Skip to main content

Janssen’s IMBRUVICA® receives positive CHMP opinion for expanded use in previously untreated CLL patients

 

Clinical courses

 

Clinical research courses

Janssen-Cilag International NV announced that the Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) of the European Medicines Agency (EMA) has adopted a Positive Opinion, recommending broadening the existing marketing authorisation for ibrutinib as a single agent for the treatment of adult patients with previously untreated chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL).

Ibrutinib is approved for the treatment of adult patients with relapsed or refractory mantle cell lymphoma (MCL), or adult patients with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) who have received at least one prior therapy, or in first line in the presence of 17p deletion or TP53 mutation (genetic mutations typically associated with poor treatment outcomes) in patients unsuitable for chemo-immunotherapy and in adult patients with Waldenström’s macroglobulinemia (WM) who have received at least one prior therapy, or in first line treatment for patients unsuitable for chemo-immunotherapy.

The Positive Opinion of the CHMP was based on data from the Phase 3, randomised, open-label RESONATE™-2 (PCYC-1115) clinical trial, as recently published in The New England Journal of medicine. Findings showed ibrutinib provided a significant improvement in all efficacy endpoints versus chlorambucil in patients aged 65 or older with newly diagnosed CLL. The progression-free survival (PFS) rate at 18 months was 90 percent for ibrutinib versus 52 percent for chlorambucil. Ibrutinib also significantly prolonged overall survival (OS) (HR=0.16 percent CI, 0.05, 0.56; P=0.001), with a 24-month survival rate of 98 percent, compared to 85 percent for patients in the chlorambucil arm. The safety of ibrutinib in the treatment-naïve CLL patient population was consistent with previously reported studies. The most common adverse reactions (ARs) (≥20 percent) of any Grade in the RESONATE-2 trial for ibrutinib  were diarrhoea (42 percent), fatigue (30 percent), cough (22 percent) and nausea (22 percent).

<< Pharma News

Subscribe to PharmaTutor News Alerts by Email >>