Pirtobrutinib Delays Progression in CLL Alread... - CLL Support

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Pirtobrutinib Delays Progression in CLL Already Treated With a BTK Inhibitor. (BRUIN CLL-321 Phase III trial results reported at ASH2024)

AussieNeil profile image
AussieNeilPartnerAdministrator
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Pirtobrutinib is the first FDA approved non-covalent BTK inhibitor (BTKi) for the treatment of CLL. The previously approved BTKi drugs (acalabrutinib, ibrutinib and zanubrutinib) bond covalently. Eventually, these drugs can stop inhibiting CLL, when DNA changes in the BTK enzyme prevent the BTKi from locking onto the enzyme in the B Cell Receptor (BCR) signalling pathway that keeps the CLL cells alive. The promise of non-covalent bonding BTKis, is that they usually work when CLL becomes resistant to a covalent BTKi. Early pirtobrutinib clinical trial results weren't all that encouraging, as trial participants had had previous treatments and we get our longest remissions from our first treatment.

From MedPage Today's ASH 2024 coverage (registration needed) of the international BRUIN CLL-321 Phase III randomized trial with 238 patients, with my emphasis; medpagetoday.com/meetingcov...

Pirtobrutinib (Jaypirca) delayed disease progression versus other available options in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) who had previously received a covalent Bruton's tyrosine kinase (BTK) inhibitor, a phase III study showed.

Median progression-free survival (PFS) reached 14 months with pirtobrutinib, an oral non-covalent BTK inhibitor, as compared with 8.7 months with investigator's choice of idelalisib (Zydelig) plus rituximab (Rituxan) or bendamustine (Bendeka, Treanda) plus rituximab (HR 0.54, 95% CI 0.39-0.75, P=0.0002), reported Jeff Sharman, MD, of Willamette Valley Cancer Institute and Research Center and U.S. Oncology Research in Eugene, Oregon.

Though the trial met its primary endpoint of PFS, no significant difference in overall survival (OS) was observed (HR 1.09, 95% CI 0.68-1.75), with the analysis "confounded by over three-quarters of subjects who crossed over to subsequent pirtobrutinib from investigator's choice", he said during a presentation at the American Society of Hematology annual meeting.

"In this high-risk population with relapsed and refractory disease and extensive prior therapy, pirtobrutinib demonstrated superior PFS and low rates of treatment discontinuation," Sharman said in his conclusion. "Patients were able to delay next therapy or death for a median of approximately 2 years, or 2.5 years among venetoclax [Venclexta]-naive subjects. Pirtobrutinib is an effective, well-tolerated agent among patients with difficult-to-treat disease and provides a clinically meaningful way to sustain BTK inhibition."

- The study population had poor-prognosis disease, with 54% harboring 17p deletions and/or TP53 mutations, and over 60% with complex karyotype. They had been heavily pretreated as well, with a third having received at least four prior lines of therapy, including a BCL2 inhibitor in about 50%

- Venetoclax-naive patients had a median time to next treatment or death of 29.5 months with pirtobrutinib versus 12.5 months with investigator's choice (HR 0.36, 95% CI 0.21-0.61), while median times among venetoclax-exposed patients were 20 and 8.7 months, respectively (HR 0.37, 95% CI 0.23-0.60).

So while Pirtobrutinib is a better bridging treatment than alternatives, more still needs to be done for those who have developed resistance to covalent BTKi and BCL-2 treatments (lisaftoclax, sonrotoclax, venetoclax, etc.)

For background on BTKi drugs approved and in clinical trials, as well as other recent developments in the treatment of CLL, see healthunlocked.com/cllsuppo...

Neil

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craterlake profile image
craterlake

wonderful news . thanks again . Neil.. 😊

nuji profile image
nuji

Are there any trials to see if Pirtobrutinib is suitable as first line of treatment for treatment naive people? If yes, how long has this trial been in progress?

AussieNeil profile image
AussieNeilPartnerAdministrator in reply tonuji

Sorry, I couldn't find any clinicaltrials.gov/search?c...

CLLerinOz profile image
CLLerinOzAdministrator in reply tonuji

There was an abstract presented at ASH 2024 which reported on the use of "Pirtobrutinib, Venetoclax, and Obinutuzumab As First-Line Treatment of Patients with Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL)"

There's a link in this post to the abstract and a commentary article that was published in Onclive: healthunlocked.com/cllsuppo... (It's abstract 1011)

CLLerinOz

AussieNeil profile image
AussieNeilPartnerAdministrator in reply toCLLerinOz

Thanks! Strange that there's no maintenance trial to date.

CLLerinOz profile image
CLLerinOzAdministrator in reply toAussieNeil

By leaving 'first line' out of the search I also found these trials for treatment naive CLL:

1) A fixed duration trial of Pirtobrutinib plus Obinutuzumab for first line CLL - clinicaltrials.gov./study/N... It's listed as 'recruiting' at four sites in the US: one in Scarborough, Maine, and three in Boston, Massachusetts.

2) A trial of Pirtobrutinib and Venetoclax with MRD Detection for Previously Untreated Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia - clinicaltrials.gov./study/N... It's listed as 'recruiting' at the Mayo Clinic

CLLerinOz

Spark_Plug profile image
Spark_Plug in reply toCLLerinOz

Side question, Do search queries still use Boolean operators as they did years ago? As both you and Neil are adept at research, I thought I'd ask. I'd like to work them back into my toolbox, if I can find my cheat sheet or make a new one.

CLLerinOz profile image
CLLerinOzAdministrator in reply toSpark_Plug

Hi Spark_Plug

I'm not sure if this answers your question. You can make what clinicaltrials.gov calls an 'expert search' using a variety of search operators as described here:

clinicaltrials.gov/find-stu...

However, I just use the simpler search functions and try a few different combinations most of the time. It's easier, of course, with an intervention like pirtobrutinib where there are fewer total entries to sort through.

CLLerinOz

Spark_Plug profile image
Spark_Plug in reply toCLLerinOz

Thank you CLLerinOz, excellent source, above and beyond 🙂. Years ago when I was first learning Intro to Computer, we used Netscape or Internet Explorer, and we had a unit on refining our searches. Then as a few years went by there was Google and my searches became pedestrian, and now the big G has become any and all things internet.

I find searches actually don't give the breadth of ways to look at a topic nor the depth of more 'other' information about the search topic, it's top 40 hits and nothing else. So, I thought I wonder if this still exists. Happy searching!

CycleWonder profile image
CycleWonder in reply toCLLerinOz

I’m on a current trial for treatment naive patients with CLL. I started on Nov 1, 2022. At the time I started, there were two arms of the trial: Pirtobrutinib vs Ibrutinib.

I’m not sure what the current protocol is but I’m doing fine. The only major side effect has been lower immunoglobulins. All my counts are normal. I have not been tested for MRD as of yet.

CLLerinOz profile image
CLLerinOzAdministrator in reply toCycleWonder

Good to hear you're doing so well on that trial.

It's an active trial that had an estimated enrolment of 650 participants but it stopped recruiting in about July this year. clinicaltrials.gov/study/NC...

Thanks for reminding us about it :)

CLLerinOz

CycleWonder profile image
CycleWonder in reply toCLLerinOz

I am doing well. Very happy and hopeful it may last for awhile.

CLLerinOz profile image
CLLerinOzAdministrator in reply toCycleWonder

Here's to that :)

Shepherd777 profile image
Shepherd777

Good to hear that there is another new choice out there and FDA approved along with several other choices as well.

DanBro1 profile image
DanBro1

Another very informative post from Aussie Neal.... thanks!

Elle_V profile image
Elle_V

This is great news but just make sure I understand correctly, Pirtobrutinib works for roughly 2 years and then people progress on it? Do people acquire mutations to the drug like they do to the covalent BTKi drugs?

Justasheet1 profile image
Justasheet1 in reply toElle_V

Elle,

Yes they progress but with different mutations but they are working on a new drug that seems to overcome all of the known mutations to both types of inhibiting drugs.

Hooray for scientists and doctors!

Jeff

Elle_V profile image
Elle_V in reply toJustasheet1

Thank goodness for the new drug, and yes I am super grateful to all the scientists and doctors working on all these new medications 🙏 for us!

AussieNeil profile image
AussieNeilPartnerAdministrator in reply toElle_V

That's what this study reported, but note that "The study population had poor-prognosis disease, with 54% harboring 17p deletions and/or TP53 mutations, and over 60% with complex karyotype. They had been heavily pretreated as well, with a third having received at least four prior lines of therapy, including a BCL2 inhibitor in about 50%."

It's indeed because people acquire mutations to the drug so that the pirtobrutinib can no longer bond to the BTKi enzyme, which, in this study population already had mutations preventing the covalent bonding BTKi from working and often others stopping venetoclax and perhaps other BCL-2 drugs from working.

What we won't know, until more trials are done, is how long pirtobrutinib will work if it is used earlier, or what will be the optimum order of application, including possibly combination use with other drugs. That's why this question asked earlier by nuji , is so important

healthunlocked.com/cllsuppo...

Neil

Justasheet1 profile image
Justasheet1 in reply toAussieNeil

Neil,

It kind of did touch on earlier treatment with pirtobrutinib as I mentioned in my post for my own possible use.

“The expected time to next treatment (TTNT) for Pirtobrutinib during the results of the phase 3 Bruin CLL-321 trial was 20.0 months for those treated with both a BTKi and a BCL2 inhibitor as is currently approved. onclive.com/view/pirtobruti...

BUT, if given after resistance to only a covalent BTK inhibitor, the TTNT was significantly longer at 29.5 months. Remember that these numbers included all participants including some very tough to treat patients.”

Jeff

SeymourB profile image
SeymourB

Neil -

Medpagetday annoys me by not citing the source. Here's the ASH 2024 abstract for reference:

ash.confex.com/ash/2024/web...

886 BRUIN CLL-321: Randomized Phase III Trial of Pirtobrutinib Versus Idelalisib Plus Rituximab (IdelaR) or Bendamustine Plus Rituximab (BR) in BTK Inhibitor Pretreated Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia/Small Lymphocytic Lymphoma

The trial is clinicaltrials.gov/study/NC... and is no longer recruiting. I think we can expect more detailed papers in the coming year. The study ends in 2027.

=seymour=

rcusher profile image
rcusher

Thanks for this update, as I am currently in the Bruin-321 trial. I was randomized to the Idelalisib + Rituximab arm. From reading the report I followed the exact findings. I lasted on the Idelalisib approx. 9 months before complications set in ultimately landing me in the hospital for 10 days. The funny thing is that the Idelaisib was actually controlling my CLL but the complications were extreme. It took approx. 3 months to get me stable enough to switch over to the Pirto. It's now been 1 year on Pirto and I have never felt better 🤞. Having never taken Venetoclax and seeing the results so far gives me some hope that Pirto may give me the 5 years that I had with Ibrutinib.

Jack

BTW, I have a complex karyotype with the addition of TP53, del 17p, trisomy 12,+++ and I am 78 years old.

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