Multicenter, Randomized Trial in Newly Diagnosed Multiple Myeloma Patients Older Than 65 Years (GEM05>65)



Similar documents
Cure versus control: Which is the best strategy?

Multiple Myeloma Therapy Doublet, Triplet, and beyond October 2013 The IV. International Eurasian Congress of Hematology Rafat Abonour, M.D.

Multiple Myeloma: Novel Agents. Robert A. Kyle, M.D. Germany June 28, Scottsdale, Arizona Rochester, Minnesota Jacksonville, Florida

Treatment results with Bortezomib in multiple myeloma

Shaji Kumar, M.D. Multiple Myeloma: Multiple myeloma (MM) is the second most common hematological

STEM CELL TRANSPLANTATION IN MULTIPLE MYELOMA

Current Multiple Myeloma Treatment Adapted From the NCCN Guidelines

Personalized, Targeted Treatment Options Offer Hope of Multiple Myeloma as a Chronic Disease

Multiple Myeloma. Scottsdale, Arizona Rochester, Minnesota Jacksonville, Florida CP

Pro Cure in Multiple Myeloma. Nicolaus Kröger Dept. of Stem Cell Transplantation University Hospital Hamburg Hamburg, Germany

FEIST- WEILLER CANCER CENTER MULTIPLE MYELOMA GUIDELINES. Updated December, Authors: Nebu Koshy, MD. Binu Nair, MD. Gerhard Hildebrandt, MD

Bendamustine for the fourth-line treatment of multiple myeloma

Momentum in Multiple Myeloma Treatment

research paper Summary

2014; 5(3): doi: /jca.8541 Research Paper

Future strategies for myeloma: An overview of novel treatments In development

The Blood Cancer Twice As Likely To Affect African Americans: Multiple Myeloma

DARATUMUMAB, A CD38 MONOCLONAL ANTIBODY IN PATIENTS WITH MULTIPLE MYELOMA - DATA FROM A DOSE- ESCALATION PHASE I/II STUDY

MULTIPLE MYELOMA Review & Update for Primary Care. Dr. Joseph Mignone 21st Century Oncology

RELAPSED/REFRACTORY MULTIPLE MYELOMA: THE CURRENT STATE OF PLAY

Henk Lokhorst, Torben Plesner, Peter Gimsing, Hareth Nahi, Steen Lisby, Paul Richardson

Outline. Question 1. Question 2. What is Multiple Myeloma? Andrew Eisenberger, MD

Lenalidomide (LEN) in Patients with Transformed Lymphoma: Results From a Large International Phase II Study (NHL-003)

In ELOQUENT-2, Empliciti was evaluated in patients who had received one to three prior

AUTOLOGOUS STEM CELL TRANSPLANTATION IN MULTIPLE MYELOMA: IS IT STILL THE RIGHT CHOICE?

Advances In Chemotherapy For Hormone Refractory Prostate Cancer. TAX 327 study results & SWOG study results presented at ASCO 2004

Prior Authorization Guideline

FARYDAK (Panobinostat) for the Treatment of Patients With Previously Treated Multiple Myeloma

MULTIPLE MYELOMA TREATMENT REGIMENS (Part 1 of 9)

Original Article Novel treatment paradigm for elderly patients with multiple myeloma

Focus on the Treatment of Multiple Myeloma

Number of Liver Transplants Performed Updated October 2005

Multiple Myeloma and Amyloidosis: Optimism for Heretofore Incurable Diseases

REVIEWS. Current treatment landscape for relapsed and/or refractory multiple myeloma

Multiple Myeloma. Solving a growing puzzle

REVLIMID and IMNOVID for Multiple Myeloma

Multiple. Powerful thinking advances the cure

lenalidomide, 5mg, 10mg, 15mg and 25mg hard capsules (Revlimid ) SMC No. (441/08) Celgene Limited

Optimizing the Treatment of Transplant- Eligible Patients in Multiple Myeloma

NATIONAL CANCER DRUG FUND PRIORITISATION SCORES

FIFTEEN YEARS OF SINGLE CENTER EXPERIENCE WITH STEM CELL TRANSPLANTATION FOR MULTIPLE MYELOMA: A RETROSPECTIVE ANALYSIS

Lenalidomide: A new therapy for multiple myeloma

Treating myeloma. Dr Rachel Hall Royal Bournemouth Hospital

How to treat elderly patients with multiple myeloma: combination of therapy or sequencing

Multiple myeloma: ESMO Clinical Practice Guidelines for diagnosis, treatment and follow-up

MULTIPLE MYELOMA Treatment Overview

Long Term Low Dose Maintenance Chemotherapy in the Treatment of Acute Myeloid Leukemia

A Clinical Primer. for Managed Care Stakeholders

In multiple myeloma, the depth and maintenance of

Therapie des Patienten mit rezidiviertem Multiplem Myelom

National Bureau for Academic Accreditation And Education Quality Assurance PUBLIC HEALTH

Maintenance therapy in in Metastatic NSCLC. Dr Amit Joshi Associate Professor Dept. Of Medical Oncology Tata Memorial Centre Mumbai

FastTest. You ve read the book now test yourself

Review of health-related quality of life data in multiple myeloma patients treated with novel agents

Cancer Treatments Subcommittee of PTAC Meeting held 18 September (minutes for web publishing)

IMMUNOMEDICS, INC. February Advanced Antibody-Based Therapeutics. Oncology Autoimmune Diseases

Evolving Management of Multiple Myeloma: Todd M. Zimmerman, M.D. Associate Professor of Medicine Section of Hematology/Oncology

Phase II: Carfilzomib, Lenalidomide, and Dexamethasone in Newly Diagnosed Multiple Myeloma Neha Korde, MD, Clinical Investigator Ola Landgren, MD

Multiple Myeloma Workshop- Tandem 2014

UNDERSTANDING MULTIPLE MYELOMA AND LABORATORY VALUES Benjamin Parsons, DO Gundersen Health System Center for Cancer and

Health Disparities in Multiple Myeloma. Kenneth R. Bridges, M.D. Senior Medical Director Onyx Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE MATCH RESULTS FOR CLASS OF Anesthesiology Dermatology - 4

CASE WESTERN RESERVE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE

MULTIPLE MYELOMA. Version Date: February, 2015

Clinical Trial Design. Sponsored by Center for Cancer Research National Cancer Institute

FDA approves Rituxan/MabThera for first-line maintenance use in follicular lymphoma

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE MATCH RESULTS FOR 2011

Things You Don t Want to Miss in Multiple Myeloma

Cancer Treatment Reviews

10 th EADO Congress Vilnius, 7-10 May Ipilimumab update. Michele Maio

Trials in Elderly Melanoma Patients (with a focus on immunotherapy)

Background. t 1/2 of days allows once-daily dosing (1.5 mg) with consistent serum concentration 2,3 No interaction with CYP3A4 inhibitors 4

New Targets and Treatments for Follicular Lymphoma. Disclosures

In Utilization and Trend In Quality

Acute Myeloid Leukemia

TABLE 37. Higher education R&D expenditures at institutions with a medical school, by state, institutional control, and institution: FY 2011

Bendamustine with rituximab for the first-line treatment of advanced indolent non-hodgkin's and mantle cell lymphoma

pan-canadian Oncology Drug Review Final Economic Guidance Report Lenalidomide (Revlimid) for Multiple Myeloma October 22, 2013

Post-Secondary Schools Offering Undergraduate Programs Including Arabic Language/Literature. University name Location Degree offered

Target Audience. This activity has been designed to meet the educational needs of hematologistoncologists

Transcription:

Multicenter, Randomized Trial in Newly Diagnosed Multiple Myeloma Patients Older Than 65 Years (GEM05>65) MV Mateos, A Oriol, J Martínez, MT Cibeira, R de Paz, MJ Terol, J García-Laraña, E Bengoechea, R Martínez, A Martín, F de Arriba, L Palomera, JM Hernández, JL Bello, ML Martín, Y González, JJ Lahuerta, J Bladé, JF San Miguel. On behalf of Spanish Myeloma Group (PETHEMA/GEM) 1

Multicenter, Two-stage Randomized Trial in Newly Diagnosed MM Patients Older Than 65 Years Induction Bort/Mel/Pred (VMP) vs Bort/Thal/Pred (VTP) Maintenance Bort/Thal (VT) Bort/Pred (VP) Bort/Thal (VT) Bort/Pred (VP) 2

Efficacy: Response Rate After Induction Therapy ITT analysis in 260 patients 60% 50% 40% ORR: 80% vs 81% 48% 46% VMP VTP 30% 27% 20% 10% 20% 12% 10% 10% 6% 11% 8% 0% CRIF- CRIF+ PR MR SD Only 2 pts in each arm progressed during induction *EBMT criteria Responses to VMP/VTP were rapid: Median time to achieve first response: 1.6 m Prolonged therapy improves the quality of response: Median time to achieve CR: VMP: 4.4 / VTP: 4.9 m 3

VMP vs VTP: Toxicity Profile (G3-4 AEs) (n=260) VMP (n:130) VTP (n:130) Hematologic toxicity - Anemia 15 (11%) 10 (8%) pns - Neutropenia 51 (39%) 29 (22%) p=0,008 - Thrombocytopenia 35 (27%) 16 (12%) p=0,0001 Non-hematologic toxicity - GI toxicities 9 (7%) 2 (2%) pns - PN 9 (5%) 12 (9%) pns - Infections 9 (7%) 1 (<1%) p=0,01 - DVT/Thromboembolism 1(<1%) 3 (2%) pns - Cardiologic events* - 11 (8%) p=0,001 Pts discontinuing due to SAEs, n (%) 15 (11%) 22 (17%) p=0,03 Deaths, n (%) 7* (5%) 7** (5%) p NS *5/7 in VMP: infections **5/7 in VTP: cardiac complications 4

VP vs VT: Toxicity Profile (AEs) (n=178) VP (n:87) VT (n:91) Hematologic toxicity (G1-2) - Anemia 2 (2%) 2 (2%) - Neutropenia 1 (1%) 3 (3%) - Thrombocytopenia 1 (1%) 1 (1%) Non-hematologic toxicity ( G3-4) - GI toxicities 1 (1%) 4 (4%) - PN 2 (2%) 5 (5%) - Infections 1 (1%) 2 (2%) -DVT/Thromboembolism - 1 (1%) - Cardiologic events* 1 (1%) 2 (2%) Patients discontinuing due to related-aes 4 + (5%) 7 ++ (7%) Deaths 1 (1%) 1 (1%) 5

Efficacy: Response Rate to Maintenance Therapy (n=178) CR (IF-) increased from 23% (after induction) up to 42% (maintenance) CR/nCR: 59% vs 55% 60% 50% 40% 44% 39% 44% 39% VT VP =91 =87 30% 20% 10% 0% 15% 16% 2% 1% CRIF- CRIF+ PR MR *EBMT criteria 6

Outcome of the Four Different Cohorts (n=178) 1,0 PFS 1,0 OS 0,8 Treat Group VMP-VT 0,8 0,6 VMP-VP 0,6 VTP-VT 0,4 VTP-VP 0,4 0,2 0,0 VMP+VT: NR VMP+VP: 32 m VTP+VT : NR VTP+VP :26.5 m VTP+VP vs VMP+VT HR 1.6, p=0.008 0,2 0,0 VMP+VT: 88% at 2y VMP+VP: 88% at 2y VTP+VT : 84% at 2y VTP+VP : 81% at 2y 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 Cox regression analysis of PFS and OS with inverse probability weighting (p=0.8 for the interaction term) 7

Efficacy in High-Risk Cytogenetic Abnormalities 1,0 From 1st randomization From 2nd randomization PFS 1,0 PFS 0,8 0,8 0,6 0,6 0,4 0,4 0,2 0,0 0 5 Standard risk: 55% at 2 y High-risk: 58% at 2 y 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 0,2 0,0 0 Standard risk: 61% at 2 y High-risk: 58% at 2 y 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 1,0 OS 1,0 OS 0,8 0,8 0,6 0,6 0,4 0,4 0,2 Standard risk: 77% at 2 y High-risk: 74% at 2 y 0,2 Standard risk: 84% at 2 y High-risk: 82% at 2 y 0,0 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 0,0 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 8

GIMEMA: Italian Multiple Myeloma Network Bortezomib, Melphalan, Prednisone and Thalidomide (VMPT) followed by maintenance with Bortezomib and Thalidomide (VT) for initial treatment of elderly multiple myeloma patients A. Palumbo 1, S. Bringhen 1, D. Rossi 2, R. Ria 2, M. Offidani 2, F. Patriarca 2, C. Nozzoli 2, A. Levi 2, T. Guglielmelli 2, G. Benevolo 2, V. Callea 2, B. Olivero 2, F. Morabito 2, M. Grasso 2, R. Marasca 2, M. Rizzo 2, A. Falcone 2, D. Gottardi 2, V. Montefusco 2, C. Musolino 2, R. Zambello 2, C. Cangialosi 2, G. Pietrantuono 2, V. Magarotto 1, M.T. Petrucci 2, P. Musto 2, G. Ciccone, F 2. Di Raimondo 2, G. Gaidano 2 and M. Boccadoro 1. 1 Division of Hematology, University of Torino, Torino, I, EU; 2 Italian Multiple Myeloma Network, GIMEMA, Italy. 9

Treatment Schedule 511 patients (older than 65 years) randomized from 58 Italian centers Patients: Symptomatic multiple myeloma/end organ damage with measurable disease 65 yrs or <65 yrs and not transplant-eligible; creatinine 2.5 mg/dl R A N D O M I Z E VMP Cycles 1-9 Bortezomib 1.3 mg/m 2 IV: days 1,8,15,22* Melphalan 9 mg/m 2 and prednisone 60 mg/m 2 days 1-4 9 x 5-week cycles in both arms VMPT Cycles 1-9 Bortezomib 1.3 mg/m 2 IV: days 1,8,15,22* Melphalan 9 mg/m 2 and prednisone 60 mg/m 2 days 1-4 Thalidomide 50 mg/day continuously NO MAINTENANCE Until relapse MAINTENANCE Bortezomib 1.3 mg/m 2 IV: days 1,15 Thalidomide 50 mg/day continuously * 66 VMP patients and 73 VMPT patients were treated with twice weekly infusions of Bortezomib 10

Best Response Rate VMP (N=253) VMPT VT (N=250) P value CR 24% 38% 0.0008 > VGPR 50% 59% 0.03 > PR 81% 89% 0.01 % of patients CR VGPR PR VMP 40 40 38 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 24 26 31 17 SD 1 PD % of patients 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 CR 21 VGPR 30 VMPT VT PR 6 SD 1 PD 11

Time to Next Therapy Progression Free Survival Median follow-up 21.6 months Time to next therapy Progression free survival 1. 00 1. 00 % of patients 0. 75 0. 50 0. 25 0. 00 P = 0.0029 VMPT VT VMP VMPT VT: TTNT @ 3 years = 75% VMP: TTNT @ 3 years = 60% 0. 75 0. 50 0. 25 0. 00 VMPT VT VMP VMPT VT: PFS @ 3 years = 60% VMP: PFS @ 3 years = 42% P = 0.007 0 10 20 30 40 50 0 10 20 30 40 50 Months Months 12

Efficacy and Toxicity by Bortezomib Schedule VMP* (VISTA) VMP twice weekly N=63 VMP once weekly N=190 CR 30% 25% 23% PFS @ 2 years 48% 56% 58% Sensory PN Any grade 44% 43% 21% Grade 3-4 13% 14% 2% PN discontinuation NA 16% 4% Total planned dose 67.6 67.6 mg/m 2 46.8 mg/m 2 Total delivered dose NA 41 mg/m 2 40 mg/m 2 *San Miguel JF et al. New Eng J Med 2008; 359: 906-17; 3 patients in twice weekly and 1 patient in once weekly group are not evaluable because they never start therapy PN: peripheral neuropathy 13

Conclusion VMP (N=253) VMPT VT (N=250) P value CR 24% 38% 0.0008 TTNT @ 3 years 60% 75% 0.0029 PFS @ 3 years 42% 60% 0.007 OS @ 3 years 89% 89% 0.96 14

A Phase III Study to Determine the Efficacy and Safety of Lenalidomide in Combination With Melphalan and Prednisone Followed by Lenalidomide (MPR-R) in Patients 65 Years With Newly Diagnosed Multiple Myeloma (NDMM) Antonio Palumbo 1, Meletios Dimopoulos 2, Michel Delforge 3, Martin Kropff 4, Robin Foa 5, Zhinuan Yu 6, Lindsay Herbein 6, Jay Mei 6, Christian Jacques 6, John Catalano 7 1 Division of Hematology, University of Torino, Torino, Italy; 2 Department of Clinical Therapeutics, Alexandra Hospital, University of Athens School of Medicine, Athens, Greece; 3 University Hospital Leuven, Leuven, Belgium; 4 Department of Medicine (Hematology/Oncology), University of Muenster, Muenster, Germany; 5 Division of Hematology, University, Rome, Italy; 6 Celgene Corporation, Summit, NJ; 7 Haematology Dept and Dorevitch Pathology, Frankston Hospital, Frankston, Australia 15

Phase III Study Schema N=459, 82 centers in Europe, Australia and Israel Cycles (28-day) 1-9 Cycles 10+ RANDOMISATION MPR-R M: 0.18 mg/kg, days 1-4 P: 2 mg/kg, days 1-4 R: 10 mg/day po, days 1-21 MPR M: Primary 0.18 mg/kg, Comparison days 1-4 P: 2 mg/kg, MPR-R days vs. 1-4 MP R: 10 mg/day po, days 1-21 Secondary MP Comparison M: 0.18 MPR-R mg/kg, vs. days MPR1-4 P: Addition 2 mg/kg, of days MPR 1-4 arm per PBO: days EMEA 1-21 advice Lenalidomide Continued Tx 10 mg/day, days 1-21 Placebo Placebo Disease progression Lenalidomide (25 mg/day) +/- dexamethasone Double-Blind Treatment Phase Open-Label Extension/ Follow-Up Phase Stratified by age ( 75 vs. > 75 years) and stage (ISS 1,2 vs. 3) M, melphalan; P, prednisone; R, lenalidomide; PBO, placebo. 16

Best Response Best Overall Response a MPR-R N = 152 MPR N = 153 MP N = 154 P Value (MPR-R vs. MP) ORR 77% 67% 49% <0.001 CR b 18% 13% 5% <0.001 VGPR c 32% 33% 11% <0.001 PR 45% 34% 37% --- Progressive Disease 0% 1% 0% --- Median time to first response, months 1.9 1.9 2.8 <0.001 a. As measured using EBMT criteria 1 b. Immunofixation negative with or without bone marrow confirmation c. VGPR: >90% reduction in M-protein 1. Bladé J et al. Br J Haematol. 1998;102:1115-1123. 17

Patients without Event (%) 100 75 50 25 0 Progression-Free Survival First Interim Analysis 50% Reduced Risk in PFS HR 0.499 95% CI [0.330, 0.755] Logrank P<0.001 MPR-R 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 PFS Time (months) MP Median PFS Not reached 13.0 months Median follow up: 9.4 mos No. at Risk MPR-R 152 115 70 36 11 2 1 MP 154 114 77 21 4 1 1 18

MPR-R vs MPR 47% Reduced Risk in PFS Patients without Event (%) No. at Risk 100 75 50 25 0 HR 0.530 95% CI [0.350, 0.802] Logrank P=0.002 0 5 MPR-R MPR 10 15 20 25 30 PFS Time (months) MPR-R 152 115 70 36 11 2 1 MPR 153 122 78 20 5 1 1 Median PFS Not reached 13.2 months 19

Lenalidomide, Bortezomib, Pegylated Liposomal Doxorubicin and Dexamethasone in Newly Diagnosed Myeloma: Updated Results of Phase I/II MMRC Trial A. J. Jakubowiak 1, D. Reece 2, C.C. Hofmeister 3, S. Lonial 4, T. Zimmerman 5, E. Campagnaro 1, R. Schlossman 6, J. Laubach 6, N. S. Raje 7, T. Anderson 1, K. Griffith 1, M. Hill 1, C. Harvey 1, A. Dollard 6, S. Wear 8, T. Bock 9, C. Tendler 10, D-L. Esseltine 11, S.L. Kelley 8, M. Kaminski 1, K.C. Anderson 6, and P. Richardson 6 1 University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center, Ann Arbor, MI, 2 Princess Margaret Hospital, Toronto, ON, 3 Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, 4 Winship Cancer Institute, Atlanta, GA, 5 University of Chicago Medical Center, Chicago, IL, 6 Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA, 7 Massechusettts General Hospital, Boston, MA, 8 Multiple Myeloma Reserarch Consortium, Narwalk, CT, 9 Celgene, Inc, Summit, NJ, 10 Centocor Ortho Biotech, Bridgewater, NJ, 11 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, The Takeda Oncology Company, Cambridge. MA 20

Treatment Schema Initial Treatment: Dose escalation of Len and PLD: up to eight 21-day cycles 1 4 8 11 21 Bz Bz Bz Bz Dex Dex Dex Dex Dex Dex Dex Dex PLD Len Maintenance: 21-day cycles up to progression or toxicity 1 4 8 11 Bz Dex Dex 21 Bz Dex Dex Len Dex, 20 mg/day days 1, 2, 4, 5, 8, 9, 11, and 12; 10 mg, cycles 5 8, and maintenance Pts PR may proceed to ASCT after 4 cycles Maintenance therapy permitted in pts SD after completion of 8 cycles DVT prophylaxis required with Lovenox or ASA 21

RVDD Induction followed by ASCT* Induction Post-Transplant 100 100 86% >VGPR 80 65% >VGPR 80 13% 60 40 23% 60 40 73% 20 42% 20 0 RVDD 0 RVDD VGPR CR/nCR VGPR CR/nCR *Actual transplant patients (N=26) 22

Novel Three- and Four-Drug Combinations of Bortezomib, Dexamethasone, Cyclophosphamide, and Lenalidomide, for Newly Diagnosed Multiple Myeloma: Results from the Multi-Center, Randomized, Phase 2 EVOLUTION Study Shaji Kumar, 1 Ian Flinn, 2 Parameswaran Hari, 3 Natalie Callander, 4 Stephen J Noga, 5 A Keith Stewart, 6 Jonathan Glass, 7 Noopur Raje, 8 Robert Rifkin, 9 Hongliang Shi, 10 Iain J Webb, 10 Paul G Richardson, 11 S Vincent Rajkumar 1 1 Division of Hematology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN; 2 Sarah Cannon Research Institute, Nashville, TN; 3 Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI; 4 University of Wisconsin Comprehensive Cancer Center, Madison, WI; 5 Sinai Hospital of Baltimore, Baltimore, MD; 6 Mayo Clinic Arizona, Scottsdale, AZ; 7 Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, Shreveport, LA; 8 Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA; 9 Rocky Mountain Cancer Centers, Denver, CO; 10 Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Cambridge, MA; 11 Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA 23

Best response Response, % VDCR (N=41) VDR (N=42) VDC (N=32) VDC-mod (N=15) CR 20 24 22 40 scr 2 10 3 0 VGPR 39 31 25 20 ncr 12 14 3 0 VGPR (scr + CR + ncr + VGPR) 59 55 47 60 ncr (scr+cr+ncr) 32 38 25 40 PR 93 93 91 93 Stable disease 7 5 6 7 Progressive disease 0 2 3 0 Patients categorized as VGPR include those who have no measurable M-protein but have not yet had bone marrow assessments to confirm CR/nCR status 24

Relapsed Options Carfilzomib Pomalidomide Elotuzomab HDAC inhibitors 25

26

27

28

29

Pomalidomide (CC4047) plus low dose dexamethasone (Pom/dex) is active and well tolerated in lenalidomide refractory multiple myeloma (MM) M.Q.Lacy, MD, M. Gertz, MD, S. Hayman, K. Detweiler Short, A. Dispenzieri, S. Zeldenrust, S. Kumar, P. Greipp, J. Lust, S. Russell, F. Buadi, R. Kyle, R. Fonseca, L. Bergsagel, V. Roy, J. Mikhael, K. Stewart, J. Allred, K. Laumann, S. Mandrekar, S.V. Rajkumar Mayo Clinic Scottsdale, Arizona Rochester, Minnesota Jacksonville, Florida Mayo Clinic College of Medicine Mayo Clinic Comprehensive Cancer Center 30

Prior treatment Number of prior regimens 1-2 10 (29%) 3-6 18 (53%) 7+ 6 (18%) Median 4 Previous regimens Lenalidomide 34 (100%) Thalidomide 19 (58%) Bortezomib 20 (59%) Transplant 23 (68%) auto 23 allo 1 31

Response Rates Confirmed Response Rate 32% Best Response VGPR 1 (3%) PR 10 (29%) MR 6 (18%) SD 11 (32%) PD 6 (18%) 50% 32

A Phase 1/2 Multi-Center, Randomized, Open Label Dose Escalation Study to determine the Maximum Tolerated Dose, Safety, and Efficacy of Pomalidomide alone or in combination with low-dose Dexamethasone in Pts With Relapsed and Refractory Multiple Myeloma, who have been previously treated with Lenalidomide and Bortezomib; Preliminary Results Paul Richardson 1, David Siegel 2, Rachid Baz 3, Susan L Kelley 4, Nikhil C Munshi 1, Daniel Sullivan 3, Laura McBride 2, Deborah Doss 1, Gail Larkins 5, Christian Jacques 5, Arlene Donaldson 5, Kenneth C Anderson 1 1 Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA; 2 Hackensack University Medical Center, Hackensack, NJ; 3 H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and Research Institute, Tampa, FL; 4 Multiple Myeloma Research Consortium, Norwalk, CT; 5 Celgene Corporation, Summit, NJ 33

MM-002: Phase 1 Summary of Best Response POM Dose (± Dex) Best Response a 2 mg (n = 6) 1 PR, 1 SD, 1 PD, 3 NE 3 mg (n = 8) 1 CR, 1 MR, 5 SD, 1 NE 4 mg (n = 8) 2 PR, 3 MR, 1 SD, 2 NE 5 mg (n = 10) 3 PR, 2 MR, 3 SD, 1 PD, 1 NE CR, complete response; MR, minimal response; NE, not evaluable; PD, progressive disease; PR, partial response; SD, stable disease. a. As measured using modified EBMT criteria 1,2 every 28d. 7/25 evaluable pts (28%) PR; 13/25 pts (52%) MR 3 15 pts received dex in addition to POM for either lack of response or PD; 8/15 pts (53%) improved response after dex added, with durability of response also improved from 13.5 to 16.9 wks 1. Bladé et al. Br J Haematol. 1998;102:1115-1123. 2. Richardson et al. N Engl J Med. 2003;348(26):2609-17. 3. Anderson et al. Leukemia. 2008;22(2):231-9. 34

Phase 1/2 Study of Elotuzumab in Combination with Lenalidomide and Low Dose Dexamethasone in Relapsed or Refractory Multiple Myeloma: Interim Results Sagar Lonial 1, Ravi Vij 2, Jean-Luc Harousseau 3, Thierry Facon 4, Jonathan Kaufman 1, Amitabha Mazumder 5, Philippe Moreau 3, Xavier Leleu 4, John Fry 6, Anil Singhal 6 and Sundar Jagannath 5 1 Winship Cancer Institute, Emory University, Atlanta, GA; 2 Oncology, Washington University School of Medicine, Saint Louis, MO; 3 Hematology, CHU Hotel-Dieu, Nantes, France; 4 Service des maladies du sang, Hospital Claude Huriez, CHRU Lille, Lille, France; 5 St. Vincent's Comprehensive Cancer Center, New York, NY; 6 Facet Biotech, Redwood City, CA 35

Elotuzumab A humanized monoclonal IgG1 targeting CS1, a cell surface glycoprotein CS1 is highly and uniformly expressed on multiple myeloma cells, with restricted expression on NK cells and little to no expression on normal tissues Pre-clinical data indicates mechanism of action is mainly through NKmediated ADCC Elotuzumab monotherapy study in advanced MM patients exhibited a manageable safety profile (first dose infusion reactions were key AEs) and stable disease in a number of patients 20/20 bone marrow cores were positive for CS1 expression Hsi et al., Clin Cancer Res 14:2775, 2008 36

Dosing Regimen DLT Observation Response Assessments Elotuzumab Dosing CYCLE 1 CYCLE 2 CYCLE 3 CYCLE 4 CYCLE N-1 5 CYCLE N6 Lenalidomide daily dose daily dose daily dose daily dose daily dose daily dose Cycle Day: 1 8 15 22 1 8 15 22 1 8 15 22 1 8 15 22 1 8 15 22 1 8 15 22 28 Dexamethasone 3+3 dose escalation cohorts evaluating 5, 10, and 20 mg/kg elotuzumab in combination with 25 mg lenalidomide and low dose dexamethasone First 5 patients were limited to 6 cycles of treatment. Remaining 23 patients are being treated until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity, if earlier 37

Efficacy Best Confirmed Response Total Patients (%) Patients w/o prior lenalidomide Total treated 28 22 population 1 ORR ( PR) 2 23 (82%) 21 (95%) VGPR 5 (18%) 5 (23%) PR 18 (64%) 16 (73%) SD 4 (14%) 1 (4%) PD 0 0 NE 1 (4%) 0 1 Patients receiving one or more doses of elotuzumab 2 Response assessed by IMWG criteria 38