The most common adverse reactions include hemorrhage, nausea, increased phosphate, musculoskeletal pain, infection, increased aspartate aminotransferase, febrile neutropenia, increased alanine aminotransferase, increased intact parathyroid hormone, bacterial infection, diarrhea, differentiation syndrome, electrocardiogram QT prolonged, decreased phosphate, increased triglycerides, decreased potassium, decreased appetite, constipation, edema, viral infection, fatigue, and increased alkaline phosphatase.[3]
Revumenib was approved for medical use in the United States in November 2024.[1][3]
Medical uses
Revumenib is indicated for the treatment of relapsed or refractory acute leukemia with a lysine methyltransferase 2A gene (KMT2A) translocation.[1][3]
History
Efficacy was evaluated in a single-arm cohort of an open-label, multicenter trial (SNDX-5613-0700, NCT04065399; AUGMENT-101) in 104 adult and pediatric participants (at least 30 days old) with relapsed or refractory (R/R) acute leukemia with a lysine methyltransferase 2A gene translocation.[3] Participants with an 11q23 partial tandem duplication were excluded.[3] Revumenib was administered until disease progression, unacceptable toxicity, failure to achieve morphological leukemia-free state by four cycles of treatment, or hematopoietic stem cell transplantation.[3]
^World Health Organization (2022). "International nonproprietary names for pharmaceutical substances (INN): recommended INN: list 88". WHO Drug Information. 36 (3). hdl:10665/363551.
Clinical trial number NCT04065399 for "A Study of Revumenib in R/R Leukemias Including Those With an MLL/KMT2A Gene Rearrangement or NPM1 Mutation (AUGMENT-101)" at ClinicalTrials.gov