RecruitingPhase 2NCT06827860

Subcutaneous Talquetamab in Elderly Patients With Multiple Myeloma in Early Relapse

A Phase 2 Single-Arm Study of Subcutaneous Talquetamab in Elderly Patients With Multiple Myeloma in Early Relapse


Sponsor

Larysa Sanchez

Enrollment

23 participants

Start Date

Nov 18, 2025

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Conditions

Summary

Induction therapy approaches in recent years have evolved, now utilizing triple or quadruple drug regimens in the majority of patients. By combining anti-CD38 antibodies, proteasome inhibitors (PIs), immunomodulatory drugs (IMiDs), and steroids, patients achieve longer remissions with their first- and second-line therapies but also become refractory to most or all three major drug classes earlier. For patients who are refractory to at least 3 of the commonly administered PIs and IMiDs, occurring after 2 lines of therapy in many, the median overall survival is only 5 months. Elderly, frail patients are not often candidates at this point for aggressive therapies like stem cell transplantation and CAR T-cell therapy thus necessitating effective yet tolerable treatments for elderly patients in early relapse (1-3 prior therapy). Talquetamab is a GPRC5DxCD3 bispecific antibody that redirects patients' T cells to myeloma cells which express GPRC5D. In the phase 1 MonumenTAL-1, heavily pretreated patients with a median of 6 prior lines of therapy attained a 70% response rate with 405 μg/kg of subcutaneous (SC) talquetamab. Importantly, subcutaneous talquetamab was found to be tolerable for the treated population, which included 28% of patients aged ≥70, with only three patients experiencing dose-limiting toxicities in the form of grade 3 rashes which responded to steroids. The anti-CD38 antibody daratumumab eliminates CD38-positive T and B regulatory cells, potentiates the activity of bispecific antibodies like talquetamab, and may improve its efficacy when used in combination. The aim of this study will be to assess the efficacy and safety of treating elderly patients with relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma with at least ≥2 prior lines of therapy with subcutaneous talquetamab. Patients who have progressive disease on talquetamab or who fail to respond after 3 cycles will have subcutaneous daratumumab added to their regimen.


Eligibility

Min Age: 70 Years

Plain Language Summary

Simplified for easier understanding

This study is testing talquetamab — an immunotherapy drug given as an injection under the skin — in older patients with multiple myeloma (a blood cancer) that has returned after initial treatment. Talquetamab works by helping the immune system find and kill myeloma cells. **You may be eligible if...** - You are an older adult with a confirmed diagnosis of multiple myeloma - Your myeloma has come back after 1–3 prior lines of treatment - Your cancer is measurable through blood or urine protein tests, or light chain levels - You are in reasonably good health overall **You may NOT be eligible if...** - Your myeloma has stopped responding to multiple drug classes (triple-class refractory disease, depending on study criteria) - You have significant organ problems that would affect your ability to tolerate the treatment - You have active serious infections or uncontrolled other illnesses - You previously received talquetamab or similar GPRC5D-targeting treatments Talk to your doctor to see if this trial is right for you.

This summary was AI-generated to explain the trial in plain language. It is not medical advice. Always discuss eligibility with your doctor before enrolling in a clinical trial.

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Interventions

DRUGTalquetamab

SC monotherapy starting with three step-up doses followed by the standard 800 μg/kg dose every other week. Cycles will be 28 days long.

DRUGDaratumumab

SC at the standard dose (weekly for 2 cycles, every other week for 4 cycles, monthly thereafter)


Locations(1)

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

New York, New York, United States

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NCT06827860


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