Jadenu

Jadenu

Generic Name

Jadenu

Mechanism

  • Target: B‑cell maturation antigen (BCMA) highly expressed on malignant plasma cells.
  • Selective Binding: The humanized IgG1 antibody portion binds BCMA with high affinity.
  • Internalization & Release: Post‑binding, the ADC is endocytosed; cathepsin‑cleavable linker releases monomethyl auristatin F (MMAF).
  • Cytotoxic Effect: MMAF microtubule‑disrupting agent arrests cell division at the G₂/M checkpoint, leading to apoptotic cell death.

Pharmacokinetics

ParameterKey Points
AbsorptionIntravenous infusion (no oral availability).
DistributionHighly protein‑bound (~95 %); tissue penetration limited by large molecular size.
MetabolismPredominantly proteolytic catabolism of the antibody and linker cleavage; MMAF metabolized via hepatic β‑oxidation and glucuronidation.
Elimination~60 % renal excretion (mostly unchanged antibody fragments); ~40 % fecal via biliary excretion.
Half‑lifeApprox. 14–16 days (steady‑state reached after 2–3 cycles).
Drug–Drug InteractionsMinimal CYP450 interactions; caution with other cytotoxic agents that affect bone marrow reserve.

Indications

  • Relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma after ≥ 4 prior lines (PI + IMiD + CD‑38).
  • Approved in the USA; ongoing studies evaluate earlier lines and combination regimens (e.g., with pomalidomide or daratumumab).

Contraindications

  • Confirmed hypersensitivity to belantamab‑mafodotin or any excipient.
  • Severe ocular disease (e.g., pre‑existing corneal ectasia).
  • Active uncontrolled infections or significant organ dysfunction.
  • Warning: Ocular toxicity (keratopathy), cytopenias, infusion‑related reactions, and rare tumor lysis syndrome.

Dosing

  • Initial dose: 2.5 mg/kg IV over 60 minutes on Day 1 of each 21‑day cycle.
  • Pre‑infusion meds: Antihistamine and acetaminophen at least 30 min before to mitigate infusion reactions.
  • Infusion adjustments:
  • Grade ≥ 2 keratopathy → 2‑week hold, then resume at 2.0 mg/kg.
  • Grade 3–4 keratopathy → repeat dose‑reduction strategy or discontinuation.
  • Duration: Continue until disease progression, unacceptable toxicity, or patient withdrawal.

Adverse Effects

  • Common (≥ 10 %):
  • Ocular: blurred vision, photophobia, corneal epithelial micro‑defects.
  • Myelosuppression: neutropenia, anemia, thrombocytopenia.
  • Infusion reactions: chills, mild rash.
  • Serious (≥ 1 %):
  • Keratopathy grade 3–4 (potential loss of vision).
  • Tumor lysis syndrome (rare).
  • Severe cytopenias leading to infection or bleeding.
  • Opportunistic infections (viral, fungal).

Monitoring

  • Baseline ophthalmology exam (visual acuity, slit‑lamp).
  • Ophthalmologic re‑assessment at each cycle start or sooner if visual changes.
  • CBC, CMP: baseline, weekly during cycles 1–2, then per cycle.
  • Bone‑marrow evaluation if cytopenias ≥ Grade 3.
  • Infusion‑related monitoring: vitals during and post‑infusion.

Clinical Pearls

  • Early Keratopathy Detection: Screen patients for contact lens use and screen for pre‑existing corneal conditions; prompt referral to ophthalmology can prevent irreversible vision loss.
  • Dose‑Adaptation Algorithm: A two‑step reduction (2.5 → 2.0 → 1.5 mg/kg) often restores ocular tolerability while maintaining efficacy.
  • Combination Potential: Studies combining Jadenu with lenalidomide/pomalidomide show synergy; however, overlapping myelotoxicity necessitates close CBC monitoring and possible dose adjustments.
  • Adjuvant Eye Drops: Artificial tears and preservative‑free lubricants may mitigate minor ocular symptoms; avoid topical NSAIDs post‑infusion to prevent further epithelial damage.
  • Drug‑Administration Window: Administer at the beginning of the day; prolonging infusion beyond 60 min has not shown benefit and may increase infusion‑related reactions.

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References (abridged):

1. *Belantamab mafodotin—FDA prescribing information.*

2. J. Varga et al., *J Clin Oncol*, 2021.

3. B. P. Smith et al., *Blood*, 2022.

*(All data as of January 2026.)*

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