IMPORTANT SAFETY INFORMATION PRESCRIBING INFORMATION REFERENCES

mIDH1 is CONSIDERED AN
EARLY DRIVER IN THE PROGRESSION OF MDS

IDH1 mutations block normal differentiation of myeloblasts1,5,16,17

IDH1 mutations are reoccurring molecular abnormalities that can occur in up to 4% of patients, and the mutation rate may double in patients who progress to AML6,18
mIDH1 is associated with a higher incidence of neutropenia, higher rate of transformation to AML, and poorer overall and leukemia-free survival18-20,a
NCCN Guidelines® recommend genetic testing for somatic mutations (ie, acquired mutations) in genes associated with MDS4
NCCN Guidelines recommend retesting if there is disease progression, no response following initial treatment, or relapse in patients with lower-risk MDS4
NCCN Guidelines also recommend retesting in R/R MDS patients with lower-risk disease with symptomatic anemia or higher-risk disease4
Patients should be retested at the first suspicion of clinical change because IDH1 mutations
can arise anytime during the course of MDS6

aThe 2-year survival rate for patients with mIDH1 MDS was 14% compared to 52% for patients with wtIDH1 MDS. 67% of patients with mIDH1 MDS transformed to AML compared to 28% of patients with wtIDH1 MDS.18

2-HG, 2-hydroxyglutarate; mIDH1, mutated IDH1; NCCN, National Comprehensive Cancer Network® (NCCN®); wtIDH1, wild-type IDH1.