logo
Can New Combo Fill ‘Unmet Need' in R/R Hodgkin Lymphoma?

Can New Combo Fill ‘Unmet Need' in R/R Hodgkin Lymphoma?

Medscape21 hours ago

Acimtamig, a first-in-class CD30/CD16A bispecific innate cell engager (ICE), combined with an off-the-shelf cord-blood derived natural killer cell product (AlloNK), shows safety and efficacy in the treatment of patients with relapsed or refractory (R/R) classical Hodgkin lymphoma, who otherwise have poor prognoses.
'Acimtamig in combination with AlloNK shows promising efficacy with a well-managed safety profile with the potential to address an unmet need in patients with R/R Hodgkin lymphoma who have exhausted standard-of-care treatment options,' said first author Joseph Maakaron, MD, of the Division of Hematology, Oncology and Transplantation, Department of Medicine, Masonic Cancer Center, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, in presenting the findings at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) 2025 annual meeting in Chicago.
Patients with classical Hodgkin lymphoma who relapse after standard-of-care treatments, including chemotherapy, brentuximab vedotin, and checkpoint inhibitors, have few remaining treatment options.
Acimtamig has previously shown some efficacy as monotherapy in the treatment of Hodgkin lymphoma, and when further combined with an allogenic cord blood derived natural killer cell product, encouraging objective response rates were observed in a proof-of-concept study.
To test the approach in a more rigorous multicenter trial, Maakaron and colleagues conducted the current open-label phase 2 LuminICE-203 trial, enrolling 24 patients with R/R Hodgkin lymphoma.
For the study, the patients were treated in one of four cohorts investigating two doses of acimtamig (200 mg or 300 mg weekly flat dosing for 6 weeks) in combination with two dose levels of AlloNK after standard lymphodepletion of up to three cycles and followed by a randomized part using the Simon two-stage design.
While the patients had a median age of 42.5 years, the range was wide, ranging from age 23 to 80 years, and 16 (67%) were men.
About two thirds of patients (66.7%) had extranodal disease, and they had all been heavily pre-treated with brentuximab vedotin and programmed cell death protein 1 inhibitors, with a median of 4.5 prior lines of treatment, including previous stem cell transplant and CAR T cell therapy among 14 (58%) patients.
'The patients had essentially exhausted all standard-of-care therapy options,' Maakaron emphasized.
As of the latest cut-off, the study achieved its primary end point of an objective response rate, with a rate of 88% among the patients, with 14 (58%) achieving complete responses.
Across all four dose cohorts, clinically meaningful deep responses were seen, with 10 ongoing responses. A progression-free survival estimate of 61% was observed at 6 months.
More robust maximum peaks were observed after the third infusion, which was presumed to be due to a steady state that had been achieved at that time, he added.
The safety profile was consistent with previous reports, with the therapy combination being well tolerated. The most common treatment-related side effects were mild to moderate infusion-related reactions, occurring in 50% of patients.
There were no cases of graft vs host disease or immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome, and cytokine release syndrome (CRS) was reported in six patients shortly after infusion.
All treatment-emergent adverse events including infusion-related reactions and CRS events were controlled with standard-of-care interventions and quickly resolved.
There were no fatal treatment-emergent adverse events.
'Acimtamig with AlloNK may provide a safe, effective, and durable new therapeutic option for patients with R/R Hodgkin lymphoma, with a progression-free survival estimate of 61% at 6 months,' Maakaron said.
'These early results support the co-administration approach of acimtamig with an off-the-shelf, commercially scalable, allogenic, cryopreserved natural killer cell product in a multicenter setting,' he said.
Study Shows Best Response Rates to Date
Commenting on the findings at the meeting, Sarah C. Rutherford, MD, associate professor of clinical medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine in New York City, said the need for better treatment options for those who have relapsed after standard therapies is pressing.
'This is really an unmet need in the field,' she underscored.
'Novel treatments in R/R classic Hodgkin lymphoma after brentuximab vedotin, checkpoint inhibitors, and autologous transplant are limited, and most don't really work that well.'
'We tend to use single-agent chemotherapies, repeat checkpoint inhibitors, and radiation, but these patients really suffer because of that, and clinical trial options have been lacking.'
Rutherford noted that, with the innovative combination, safety and tolerability were important concerns.
'I was really struck by the tolerability of this regimen, with only five patients having grade 3 and one [having] grade 4 treatment-emergent adverse events.'
Furthermore, the response rates were impressive, she noted.
'These are the best response rates observed to date in the post-brentuximab vedotin and checkpoint inhibitor setting, and the toxicities appear manageable,' she said.
'I think it's going to be unlikely to be as widely adopted as checkpoint inhibitors because of the nature of the cellular therapy approach, but I do think this is a very promising agent,' Rutherford said.
'I think it's the current best available trial option, and in the future, some version of this could become a third-line therapy in this disease.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Can a TKI Boost Anti-PD-L1 Activity in NSCLC?
Can a TKI Boost Anti-PD-L1 Activity in NSCLC?

Medscape

time14 minutes ago

  • Medscape

Can a TKI Boost Anti-PD-L1 Activity in NSCLC?

Can adding a TKI that targets programmed death ligand 1 (PD-L1) to a monoclonal antibody that also targets PD-L1 improve outcomes over the monoclonal antibody alone in locally advanced, unresectable non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC)? Researchers in China have come in with a qualified yes. The authors of the new study found that a combination of anlotinib, an oral small-molecule TKI, and benmelstobart (TQB2450), a humanized immunoglobulin G subclass 1 (IgG1) monoclonal antibody that targets PD-L1, improved progression-free survival (PFS) compared with benmelstobart alone after concurrent/sequential chemoradiotherapy (60 Gray ± 10%). A downside of taking the TKI was a significant increase in side effects, Ming Chen, MD, PhD, lead investigator of the R-ALPS trial, reported at American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) 2025. Study Results 'Our key finding demonstrated significant improvement in median PFS with the combination of benmelstobart plus anlotinib, with a median PFS of 15.1 months compared to 9.7 months with benmelstobart alone and 4.2 months with placebo,' said Chen, while presenting the abstract at the meeting. PFS was the primary endpoint of the study. Ming Chen, MD, PhD 'This translated into a reduced risk of disease progression with a hazard ratio of 0.49 for the combination arm and 0.53 for benmelstobart alone,' vs placebo, said Chen, who is director of Radiation Oncology at the Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center in Guangzhou, China. The P values for both were less than .0001. Chen reported results of an interim analysis of the phase 3 R-ALPS study, which randomized 553 patients to one of three treatment groups after all received concurrent/sequential chemoradiotherapy: Benmelstobart alone, benmelstobart plus anlotinib, or placebo. Twelve-month PFS rates were 54.9% in the combination group, 45.7% in the benmelstobart alone group, and 26.4% in the placebo group. The data analysis of overall survival rates has not been completed, Chen said. Among secondary endpoints, overall response rates were 25.6% ( P = .01), 23.3 ( P = .0318), and 12.9% for the combination, benmelstobart alone, and placebo groups, respectively. The disease control rates were 84.5% ( P = .0067) and 86.1% ( P = .0023) for the combination and benmelstobart alone groups, respectively, and was 70.5% for the placebo group. Safety Profile 'Manageable' or 'Significant'? The combination group had consistently higher rates of adverse events than the other two groups. Chen said the safety profile of adding anlotinib to benmelstobart was 'manageable,' while Shankar Siva, PhD, MBBS, a discussant at the oral abstracts session, characterized the toxicity profile of the study as 'significant.' Shankar Siva, PhD, MBBS Overall, the rates of grade 3-5 treatment-related adverse events (TRAEs) were 50% in the combination group, 32% in the benmelstobart alone group, and 21% in the placebo group. The rates of serious TRAEs were 38.3%, 33% and 26.5%, respectively. Hematologic toxicities were not significantly different across the three groups, Chen said, but the following four biochemical measures were significantly elevated in the combination group: Antistreptokinase, creatine phosphokinase, thyroid-stimulating hormone, and amylase. Among the grade 3-5 non-hematologic TRAEs, rates of infectious pneumonia, hypertension, and hemoptysis were significantly higher in the combination group: 8.1%, 8.6%, and 2.4%, respectively, vs 4.7%, 0.9%, and 0.5% in the benmelstobart alone group and 5.3%, 1.8%, and 0.8% in the placebo group. Chen added that the rates of radiation pneumonitis and immune pneumonitis 'were very mild in all three arms,' with rates below 3%. Elaborating on his different take on the combination treatment's safety profile from Chen's, Siva said the incidence of high-grade adverse events in this study was notable. 'More targeted or bispecific TKIs' might be worth exploring in a combination treatment after chemoradiotherapy for NSCLC to improve the safety profile, he said, during the session. Knowing biomarkers of benefit and potential toxicity would also be important for using multitarget TKIs in combination therapies after chemoradiotherapy for NSCLS, noted Siva, who is a radiation oncologist at Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre in Melbourne, Australia. One of the limitations of the study was that all patients were Chinese, Chen said. Anlotinib was approved for advanced NSCLC in China in 2019. Chia Tai TianQing Pharmaceutical Group funded the study. Chen reported having no relevant financial relationships. Siva reported having financial relationships with AstraZeneca, Bayer, Bristol Myers Squibb, Merck Sharp & Dohme, and Varian Medical Systems.

Real Life Simulations: Mass Casualty Training in Med School
Real Life Simulations: Mass Casualty Training in Med School

Medscape

time24 minutes ago

  • Medscape

Real Life Simulations: Mass Casualty Training in Med School

Anyone who watched television show The Pitt on Max knows how overwhelming a mass casualty event can be for a hospital. Preparation is key, and accredited hospitals are required to hold training exercises. But these incidents don't only affect physicians in the Emergency Department. The random nature of mass shootings, natural disasters, multi-car pileups, building collapses, and the like means an all-hands-on-deck situation could happen at any time. An increasing number of medical schools see the value in preparing their students early. 'Unfortunately this is where the world is going. We need to rely on ourselves because help may not be coming,' said Jeffrey Pearl, MD, associate dean of professional health education at the University of Texas (UT) at Tyler School of Medicine. 'In the end, the first line is going to be one of us picking someone out of the rubble from a tornado and putting a tourniquet on.' Unfortunately this is where the world is going. We need to rely on ourselves because help may not be coming. More than 20 years ago, the Associations of American Medical Colleges and the CDC issued a joint report recommending disaster-related training for medical students. It's still a relatively rare offering — by 2021, only seven allopathic medical schools in the US mentioned disaster response training in their course catalogs. But just 2 years later, that number had more than doubled. Roughly 10% of allopathic medical schools now offer it, as do a number of osteopathic medical schools. 'I think the best part is, it gives you perspective as to what goes on out in the field,' said Joshua Goodman, a rising fourth-year medical student at the Donald and Barbara Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell in Hempstead, New York. He's participated in the school's annual training day more than once. 'Even in non-MCI situations, you might wonder why the patient is being brought in in this condition. Why didn't they do this? Why didn't they do that? This gives you a better understanding of what it's really like out there, so you know what to expect and can act on it.' Different Approaches to the Same Concept In order to prepare their students for an unpredictable future, medical schools take a variety of tacks. At some schools, all students undergo this training. At others, it's voluntary. Scenarios include bus bombings, school shootings, landslides, and the like. Often, they're location-specific, like the New York City subway car used in Hofstra's training, done at the local fire training academy. 'They fill it with smoke, and have students come in to rescue patients,' said Thomas Kwiatkowski, MD, assistant dean for simulation and professor of emergency medicine and science education at Hofstra. 'Some victims speak a different language, which is typical for New York City. It really challenges the students.' The variations don't stop there: At both UT Tyler and Hofstra, all first-year medical students complete a full emergency medical technician course. It concludes with a mass casualty simulation, which provides the chance to really practice the skills they've just learned. 'We didn't just want them to ride along in an ambulance,' Kwiatkowski said. 'That's not going to provide anything more than observation. I wanted a true clinical experience.' A presentation on FEMA's National Incident Management System kicks off the day at Ohio University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine, Dublin, Ohio. Students then move on to training with emergency equipment like cervical collars and backboards. But the bulk of the day is spent at the local fire department's training center for a hands-on simulation. Training at Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, is part of a popular 2-week elective in wilderness and disaster medicine. Medical students learn to handle scenarios including avalanches, dirty bombs, and chemical weapons. At Idaho College of Osteopathic Medicine, Meridian, Idaho, training has included a simulated music festival gone awry as well as a multi-vehicle accident. College of Osteopathic Medicine, University of New England, Portland, Maine, has held four annual mock events. Last year's program focused on the lessons learned in the 2023 mass shooting in nearby Lewiston. Investing in Realism Limited research has been done to show exactly how realistic simulations should be, but there is some that suggests the more accurately a scenario reflects real life, the more students can benefit from it. Depending on a medical school's budget, things can get quite realistic, indeed. For many, it includes going off-site to a training ground, where students must triage realistic victims even as they experience the chaos of an actual event. 'When they walk into a burn tower knowing that there's been an explosion, and they hear people screaming out and they can't see much, it's an environment that probably causes their heart rate to go up a little bit, perhaps their respiratory rate to go up a little bit,' said William Burke, DO, dean of Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine, Ohio University, Athens, Ohio. 'I think those types of situations help you better understand, as an individual, how you might respond in real life.' William Burke, DO For the simulations' victims, most schools use a combination of mannequins and volunteers — either locals or other medical students. Often, moulage artists are brought in to apply special-effects makeup. At UT Tyler, a relatively new school, Pearl had a sizable budget to design the mass casualty training program. Faculty works with campus and local law enforcement, fire department and emergency medical services, and even the Federal Bureau of Investigation to make the event feel as real as possible for students. High-tech wound simulation includes three-dimensional printed shrapnel mounted on silicone patches that are easily applied to volunteers' bodies; bleeding systems that pump fake blood; two cut suits of repairable skin with organs that bleed — which can be operated on while actors wear them; and several mannequins with realistic injuries. A significant amount of effort goes into creating thoughtful, plausible scenarios. A school shooting is part of the simulation at Hofstra. 'The way they set it up is hyper realistic, in that you have real police officers acting, there's a lot of yelling, it's dark, there's a lot of banging on doors. It's frankly a little bit scary,' Goodman, the medical student, said. 'You really do feel like you're in a school and you have to hide but you also have to triage: Who can we get out? How are we going to get them out? Is it safe to open the door?' Decisions Under Pressure Whatever the scenario, the goal in all these simulations is the same: To help medical students learn to make life-or-death decisions quickly, under extreme circumstances. 'The first minute or two, they're a little shell shocked. After that, it's like watching your children grow up,' Pearl said. 'These are first- and second-year med students, and they're rocking and rolling.' Thomas Kwiatkowski, MD During the exercises, they must triage victims into color-coded categories. Yes, just like in The Pitt : Green goes to the walking wounded, those who need minimal help. Yellow indicates a more serious injury, but not immediately life-threatening. Red means a victim has severe injuries, but with a high potential for survival. Victims designated with a black mark are either deceased or have injuries incompatible with life. 'It's very difficult when you have to make that decision,' Kwiatkowski said. 'There are a couple of maneuvers that people do before they can decide to make someone black, but sometimes you can have someone who's talking to you, and you know that you can't save them. That's an important experience for students.' Other ethical considerations also play out. During some simulations, for instance, a school shooter is still active. Students must decide how to help children while staying safe themselves, or if and when it's worth it to risk their own lives. At Ohio University, one situation involves a bombing. Unbeknownst to the students, the bomber is among the victims. 'Students are turning victims over and see the person playing the bomber has another bomb underneath them,' Burke said. 'It helps them understand the ethics of the situation: Do you treat them the same? The answer is yes, you take care of everybody. When you ask those questions, students are thinking about things in ways they've never had to before.'

Artificial Intelligence Is Unlocking the Secrets of Black Holes
Artificial Intelligence Is Unlocking the Secrets of Black Holes

WIRED

time29 minutes ago

  • WIRED

Artificial Intelligence Is Unlocking the Secrets of Black Holes

Jun 11, 2025 5:30 AM A neural network trained with simulations of supermassive black holes has found that the one at the center of the Milky Way, Sagittarius A*, likely rotates at maximum speed. An artistic impression of a neural network connecting observations of black holes (left) with models of them (right). Photograph: EHT/Janssen et al. There may not yet be telescopes capable of unlocking all the secrets of supermassive black holes, but AI is now on the case. Recently, an international team of astronomers successfully trained a neural network with millions of black hole simulations to allow it to interpret fuzzy data captured from these enigmatic space objects in real life. Of the various methods for investigating a black hole, the Event Horizon Telescope is the most famous. The EHT isn't a single instrument but rather a number of radio telescopes around the world that work together like a single telescope. Thanks to the EHT, it's been possible to obtain images of the supermassive black holes M87 and Sagittarius A*. These are not images in the traditional sense but instead are visualizations of radio waves coming from the black holes. To create these images, supercomputers in different parts of the world processed the radio signals captured by the EHT. But in the process, they discarded much of the information gathered, as it was difficult to interpret. The new neural network, trained by experts at the Morgridge Research Institute in Wisconsin, aims to tap into that sea of data to improve the resolution of the EHT's readings and make new discoveries. According to a press release from the institute, the artificial intelligence successfully analyzed the once-discarded information and established new parameters of Sagittarius A*, which sits at the center of the Milky Way. An alternative image of the black hole's structure was generated, with this revealing some new characteristics of the black hole. 'Researchers now suspect that the black hole at the center of the Milky Way is spinning at almost top speed,' wrote the researchers in a press release. The new image also also indicates that the black hole's rotation axis points to the Earth and gives clues as to the causes and characteristics of the disks of material that circulate around the black hole. Astronomers had previously estimated that Sagittarius A* rotates at a moderate to fast speed. Knowing its actual rotational speed is important, since it allows us to infer how the radiation around the black hole behaves and provides clues about its stability. 'That we are defying the prevailing theory is of course exciting,' lead researcher Michael Janssen, of Radboud University Nijmegen in the Netherlands, said in the press release. 'However, I see our AI and machine learning approach primarily as a first step. Next, we will improve and extend the associated models and simulations.' This story originally appeared on WIRED en Español and has been translated from Spanish.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store