CA057-003

A Study to Evaluate Safety, Drug Levels and Effectiveness of CC-92480 (BMS-986348) in Combination With Other Treatments in Participants With Relapsed or Refractory Multiple Myeloma

What's the purpose of the trial?

The purpose of this study is to assess the safety, tolerability and preliminary effectiveness of CC-92480 (BMS-986348) in novel therapeutic combinations for the treatment of Relapsed or Refractory Multiple Myeloma (RRMM).

Trial status

Not yet accepting

Phase
Phase 1/2
Enrollment
220
Last Updated
1 month ago
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Participating Centers

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Experimental Treatments

Learn more about the experimental treatments being evaluated in this clinical trial.

  • Dexamethasone
  • Mezigdomide
  • Tazemetostat
  • Trametinib

Published Results

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Mezigdomide (MEZI) in Novel-Novel Combinations for Relapsed or Refractory Multiple Myeloma (RRMM): Preliminary Results from the CA057-003 Trial

Results: As of May 8, 2024, 14 pts received MEZId + TAZ, 16 MEZId + BMS-986158, and 15 MEZId + TRAM. Across all cohorts, median (range) age was 63 (37–83) y and median time since initial diagnosis was 7.5 (2.0–18.4) y. Eight (18%) pts were Black/African American, 35 (78%) White, and race was not collected/unknown (NA) in 2 (4%); 6 (13%) were Hispanic/Latino and 36 (80%) were not (NA = 3 [7%] pts); 56% were in the United States. Extramedullary plasmacytomas were present in 16 (36%) pts. The median number of prior antimyeloma regimens was 5 (2–20). Prior therapies included autologous stem cell transplantation (78%), IMiD agents (100%), proteasome inhibitors (PIs; 100%), anti-CD38 monoclonal antibodies (mAbs; 100%), and T cell-redirecting therapy (58%); 82% had triple-class refractory disease (to an IMiD agent, PI, and anti-CD38 mAb).

At data cutoff, 7 (50%) pts continued on treatment in the MEZId + TAZ cohort, 8 (50%) in the MEZId + BMS-986158 cohort, and 10 (67%) in the MEZId + TRAM cohort. The main reason for discontinuation in all 3 cohorts was PD. Median follow-up was 4.1 (1.0–11.0) mo (MEZId + TAZ), 2.9 (1.0–6.5) mo (MEZId + BMS-986158), and 3.6 (0–10.6) mo (MEZId + TRAM).

The most frequent grade (Gr) 3/4 treatment-emergent adverse event (TEAE) across all 3 cohorts was neutropenia (43–73%); Gr 3/4 non-hematologic TEAEs were low or absent. Three pts had dose-limiting toxicities (1 with 0.3 mg MEZId + BMS-986158, 1 with 1.0 mg MEZId + BMS-986158, and 1 with 1.0 mg MEZId + TRAM).

In the efficacy-evaluable population, overall response rate (≥ partial response [PR]) was 54% (7/13 pts) with MEZId + TAZ; 36% (5/14) with MEZId + BMS-986158; and 92% (11/12) with MEZId + TRAM. In the MEZId + TAZ and MEZId + BMS-986158 cohorts, deeper responses (≥ very good PR), including 1 stringent complete response (sCR) with MEZId + TAZ, were observed with 1.0 mg MEZI, and in the MEZId + TRAM cohort with ≥0.6 mg MEZI (including 1 sCR), and 100% (5/5 pts) at 1.0 mg MEZI were ongoing responses with this combination.

Exposures increased in a dose-linear manner over the dose range and were consistent across treatment cohorts, demonstrating no drug-drug interaction between MEZI and novel therapeutic agents. MEZI remained pharmacodynamically active, inducing Ikaros/Aiolos degradation and B-cell reduction with all combination agents at all dose levels, with the greatest effect observed at MEZI 1.0 mg.

Conclusions: MEZId combined with the novel therapeutic agents TAZ, BMS-986158, or TRAM showed promising efficacy and a manageable safety profile in patients with RRMM. No new safety signals were identified, with neutropenia being the most common Gr 3/4 TEAE in all 3 cohorts. These results provide a rationale for further exploration of these novel all-oral combinations. Accrual continues and updated results will be presented at the meeting.

5 months ago Read more

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