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AQUILA: Early intervention with daratumumab extends survival in smouldering MM

Presented by
Dr Meletios Dimopoulos, University of Athens, Greece
Conference
ASH 2024
Trial
Phase 3, AQUILA
Daratumumab reduced progression to multiple myeloma (MM) and prolonged overall survival (OS) in patients with high-risk smouldering MM, representing an opportunity to delay or avoid end-organ damage in these patients.

The phase 3 AQUILA study (NCT03301220) randomised 390 patients with smouldering MM 1:1 to daratumumab or to active monitoring [1]. The primary outcome was progression-free survival (PFS). Dr Meletios Dimopoulos (University of Athens, Greece) presented the primary results of the trial.

After a median follow-up of 65.2 months, the primary endpoint was met: median PFS was 41.5 months in the control arm and ‘not reached’ in the daratumumab arm (HR 0.49; 95% CI 0.36–0.67; P<0.001). “Daratumumab significantly reduced the risk of progression to MM or death by 51%,” commented Dr Dimopoulos. The PFS rates at 60 months were 63.1% and 40.8%, favouring the daratumumab arm. The OS rates were 93.0% and 86.9% at 60 months of follow-up (HR 0.52; 95% CI 0.27–0.98). “Thus, early intervention with fixed-duration daratumumab extended OS compared with active monitoring,” said Dr Dimopoulos. He noted that the benefit of daratumumab appeared to be more pronounced in ‘Mayo 2018 criteria high-risk’ patients.

In total, 5.7% of the participants discontinued the daratumumab arm due to treatment-emergent adverse events. No new safety issues were identified with daratumumab monotherapy in this population.

“AQUILA strongly favoured early intervention with daratumumab in patients with high-risk smouldering MM,” decided Dr Dimopoulos. “It offers a chance to improve health outcomes, like survival or delayed progression to MM, in these patients.”

  1. Dimopoulos MA, et al. Phase 3 randomized study of daratumumab monotherapy versus active monitoring in patients with high-risk smoldering multiple myeloma: primary results of the AQUILA study. Abstract 773, 66th ASH Annual Meeting, 7–10 December 2024, San Diego, CA, USA.

Medical writing support was provided by Robert van den Heuvel.

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