The dramatic efficacy boost from adding epcoritamab suggests it's the primary driver of patient benefit, not just an adjunct. This shifts the conceptual framework, positioning the bispecific antibody as the new therapeutic backbone, with rituximab and lenalidomide as supportive agents.
The regimen's profound success in relapsed/refractory patients is not an endpoint, but a launchpad. It provides the rationale for the ongoing Epcor FL2 trial, which directly challenges standard chemoimmunotherapy and could establish a chemotherapy-free, bispecific-based combination as the new first-line standard of care.
Beyond approving the triplet combination, the positive Epcor FL1 trial data had a significant ripple effect. It solidified the drug's overall profile, leading to the conversion of its prior provisional (accelerated) approvals for monotherapy in follicular lymphoma and DLBCL into full, traditional approvals.
A modified three-step-up dosing schedule for epcoritamab drastically reduced cytokine release syndrome (CRS) rates to 26%, with no severe events. This safety profile supports fully outpatient administration, making this highly effective regimen accessible to community practices without immediate hospital access.
