Second-Line Therapies After Fixed-Duration Treatments

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Authored by Ann Liu, PhD
Medically Reviewed by Brian Koffman, MDCM (retired), MSEd

The Bottom Line:

Second-line targeted therapies are very effective for patients with CLL who relapse after first-line, fixed-duration venetoclax-based therapy.

Who Performed the Research and Where Was it Presented:

Dr. Carsten Niemann from the University of Copenhagen and colleagues presented the results at the American Society for Hematology (ASH) Annual Meeting in 2025.

Background:

Targeted therapies such as BTK inhibitors and BCL2 inhibitors have revolutionized the treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) and small lymphocytic lymphoma (SLL). Most patients now receive first-line treatment with a continuous BTK inhibitor (ibrutinib, acalabrutinib, zanubrutinib) or a fixed-duration venetoclax-based combination therapy. While these treatments can provide long remissions, they are not curative, and eventually patients may relapse. Researchers sought information on which second-line therapies might be most effective in patients who had previously received first-line treatment with a venetoclax-based therapy.

Methods and Participants:

The GAIA / CLL13 trial enrolled 926 physically fit patients with CLL and randomly assigned them to one of four treatment groups.

  1. Chemoimmunotherapy (CIT)
  2. Venetoclax plus rituximab (VR)
  3. Venetoclax plus obinutuzumab (VO)
  4. Ventoclax plus obinutuzumab plus ibrutinib (VOI)

Researchers followed these patients over time, and this study gathered data on patients who had their disease progress to the point where they needed a second-line treatment. Second-line treatments were chosen by the treating physician.

Results:

  • A total of 177 patients received second-line therapy.
  • 112 of these patients had received a venetoclax-based first-line treatment (VR, VO, or VOI), and their second-line treatments fell into the following categories:
    • BTK-inhibitor-based (n=57)
    • Venetoclax-based (n=23)
    • Venetoclax plus BTK inhibitor (n=26)
    • Chemoimmunotherapy (n=6)
  • Treatment-free survival rates 2 years after starting second-line therapy were:
    • BTK inhibitor-based: 78%
    • Venetoclax-based: 81%
    • Venetoclax plus a BTK inhibitor: 100%
    • Chemoimmunotherapy: 28%
  • Two-year overall survival rates were >90% in patients receiving second-line treatment with targeted therapies (BTK inhibitor-based, venetoclax-based, or venetoclax plus BTK inhibitor).

Conclusions:

Data have been sparse on outcomes for second-line therapies to help guide the appropriate sequencing of treatments. The importance of this study is that it demonstrates that venetoclax-based therapies and BTK inhibitor-based therapies are effective second-line treatments for patients who have already been treated with fixed-duration venetoclax-based therapies. This is great news for patients, because we just learned that fixed-duration venetoclax-based therapies are just as effective as continuous BTK inhibitor therapy as a first-line treatment. Now this study provides reassurance that there are good second-line options if patients relapse after a fixed-duration treatment, and they can even be re-treated with venetoclax-based combination therapies.

Links and Resources:

Watch the interview on the abstract here:

Second-Line Therapies After Fixed-Duration Treatments – Dr. Carsten Niemann and Dr. Nicole Lamanna

You can read the actual ASH abstract here: Efficacy of 2nd-line treatment in CLL after venetoclax-based 1st-line treatment: Results from the GAIA/CLL13 trial


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