While injectable treatments improve patients’ survival, they require patients to visit a clinic five to seven days every month. “They are spending more than a quarter of their remaining life coming to the clinic to get injections,” says Zeidan. “For many seniors, this time toxicity is so disruptive to their quality of life that some choose to forgo treatment entirely.”
To solve this, Zeidan and his colleagues conducted the ASCERTAIN-V Phase I–II clinical trial, which included 189 patients who were 75 or older or had health conditions that made intensive chemotherapy unfavorable. The trial swapped the traditional injection for two oral pills: a combination of decitabine (a chemotherapy that slows cancer growth and boosts production of healthy blood cells) and cedazuridine (an ingredient that allows decitabine to work in a pill form) as well as venetoclax, an inhibitor that blocks a protein cancer cells need to live.
Once a patient’s bone marrow was clear of cancer, the team shortened the number of days the pills were taken in the next cycles. Ventoclax was shortened from 28 days per cycle down to 21, 14, or seven days depending on how quickly a patient's blood count could recover. Decitabine-cedazuridine was shortened from five days per cycle to three to four days.
“This truncation strategy allowed the patients' healthy blood counts to recover faster and remain in good levels for longer periods,” says Zeidan. “It also reduced the risk of dangerous side effects like infections or bleeding while still keeping the leukemia under control.”