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Late-Breaking Research: CLINICAL/TRANSLATIONAL RESEARCH
Abstract #LB01

Comparison of the Efficacy of Generic Plerixafor Versus Mozobil as Adjunct Peripheral Blood Stem-Cell Mobilization Agents in Patients With Multiple Myeloma

JHOP - March 2024 Vol 14 Special Feature - HOPA Abstracts

Presenting Authors: Hoim Kim, PharmD, BCOP, BCPS, City of Hope National Medical Center, Duarte, CA; Shelley Chang, MD, PhD, University of Southern California School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA

Co-Authors: Shan Yuan, MD, and Shirong Wang, MD, City of Hope National Medical Center, Duarte, CA

BACKGROUND: Plerixafor is an adjunct agent for peripheral blood stem cell (PBSC) mobilization with well-demonstrated safety and efficacy since its FDA approval in 2009. Until recently, plerixafor was solely available in the United States under the brand name of Mozobil (Sanofi-Aventis; France), and its widespread use has been limited by cost. Our institution recently switched from using Mozobil to generic plerixafor (Meitheal Pharmaceuticals; Chicago, IL) with a much lower cost.

OBJECTIVE: This retrospective, observational study was conducted to compare the mobilization efficacy of generic and brand-name plerixafor in patients with multiple myeloma (MM).

METHODS: Two cohorts of consecutive patients with MM who underwent PBSC mobilization immediately before (n=64) and after (n=61) the switch from brand-name to generic plerixafor were identified. All were mobilized with filgrastim at 10 µg/kg/day for 4 days, with plerixafor given subcutaneously either upfront in the evening of day 4 prior to starting collection on day 5 or added just in time on day 5 following low peripheral blood CD34 counts or collection yields. Injections and apheresis collections continued until 2-3 × 10e6 or 4-6 × 10e6 CD34+ cells/kg for single and double transplant candidates, respectively, were collected.

RESULTS: The 2 cohorts had no significant difference in sex (brand-name, 65.5% male; generic, 60.7% male; P=.70), median age (brand-name, 61.5; generic, 64; P=.30), and mean weight (brand-name, 82 kg; generic, 86.86 kg; P=.20), previous radiation therapy (brand-name, 14.1%; generic 9.84%; P=.59), previous number of therapy lines (brand-name: 70% 1 line, 28.1% 2 lines, 1.56% 3 lines; generic: 67.2% 1 line, 32.8% 2 lines, 0% 3 lines; P=.70), upfront (vs just-in-time), or plerixafor use (brand-name, 62.5%; generic, 73.8%; P=.250). Patients required a lower median number of plerixafor doses and collection days in the generic arm (1; interquartile range [IQR], 1-2) versus brand arm (2; IQR, 1-2; P<.05). Only 31% of patients in the generic arm required more than 1 dose versus 59% of patients in the brand-name arm (P<.05). There is a significantly higher post-plerixafor day-1 yield (10e6 CD34+ cells/kg) in the generic versus brand-name cohorts (4.79 vs 3.78, respectively; P<.05). There were no significant differences in the median total yield after treatment with plerixafor (brand-name, 5.38; generic 5.47; P=.441) and the median overall cumulative total yield (brand-name, 5.91; generic, 5.80; P=.505). Only 4.69% and 3.28% in the brand-name and generic cohorts did not collect 2 × 10e6 CD34+ cells/kg (P=1).

CONCLUSION: Generic plerixafor produced similar cumulative collection yields with fewer doses and collection days compared to brand-name plerixafor.

  1. DiPersio JF, Stadtmauer EA, Nademanee A, et al. Plerixafor and G-CSF versus placebo and G-CSF to mobilize hematopoietic stem cells for autologous stem cell transplantation in patients with multiple myeloma. Blood. 2009;113:5720-5726.
  2. Park G, Shayani S, Stiller T, et al. Dose capping of plerixafor in patients weighing more than 100 kg at one vial led to successful mobilization outcomes and significant cost savings. Transfusion. 2018;58:323-329.
  3. Sevindik O, Bilgen H, Serin I, et al. Comparison of efficacy and safety of generic plerixafor vs original plerixafor in the mobilization of myeloma patients. Blood. 2022;140(suppl 1):12803-12804.
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