scholarly journals Prognostic significance of early molecular response in chronic myeloid leukemia patients treated with tyrosine kinase inhibitors

Hematology ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 (1) ◽  
pp. 240-243 ◽  
Author(s):  
David T. Yeung ◽  
Michael J. Mauro

Abstract A 55-year-old man presented with splenomegaly (10 cm below left costal margin) and leucocytosis (145 × 109/L). Differential showed neutrophilia with increased basophils (2%), eosinophils (1.5%), and left shift including myeloblasts (3%). A diagnosis of chronic myeloid leukemia in chronic phase was established after marrow cytogenetics demonstrated the Philadelphia chromosome. Molecular studies showed a BCR-ABL1 qPCR result of 65% on the International Scale. Imatinib therapy at 400 mg daily was initiated due to patient preference, with achievement of complete hematological response after 4 weeks of therapy. BCR-ABL1 at 1 and 3 months after starting therapy was 37% and 13%, respectively (all reported on International Scale). Is this considered an adequate molecular response?

Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (11) ◽  
pp. 2232-2235 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dushyant Verma ◽  
Hagop M. Kantarjian ◽  
Dan Jones ◽  
Rajyalakshmi Luthra ◽  
Gautam Borthakur ◽  
...  

Abstract The most common BCR-ABL transcripts in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) are e13a2(b2a2) and e14a2(b3a2). Other transcripts such as e1a2 are rare and their outcome with tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) therapy is undefined. We analyzed 1292 CML patients and identified 14 with only e1a2 transcripts, 9 in chronic phase (CP), 1 in accelerated phase (AP), and 4 in blast phase (BP). Of the CP, 4 achieved complete hematologic response (CHR); 2, complete cytogenetic response (CCyR); 2, partial cytogenetic response (PCyR), and 1 did not respond to imatinib. Five patients progressed to myeloid BP (3), lymphoid BP (1), or AP (1). The AP patient received various TKIs sequentially and achieved only CHR. BP patients received hyper-CVAD (hyperfractionated cyclophosphamide, vincristine, adriamycin, dexamethasone) plus imatinib/dasatinib or idarubicin plus cytarabine (Ara-C); 2 did not respond, 1 had CCyR, and 1 short-lasting complete molecular response (CMR). Overall, cytogenetic responses lasted 3 to 18 months; only 2 achieved major molecular response (MMR) on TKI. P190BCR-ABL CML is rare and is associated with an inferior outcome to therapy with TKI. These patients need to be identified as high-risk patients.


Blood ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 138 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 3596-3596
Author(s):  
Mengxing Xue ◽  
Zhao Zeng ◽  
Qinrong Wang ◽  
Lijun Wen ◽  
Yi Xu ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Despite significant improvements in the prognosis of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) achieved by targeted therapy with tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs), a small proportion of cases may not respond to TKIs or may relapse after an initial response, and then progress from chronic phase (CP) to blastic crisis (BC), characterized by a dismal prognosis. It remained uncertain whether the genetic lesions in addition to the BCR-ABL1 fusion could predict clinical outcomes of CML in the TKI era. Aim: To study the mutational profiles at each stage of CML and the prognostic significance of somatic mutations in addition to the BCR-ABL1 fusion in the TKI era. Patients and Methods: We performed targeted sequencing in 81 CML patients chosen retrospectively. 10 patients had optimal response to TKIs by European LeukemiaNet criteria and maintained durable major molecular response more than 5 years. 71 patients had progressed to accelerated phase (AP) or BC, of whom 43 had sequencing performed at paired CP and AP/BC samples, 28 at AP or BC samples. Totally, we analyzed 53 CP, 20 AP, and 61 BC samples. The targeted resequencing gene panel, covering 386 genes which were recurrently mutated in hematologic malignancies, were performed on a HiSeq 4000 NGS platform (Illumina). Results: Among the 53 CP samples, 20 (37.7%) had mutations involving 14 genes, and the number of mutated genes in each patient was 0-3 (median 0). ASXL1 was the most commonly mutated gene, 10/53 (18.9%) patients had this mutation, followed by KMT2D (4/53, 7.5%), PC (2/53, 3.8%), ERBB4 (2/53, 3.8%). ASXL1 mutation mainly existed in 43 patients with progressed disease , while only one case carried this mutation in 10 patients responsive to TKIs (20.9% vs 10%). 17/20 (85%) AP samples (including 10 patients progressed to AP and the other 10 patients who eventually progressed to BC from AP ) carried mutations involving 18 genes, the number of mutated genes in each patient was 0-6 (median 1.5). ABL1 was the most commonly mutated gene, and 8/20 (40%) patients had this mutation. The second was the ASXL1 mutation, 7 (7/20, 35%) patients carried this mutation. The other genes mutated in more than 2 patients included BCORL1 (3/20, 15%), RUNX1 (2/20, 10%), PHF6 (2/20, 10%), KMT2D (2/20, 10%), ATM (2/20, 10%). 54/61 (88.5%) BC samples (44 with myeloid crisis, 14 with lymphoid crisis, 3 with mixed phenotypic crisis) carried mutations, involving 41 genes, and the number of mutated genes in each patient was 0-9 (median 2). Similar to the mutation status in AP, the most commonly mutated gene was also ABL1, 24/61 (39.3%) patients carried this gene mutation, followed by ASXL1 mutation (13/61, 21.3%), and the other genes were in order, RUNX1 (11/61, 18.0%), WT1 (8/61, 13.1%), GATA2 (6/61, 9.8%), MED12 (5/61, 8.2%), IDH1 (5/61, 8.2%), TP53 (4/61 , 6.6%), KMT2D (4/61, 6.6%), etc. (Figure 1A) Among all the samples, 34 nonsynonymous variants in the ASXL1 gene were identified in 31 samples of 21 patients ( 3 samples with two variants). All the variants were frameshift and nonsense mutations, localized at the last exon of the ASXL1 gene. 13/21 patients with ASXL1 mutations had multi-stage samples. The median VAF of the ASXL1 mutations in the advanced stage was 31.4% (0-47.0%), which was significantly higher than that in CP at diagnosis (7.0%, 0-27.2%, P=0.033). Most of the ASXL1 mutations detected in CP expanded at the advanced disease, and were accompanied with other additional gene abnormalities, such as ABL1, RUNX1 and WT1 mutations, with the VAF similar to or lower than that of the ASXL1 mutations. In a few cases, the ASXL1 mutant clones in the CP disappeared, suggesting that some ASXL1 mutations may be clonal hematopoiesis unrelated to disease progression.(Figure 1B) In order to evaluate the effects of ASXL1 mutations on sensitivity to TKIs in vitro. We co-expressed P210-BCR-ABL1 fusion and ASXL1 mutation (G646Wfs*12) in Ba/F3 cells. Compared to Ba/F3 cells co-expressing BCR-ABL1 fusion and ASXL1 mutation (Ba/F3-BA/As), Ba/F3-BCR-ABL1 cells without ASXL1 mutation (Ba/F3-BA/Ve) showed higher sensitivity to TKIs, including imatinib, dasatinib and nilotinib.(Figure 1C) Conclusions: These results demonstrated the genetic lesions accumulated during the progression of CML from CP to BC. ASXL1 mutations were the most common genetic lesion in CP at diagnosis and may confer a poor prognosis, as it reduced the sensitivity to TKIs. Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Cancers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (7) ◽  
pp. 1643
Author(s):  
Prahathishree Mohanavelu ◽  
Mira Mutnick ◽  
Nidhi Mehra ◽  
Brandon White ◽  
Sparsh Kudrimoti ◽  
...  

Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) are the frontline therapy for BCR-ABL (Ph+) chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). A systematic meta-analysis of 43 peer-reviewed studies with 10,769 CML patients compared the incidence of gastrointestinal adverse events (GI AEs) in a large heterogeneous CML population as a function of TKI type. Incidence and severity of nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea were assessed for imatinib, dasatinib, bosutinib, and nilotinib. Examination of combined TKI average GI AE incidence found diarrhea most prevalent (22.5%), followed by nausea (20.6%), and vomiting (12.9%). Other TKI GI AEs included constipation (9.2%), abdominal pain (7.6%), gastrointestinal hemorrhage (3.5%), and pancreatitis (2.2%). Mean GI AE incidence was significantly different between TKIs (p < 0.001): bosutinib (52.9%), imatinib (24.2%), dasatinib (20.4%), and nilotinib (9.1%). Diarrhea was the most prevalent GI AE with bosutinib (79.2%) and dasatinib (28.1%), whereas nausea was most prevalent with imatinib (33.0%) and nilotinib (13.2%). Incidence of grade 3 or 4 severe GI AEs was ≤3% except severe diarrhea with bosutinib (9.5%). Unsupervised clustering revealed treatment efficacy measured by the complete cytogenetic response, major molecular response, and overall survival is driven most by disease severity, not TKI type. For patients with chronic phase CML without resistance, optimal TKI selection should consider TKI AE profile, comorbidities, and lifestyle.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (11) ◽  
pp. 3692
Author(s):  
Matteo Dragani ◽  
Giovanna Rege Cambrin ◽  
Paola Berchialla ◽  
Irene Dogliotti ◽  
Gianantonio Rosti ◽  
...  

Successful discontinuation of tyrosine kinase inhibitors has been achieved in patients with chronic-phase chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). Careful molecular monitoring after discontinuation warrants safe and prompt resumption of therapy. We retrospectively evaluated how molecular monitoring has been conducted in Italy in a cohort of patients who discontinued tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) treatment per clinical practice. The outcome of these patients has recently been reported—281 chronic-phase CML patients were included in this subanalysis. Median follow-up since discontinuation was 2 years. Overall, 2203 analyses were performed, 17.9% in the first three months and 38.4% in the first six months. Eighty-six patients lost major molecular response (MMR) in a mean time of 5.7 months—65 pts (75.6%) during the first six months. We evaluated the number of patients who would experience a delay in diagnosis of MMR loss if a three-month monitoring schedule was adopted. In the first 6 months, 19 pts (29.2%) would have a one-month delay, 26 (40%) a 2-month delay. Very few patients would experience a delay in the following months. A less intense frequency of monitoring, particularly after the first 6 months off treatment, would not have affected the success of treatment-free remission (TFR) nor put patients at risk of progression.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 3228-3228 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicolas Batty ◽  
Hagop Kantarjian ◽  
Gautam Borthakur ◽  
Farhad Ravandi ◽  
Susan O’Brien ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Variant Philadelphia chromosome (Ph) translocations frequently involving 1-2 additional chromosomes besides 9 and 22 and represent 5–10% of patients (pts) with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). The European LeukemiaNet recommendations provide a warning for patients with variant translocations, although there is limited information about their outcome after therapy with tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI). Our prior analysis mostly among pts who had failed prior interferon suggested that these pts had similar outcome to those with classic Ph translocations when treated with imatinib (El-Zimaity et al; Br. J Haematol 2004). Aims: To explore the characteristics and outcome of patients with variant translocations treated with frontline imatinib or 2nd generation TKI (dasatinib or nilotinib) after imatinib failure. Methods: We reviewed the outcome of all pts with CML treated at our institution in 3 groups: early chronic phase (CP) receiving imatinib as initial therapy, and CP treated with 2nd generation TKI after Imatinib failure, accelerated phase (AP) treated with 2nd TKI after imatinib failure. Results of pts with variant Ph were compared to those with classic Ph. Results: Among 554 pts (278 CP frontline imatinib, 190 CP post imatinib failure, 86 AP post Imatinib failure) 33 (6%) had variant Ph (21[8%], 6[3%], 6[7%], in each of the 3 groups, respectively). Median follow up is 55 months (mo) (2 – 90), 24 (1 – 53) mo and 29 (5 – 46) mo, respectively, for the 3 groups. Results are summarized in the following tables: Frontline Imatinib Therapy Percentage Variant Ph Classic Ph P value N=21 N=255 MCyR 95 95 1 CCyR 86 89 0.49 2-yr EFS 83 93 0.93 2-yr TFS 94 96 0.7 2-yr OS 100 99 0.48 Second generation TKI Variant Ph Chromosome Variant Ph Classic Ph P value Chronic Phase N = 6 N = 78 MCyR 100 75 0.34 CCyR 100 72 0.34 2-yr EFS 100 80 0.27 2-yr OS 100 98 0.71 Accelerated Phase N=6 N=80 MCyR 33 38 1 CCyR 33 32 1 2-yr EFS 25 41 0.41 2-yr OS 100 89 0.44 Conclusion: Pts with variant Ph have a similar prognosis to those with classic Ph translocations when treated with imatinib as initial therapy or with 2nd generation TKI after imatinib failure. The warning category for these patients may no longer be needed in the era of TKI.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 4458-4458
Author(s):  
Arif Alam ◽  
Sabir Hussain ◽  
Amar Lal ◽  
Donna Lee ◽  
Jorgen Kristensen

Abstract Abstract 4458 Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML) is a clonal myeloproliferative disorder characterized by the presence of a balanced reciprocal translocation involving the long arms of chromosomes 9 and 22. The fusion gene that is created by this translocation (BCR-ABL1) encodes for a constitutively active protein tyrosine kinase that is primarily responsible for the leukemic phenotype. Targeted therapy with Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors (TKIs) has become the recommended first-line treatment for patients with CML. Monitoring of the CML is done with quantification of the BCR-ABL transcripts by RQ-PCR–based molecular technique. Twenty nine patients were diagnosed with CML in chronic phase between January 2009 till June 2012. The median age was 32 years (range 22–68 years). Male to female ratio was4.14:1. Three patients were lost from follow up after diagnosis and are excluded. Molecular response is available for 16 patients. Nine patients were treated with Imatinib 400 mg daily, four with Dasatinib 100 mg daily and three with Nilotinib 400 mg BID daily as upfront therapy. Twelve patients have achieved MMR/CMR (75 %) within 18months of starting therapy. Four patients have failed to achieve MMR by 24 months. All non responders were on Imatinib. Interestingly six (37.5%) patients achieved MMR/CMR within 9 months of starting TKIs. Of these only 1 was on Imatinib while the rest were on 2nd generation TKIs (Nilotinib 3 and Dasatinib 2). MMR report from Enestnd trial is 67–71% in favor of Nilotinib as compared to Imatinib 44%, while the Dasision trial reported a MMR of 44 % in favor of Dasatinib with faster rate to response. Our results mirror the results of these phase 3 randomized trial with MMR/CMR of 75 %. Until today there has been no case of progressive disease. Our data is limited but shows that the median age is much lower compared to Western countries, just reflecting differences in the age distribution of the population in the UAE with 80% being below the age of 65 years. Expatriates accounts for approximately 80% of the population in the UAE and many are temporary employed, having limited health care coverage, limited financial means as well as limited possibilities to attend regular follow-ups. This leads to compliance problems, loss from follow-up and suboptimal management and monitoring of their disease. Disclosures: Alam: BMS/Novartis: Consultancy, Honoraria. Hussain:BMS: Consultancy, Honoraria.


2021 ◽  
Vol 71 (Suppl-1) ◽  
pp. S71-75
Author(s):  
Amjad Khan ◽  
Riaz Ahmed ◽  
Sarah Fatimah ◽  
Muhammad Nadeem ◽  
Shama Iqbal ◽  
...  

Objective: To determine the relationship of baseline quantitative BCR ABL1 gene percentage and therapeutic response i.e. Early Molecular Response (EMR) at 3 months with first generation Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (Imatinib) in patients with Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML) in chronic phase (CP). Study Design: Prospective observational study. Place and Duration of Study: Combined Military Hospital, Rawalpindi, Pakistan, and Armed Forces Institute of Pathology Rawalpindi, Pakistan from Oct 2017 to Oct 2019. Methodology: One hundred and seventy patients, 18 years of age or older with newly diagnosed Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML) in chronic phase (CP) with quantitative baseline BCR-ABL (IS) transcript were included in the study. All enrolled patients were placed on Imatinib therapy (400 mg/day) and Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) for BCR ABL transcript was repeated at 3 months to document EMR (BCR-ABL (IS) <10%). Patients who were in accelerated/blast phase, or already taking any Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors (TKI) or chemotherapy were excluded from the study. Results: In our study 101 (59.4%) patients achieved early molecular response. Out of these 80 (70.8%) patients with BCR-ABL<50% at baseline value showed early molecular response. However, only 21 (36.8%) with BCRABL >50% at baseline achieved early molecular response (p-value <0.001). Conclusion: A significant number of patients achieved early molecular response with Imatinib therapy that had BCR ABL below 50%, however those with baseline BCR ABL >50%, the rate of EMR was comparatively lower.


Author(s):  

Treatment for Chronic myeloid leukemia has been revolutionized because of availability of different tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Each TKI come with its on toxicity profile as this needs to be taken in account before starting therapy with particular agent in a patient. Most of the adverse effects related to TKI are mild and can be managed by either symptomatic treatment or either by dose reduction. But some patients can become intolerant and to switch to other TKI remains the only option. Bosutinib is currently approved for treatment of chronic phase CML in patients who are either resistant or intolerant to previous TKI. We present a case of 59 year old male patient with CML who was intolerant to Dastanib and Nilotinib but showed excellent hematological and major molecular response to bosutinib


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yu-Cheng Chang ◽  
Yi-Hao Chiang ◽  
Kate Hsu ◽  
Chih-Kuang Chuang ◽  
Chen-Wei Kao ◽  
...  

AbstractTyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) that target BCR-ABL are the frontline treatments in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). Growing evidence has shown that TKIs also enhance immunity. Since gamma-delta T (γδT) cells possess the potent anticancer capability, here we investigated the potential involvement of γδT cells in TKI treatments for CML. We characterized γδT cells isolated from chronic-phase CML patients before and during TKI treatments. γδT expression increased significantly in CML patients who achieved major molecular response (MMR) and deep molecular response (DMR). Their Vδ2 subset of γδT also expanded, and increased expression of activating molecules, namely IFN-γ, perforin, and CD107a, as well as γδT cytotoxicity. Mechanistically, TKIs augmented the efflux of isopentenyl pyrophosphate (IPP) from CML cells, which stimulated IFN-γ production and γδT expansion. Notably, the size of the IFN-γ+ naïve γδT population in TKI-treated CML patients was strongly correlated with their rates to reach DMR and with the duration on DMR. Statistical analysis suggests that a cutoff of 7.5% IFN-γ+ naïve subpopulation of γδT in CML patients could serve as a determinant for MR4.0 sustainability. Our results highlight γδT cells as a positive regulator for TKI responses in CML patients.


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