The results of a phase 2 trial led by Roswell Park's Dr.
Brian Betts answer a longstanding
question in stem cell transplantation. While adding the JAK
inhibitor pacritinib to the treatment regimen for patients
undergoing stem cell transplant did not help prevent graft vs. host
disease (GVHD), the strategy may still prove effective as a
treatment for chronic GVHD.
- Study added pacritinib to standard sirolimus/tacrolimus
regimen
- JAK2 inhibition + reducing Th1/Th17 cells does not improve GVHD
prevention
- Results published in Blood, the leading hematology journal
BUFFALO,
N.Y., Aug. 5, 2024 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- A study
led by Brian Betts, MD, Vice Chair
of Strategic Initiatives for Transplant & Cellular Therapy at
Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center, demonstrates that adding
a JAK2 inhibitor to standard immunosuppressive drugs does not
improve prevention of acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), a
serious complication of treatment in patients with hematologic
cancers who undergo stem cell transplant. The results show that
further research is warranted to determine whether this strategy
might benefit patients who experience the chronic, more widely
systemic form of GVHD. The study is newly published in Blood, the
leading journal in the field of hematology.
"This work highlights critical biologic
differences between GVHD treatment and GVHD prevention."
Hematopoietic stem cell transplant — also known as bone marrow
transplant — offers a potential cure for patients with
hematological malignancies, or blood cancers. But between 10% and
20% of patients who receive stem cells from a donor — a procedure
called allogeneic transplant (alloHSCT) — later develop acute GVHD,
typically within the first 100 days following transplant. This
sometimes-fatal condition occurs when a donor's immune cells
identify the patient's cells as foreign and attack them. Apart from
disease recurrence, GVHD can be life-threatening and can greatly
impact a patient's quality of life post-transplant.
Though JAK inhibition has been shown to be effective in GVHD
treatment, this trial addressed whether JAK inhibitors have a role
in GVHD prophylaxis (prevention). To find ways of preventing acute
GVHD, investigators have looked toward the potential of JAK2
inhibitors — drugs that can "turn off" JAK2, a gene that promotes
inflammation and contributes to the development of GVHD. The
investigational anti-inflammatory drug pacritinib is a JAK2
inhibitor. The JAK1/2 inhibitor ruxolitinib (brand name Jakafi) is
indicated for the treatment of refractory GVHD.
The new publication reports findings from a collaborative team
of investigators from Roswell Park, the University of Minnesota's Masonic Cancer Center and
Moffit Cancer Center in Florida.
The team conducted a phase 2 clinical trial to determine whether
adding the Janus kinase 2 (JAK2) inhibitor pacritinib (brand name
Vonjo) to the anti-inflammatory drugs sirolimus (brand name
Rapamunel) and tacrolimus (brand name Prograf) could prevent acute
GVHD in patients who have undergone alloHSCT.
"JAK inhibitors are active in treating GVHD that does not
respond to steroids," explains Dr. Betts. "But the question over
the past 10 years has been whether JAK inhibition could prevent
GVHD."
He and his colleagues found the answer in the phase 2 results of
a phase 1/2 clinical trial (NCT02891603) that enrolled patients who
underwent alloHCT for the treatment of hematological malignancies
or myeloproliferative neoplasms — conditions in which the body
produces too much of a specific type of blood cell. Twenty-eight
patients in the phase 2 study were treated at the University of Minnesota and Moffitt Cancer Center
with a regimen of pacritinib/sirolimus/tacrolimus (PAC/SIR/TAC), a
combination that the phase 1 study had determined to be safe.
Patients received pacritinib on the day of transplant (Day 0)
and for the following 70 days. Sirolimus, an mTOR inhibitor, was
administered the day prior to transplant and then daily for at
least one year. Tacrolimus, a calcineurin inhibitor, was given
three days before transplant and continued for at least 50
days.
The biologic endpoint of the trial was successful, in that
PAC/SIR/TAC reduced JAK2 activity in donor T cells, as well as the
development of Th1/Th17 cells, thought to be implicated in GVHD
onset. Despite achieving this immunologic effect, the incidence of
grade 2-4 acute GVHD was very similar to what had been achieved in
the past with the use of SIR/TAC alone (46% vs. 43%), demonstrating
that adding pacritinib to the regimen did not improve prevention of
GVHD.
"We show that JAK inhibition with pacritinib does what we expect
immunologically," says Dr. Betts. "It suppresses JAK2/STAT3
activation and Th1/Th17 cells. However, less-selective approaches
like the use of cyclophosphamide after transplantation appear to
afford deeper and more durable immune tolerance."
"This work highlights critical biologic differences between GVHD
treatment and GVHD prevention," he notes. "While our phase 2 trial
shows that JAK inhibition with the sirolimus/tacrolimus regimen
does not actually prevent GVHD after all, we are eager to see how
this combination performs in treating chronic GVHD."
From the world's first chemotherapy research to the PSA prostate
cancer biomarker, Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center
generates innovations that shape how cancer is detected, treated
and prevented worldwide. Driven to eliminate cancer's grip on
humanity, the Roswell Park team of 4,000 makes compassionate,
patient-centered cancer care and services accessible across
New York State and beyond. Founded
in 1898, Roswell Park was among the first three cancer centers
nationwide to become a National Cancer Institute-designated
comprehensive cancer center and is the only one to hold this
designation in Upstate New York. To learn more about Roswell Park
Comprehensive Cancer Center and the Roswell Park Care Network,
visit http://www.roswellpark.org, call 1-800-ROSWELL
(1-800-767-9355) or email ASKRoswell@RoswellPark.org.
Media Contact
Ann E Deck-Miller, Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center,
7168458593, annie.deck-miller@roswellpark.org, roswellpark.org
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SOURCE Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center