In my quest for some Follicular Lymphoma-related reading material during this slow news time, I found an article in Pharmacy Times called "Epcoritamab Plus Lenalidomide and Rituximab in Practice: A Focus on EPCORE FL-1."
As you can guess, Pharmacy Times is aimed at pharmacists, the folks who manage and sometimes advise on medications. That's the angle that makes it kind of interesting.
It's mostly a summary of the EPCORE FL-1 clinical trial results. EPCORE is the general name for a series of studies that have looked at the bispecific Epcoritamab. The EPCORE NHL-1 study looked at patients with several types of Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma who were treated with just Epcoritamab. The EPCORE FL-1 study is the one described here, and is the one that got people very very excited at last year's ASH conference. This trial involves only FL patients, and combines Epcoritamab with R-Squared (Rituxan + Revlimid, also known as Lenalidomide).
The article provides a good overview of all of the successful trials for Epcoritamab, and especially for EPCORE FL-1. This was a phase 3 global study, with 488 patients from 30 countries. Patients had refractory or relapsed disease and had previously received a monoclonal antibody + chemotherapy. Patients were divided into two groups: one received R-squared and the other received R-squared plus Epcoritamab.
Results were very positive. After a median follow-up of 14.8 months, The Epcoritamab group had a 95% Overall Response Rate (versus 79% for the R-squared only group). Most other measures were better in the Epcoritamab group did better than the R-squared only group -- including Progression Free Survival, Duration of Response, and Time to Next Treatment. It's easy to see why people were so excited at ASH.
Safety was also good, with low white blood cells counts (neutropenia) and infections being the most common side effects. Cytokine Release Syndrome, a major concern, occurred in 26% of patients, but all cases were manageable. Other side effects are described in the article. This isn't really providing any new data, just a summary of what was already reported.
What I found so interesting, though, were the "pharmacy" aspects of the article.
For instance, the article goes into some detail about dose escalation, something that gets mentioned in most oncology articles, but not in much detail.
In the EPCORE FL-1 trial, the dosing was changed partway through. At first, patients received a smaller dose first, and then a larger second dose. But in later studies, it was divided into three steps instead of two, so patients received it more gradually. Researchers think this probably helped lessen the severity of some side effects, including CRS.
It also goes into some detail about "premedications" -- intravenous hydration, an antihistamine, an antipyretic (like acetaminophen), and corticosteroids (preferable dexamethasone) -- as well as "postmedications," including two to three liters of oral fluids within 24 hours after receiving Ecoritamab, plus corticosteroids (dexamethasone again) for 3 days.
I can picture an oncology pharamacist reading the results of the EPCORE FL-1 in an abstract, and thinking "That's nice, but what were the premedications?!"
And I say that with great admiration, from one amateur Cancer Nerd to a professional one.
I don't really think about the role that pharmacists play in our treatment.
When I had my Rituxan infusions, I had a blood draw first. Then I met with the oncologist to make sure everything was OK and I was well enough for the day's dose. Then I went to the treatment room, where the excellent Nurse Sue took care of me for a few hours. But somebody had to prepare the Rituxan. Somebody had to worry about my premedication hydration and the antihistamine I needed when I had an allergic reaction.
It's kind of cool to think that there's someone else behind the scenes, keeping an eye on things. The size of our care team is really large.
I don't ever remember talking to a pharmacist when I needed treatment, but education is certainly a job for pharmacists, and the article discusses the role that pharmacists can play when a patient needs education about any of the medications that are a part of this treatment process.
It's just kind of nice to have a broader perspective on things. It's one more person who cares about us, and who is looking out for us. We're lucky to have these hidden angels.