Asciminib monotherapy in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia in chronic phase without BCR::ABL1T315I treated with at least 2 prior TKIs: Phase 1 final results

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Abstract

Asciminib is the first approved BCR::ABL1 inhibitor that Specifically Targets the ABL Myristoyl Pocket (STAMP). The present final analysis of the phase 1, open-label, nonrandomized trial (NCT02081378) assessed the long-term safety, tolerability, and antileukemic activity of asciminib in 115 patients with chronic myeloid leukemia in chronic phase without the BCR::ABL1T315I mutation who received asciminib 10–200 mg twice daily (BID) or 80–200 mg once daily (cutoff: March 14, 2023). Median exposure duration was 5.9 (range, 0–8.4) years; 60.9% of patients continued receiving asciminib through post-trial access. Grade ≥3 adverse events (AEs) occurred in 88 patients (76.5%). AEs led to treatment discontinuation, dose adjustment/interruption, or additional therapy in 15 (13.0%), 74 (64.3%), and 106 (92.2%) patients, respectively. Most first-ever AEs, particularly hematologic AEs, presented within the first year and no new safety signals emerged. Of 56 patients who achieved major molecular response, 50 maintained the response by cutoff; the Kaplan-Meier-estimated probability of maintaining this response for ≥432 weeks (≈ 8.3 years) was 88% (95% confidence interval, 78.2–97.0%). The recommended dose for expansion was determined at 40 mg BID. With up to 8.4 years of treatment, asciminib continued to demonstrate long-term safety and efficacy in this population.

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Hochhaus, A., Kim, D. W., Cortes, J. E., Sasaki, K., Mauro, M. J., Hughes, T. P., … Rea, D. (2025). Asciminib monotherapy in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia in chronic phase without BCR::ABL1T315I treated with at least 2 prior TKIs: Phase 1 final results. Leukemia, 39(5), 1114–1123. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41375-025-02578-7

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