Christopher A. Yasenchak
Willamette University
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Featured researches published by Christopher A. Yasenchak.
Blood | 2015
Andres Forero-Torres; Beata Holkova; Jerome H. Goldschmidt; Robert Chen; Gregg Olsen; Ralph V. Boccia; Rodolfo E. Bordoni; Jonathan W. Friedberg; Jeff P. Sharman; Maria Corinna Palanca-Wessels; Yinghui Wang; Christopher A. Yasenchak
Outcomes in older patients with Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) tend to be poor following conventional chemotherapy regimens. Treatment-related toxicity is significant and comorbidities often limit therapeutic options. This phase 2, open-label study evaluated the efficacy and safety of brentuximab vedotin, a CD30-directed antibody-drug conjugate, as frontline therapy in 27 HL patients aged ≥60 years. The objective response rate (ORR) was 92%, with 73% achieving complete remission. All patients achieved stable disease or better, and had decreased tumor volume following treatment. At the time of this analysis, the median duration of objective response for efficacy-evaluable patients (N = 26) was 9.1 months (range, 2.8 to 20.9+ months), median progression-free survival was 10.5 months (range, 2.6+ to 22.3+ months), and median overall survival had not been reached (range, 4.6+ to 24.9+ months). The observed adverse events (AEs) were generally consistent with the known safety profile of brentuximab vedotin. The most common AEs were peripheral sensory neuropathy (78%), fatigue (44%), and nausea (44%), and were ≤ grade 2 for most patients. The incidence of grade 3 peripheral neuropathy events was relatively high (30% overall), particularly among patients with the known risk factors of diabetes and/or hypothyroidism (46% vs 14% for those without). However, these risk factors were not associated with delayed time to resolution/improvement of peripheral neuropathy. Preliminary data showed no substantial age-related changes in brentuximab vedotin pharmacokinetics. Brentuximab vedotin monotherapy may provide a frontline treatment option for older patients who cannot tolerate conventional combination chemotherapy. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT01716806.
Blood | 2017
Jonathan W. Friedberg; Andres Forero-Torres; Rodolfo E. Bordoni; Vivian Jean M. Cline; Dipti Patel Donnelly; Patrick J. Flynn; Gregg Olsen; Robert Chen; Abraham Fong; Yinghui Wang; Christopher A. Yasenchak
Patients aged ≥60 years with treatment-naive Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) have few treatment options and inferior survival due to treatment-related toxicities and comorbidities. This phase 2, nonrandomized, open-label study evaluated brentuximab vedotin (BV) monotherapy (results previously reported), BV plus dacarbazine (DTIC), and BV plus bendamustine. Patients had classical HL and were ineligible for or declined frontline chemotherapy. Twenty-two patients received 1.8 mg/kg BV and 375 mg/m2 DTIC for up to 12 cycles, and 20 more patients received 1.8 mg/kg BV plus 90 or 70 mg/m2 bendamustine for up to 6 cycles (dose reduced due to toxicity). Subsequent BV monotherapy was allowed. Approximately 30 patients were to receive BV plus bendamustine; however, the incidence of serious adverse events (65%) and 2 deaths on study led to discontinuation of bendamustine and cessation of enrollment. Most patients had stage III/IV disease, and approximately half had ≥3 comorbidities or were impaired in ≥1 aspect that significantly interfered with quality of life. For BV plus DTIC, the objective response rate (ORR) was 100% and the complete remission (CR) rate was 62%. To date, the median progression-free survival (PFS) is 17.9 months. For BV plus bendamustine, the ORR was 100% and the CR rate was 88%. Neither the median PFS nor overall survival was reached. For elderly patients with HL, BV plus DTIC may be a frontline option based on tolerability and response duration. Despite activity, BV plus bendamustine is not a tolerable regimen in these patients. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT01716806.
Leukemia & Lymphoma | 2015
Christopher A. Yasenchak; Wan-Yu Tseng; Mark Yap; Debra Rembert; Debra A. Patt
The current study aimed to assess the economic burden of progressive disease among patients with Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) receiving second- or third-line therapy in a large US network of community-based practices. This retrospective, observational cohort analysis used electronic health records to examine adult patients with classical HL who received chemotherapy between 2007 and 2011. Of 291 observations, 112 had non-progressive disease (received only one line of therapy; LOT1), 114 received second-line therapy (LOT2), and 65 received third-line therapy (LOT3). In LOT2, 49 patients (43%) underwent transplant. In LOT3, 13 patients (20%) underwent transplant. The mean total cost per line of therapy was
British Journal of Haematology | 2018
David J. Andorsky; Kathryn S. Kolibaba; Sarit Assouline; Andres Forero-Torres; Vicky Jones; Leonard M. Klein; Dipti Patel-Donnelly; Mitchell R. Smith; Wei Ye; Wen Shi; Christopher A. Yasenchak; Jeff P. Sharman
21 956 in LOT1,
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2012
Hovav Nechushtan; Raanan Berger; Razelle Kurzrock; Ilan-Gil Ron; Patrick Schöffski; Ahmad Awada; Christopher A. Yasenchak; Howard A. Burris; David A. Ramies; Teresa Rafferty; Xiaodong Shen; Sara M. Tolaney
77 219 in LOT2, and
Blood | 2015
Christopher A. Yasenchak; Andres Forero-Torres; Vivian Jean Mikao Cline-Burkhardt; Rodolfo E. Bordoni; Dipti Patel-Donnelly; Patrick J. Flynn; Robert Chen; Abraham Fong; Jonathan W. Friedberg
59 442 in LOT3. When transplant was required, the mean total cost per line of therapy increased 7- to 8-fold when compared with the cost of LOT1 (approximately
Blood | 2015
Christopher A. Yasenchak; Ahmad Halwani; Ranjana H. Advani; Stephen M. Ansell; Lihua E. Budde; John M. Burke; Charles M. Farber; Beata Holkova; Luis Fayad; Kathryn S. Kolibaba; Mark Knapp; Martha Li; Thomas J. Manley; Dipti Patel-Donnelly; Mahesh Seetharam; Habte Aragaw Yimer; Nancy L. Bartlett
154 000 for LOT2 and
Blood | 2015
Jeff P. Sharman; Leonard M. Klein; Michael Boxer; Kathryn S. Kolibaba; Steve Abella; Clarence Eng; Jing He; Jing Hu; Christopher A. Yasenchak
193 000 for LOT3). Future therapies that intervene as early as possible in the treatment algorithm to prevent or significantly delay relapse will likely result in significant cost savings.
Blood | 2016
Jeffrey P. Sharman; Andrei R. Shustov; Mitchell R. Smith; Christopher T. Hagenstad; Kathryn S. Kolibaba; Esteban Abella-Dominicis; Danjie Zhang; Siddhartha Mitra; Christopher A. Yasenchak; Farrukh T. Awan
Spleen tyrosine kinase (Syk) mediates B‐cell receptor signalling in normal and malignant B cells. Entospletinib is an oral, selective Syk inhibitor. Entospletinib monotherapy was evaluated in a multicentre, phase 2 study of patients with relapsed or refractory indolent non‐Hodgkin lymphoma or mantle cell lymphoma (MCL). Subjects received 800 mg entospletinib twice daily. Forty‐one follicular lymphoma (FL), 17 lymphoplasmacytoid lymphoma/Waldenström macroglobulinaemia (LPL/WM), 17 marginal zone lymphoma (MZL) and 39 MCL patients were evaluated. The primary endpoint was a progression‐free survival (PFS) rate (defined as not experiencing progression or death) at 16 weeks for patients with MCL and at 24 weeks for patients with FL, LPL/WM and MZL. The most common treatment‐emergent adverse events were fatigue, nausea, diarrhoea, vomiting, headache and cough. Common laboratory abnormalities were anaemia, neutropenia and thrombocytopenia; aspartate transaminase, alanine transaminase, total bilirubin and serum creatinine were all increased. PFS at 16 weeks in the MCL cohort was 63·9% [95% confidence interval (CI) 45–77·8%]; PFS at 24 weeks in the FL, LPL/WM, MCL and MZL cohorts was 51·5% (95% CI 32·8–67·4%), 69·8% (95% CI 31·8–89·4%), 56·6% (95% CI 37·5–71·8%) and 46·2% (95% CI 18·5–70·2%), respectively. Entospletinib had limited single‐agent activity with manageable toxicity in these patient populations.
Blood | 2014
Andres Forero-Torres; Beata Holkova; Jeff P. Sharman; Jonathan W. Friedberg; Maurice J. Berkowitz; William Fintel; Robert Chen; Ralph V. Boccia; Mansoor Saleh; Neil Josephson; Maria Corinna Palanca-Wessels; Christopher A. Yasenchak