CURE magazine has a nice interview with Dr. Christina Poh of the Fred Hutch Cancer Center about Tafasitamab.
As you might remember, Tafasitamab was recently approved by the FDA, in combination with R-Squared (Rituxan and Revlimid/Lenalidomide), for Follicular Lymphoma. I wrote about this recently, looking at the the announcement from the FDA.
But Dr. Poh offers some more insight into why this approval is so significant. Some of it came out in the FDA announcement, but hearing it from a hematologist/oncologist at a prestigious cancer center is even better.
For example, Dr. Poh points out how great the design of the clinical trial was. It's a double-blind study, meaning half of the patients in the trial receive one treatment, and the other half receives a different treatment. This allows for a direct comparison between the two. But more importantly, as a "double blind" study, it means that neither group knew for sure which of the treatments they were receiving. Knowing the treatment (which happens in lots of trials) can influence how a participant feels. If they know a treatment may cause a certain side effect, the patient may "feel" that symptom and ask to pull out of the trial. That's not a criticism of the patient -- any trial participant has the right to pull out of the trial for any reason at any time. But it's one example of how a double-blind study can be more significant.
Another element that Dr. Poh points out is that the population more accurately mirrored a "real world" population. Many trials for newer treatments have strict limitation on who can participate in the trial. It's for a good reason. If a new treatment might affect a patient's heart, for example, then patients with heart issues are kept out of the trial. If they did participate and then had heart issues, it would be hard to know if the new treatment caused the issue or if it was a pre-existing heart issue. Once a treatment is approved, researchers might do a "real world" study without those restrictions, to get a better idea of how the treatment will really affect all patients. Because all of the elements in this trial (Tafasitamab, Rituxan, and Revlimid) had already been approved, there was already plenty of "real world" data on side effects. So the trial could include a wide range of FL patients -- those who were asymptomatic, those with POD24, etc. So there is more certainty that the combination will be helpful for many patients.
Finally, Dr. Poh talks about the significance of this being a non-chemotherapy treatment. When R-squared was approved, it was a very big deal. It was the first time a non-chemotherapy treatment was shown to be as effective as traditional chemo like R-CHOP or B-R. And now, this combination is perhaps even more effective than R-Squared. Because treatments like this are more targeted, affecting fewer non-cancer cells than chemotherapy, they have a different set of side effects. (One of the big takeaways from R-Squared being approved was just that -- different side effects, not necessarily fewer or less harsh side effects.) But the feeling is, according to Dr. Poh, that it will not result in long-term side effects like bone marrow damage that can come from chemo. So it may result in greater use by oncologists.
It will be interesting to see if that is true -- that this non-chemo treatment becomes a replacement for chemo, or if it becomes just another option for second and third line situations. I haven't seen too much of this kind of analysis, but it's speculation, anyway. "Real world" data will tell us for sure in the years to come.
Dr. Poh was on the team that conducted the trial, so she has seen the effects of the treatment in patients. If any of you has a conversation with your oncologist about this as a treatment option, please do share what you learned.