apr

Phase III randomised study of dexamethasone with or without oblimersen sodium for patients with advanced multiple myeloma.

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Asher A Chanan-Khan
Ruben Niesvizky
Raymond J Hohl
Todd M Zimmerman
Neal P Christiansen
Gary J Schiller
Natalie Callander
John Lister
Martin Oken
Sundar Jagannath

Keywords

Abstract

Upregulation of the Bcl-2 antiapoptotic protein is reported to be associated with aggressive clinical course in multiple myeloma. Oblimersen sodium is a bcl-2 antisense oligonucleotide complementary to the first six codons of the open-reading frame of bcl-2 mRNA that can decrease transcription of Bcl-2 protein and increase myeloma cell susceptibility to cytotoxic agents. In this phase III randomised trial, we investigated in patients with relapsed/refractory myeloma whether addition of oblimersen to dexamethasone improved clinical outcomes vs. dexamethasone alone. Two hundred and twenty-four patients were randomised to receive either oblimersen/dexamethasone (N = 110) or dexamethasone alone (N = 114). The primary endpoint was time to tumor progression (TTP). Final results of this study demonstrated no significant differences between the two groups in TTP or objective response rate. The oblimersen/dexamethasone regimen was generally well tolerated with fatigue, fever and nausea, the most common adverse events reported.

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