Demethylating Agents As a Salvage Treatment in Relapsed Myeloid Diseases Following Allogeneic Bone Marrow Transplantation

Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 4216-4216
Author(s):  
Sangeeta Atwal ◽  
Anjum Bashir Khan ◽  
Victor Noriega ◽  
Yogesh Jethava ◽  
Michelle Kenyon ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 4216 Patients who relapse after allogeneic bone marrow transplant (BMT) for acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) have a poor prognosis. Salvage treatments rely on further chemotherapy, donor lymphocyte infusions (DLI) and experimental therapies. However, the treatments are often toxic and the prognosis grim particularly in patients over the age of 60 years. More recently, DNMT3A inhibition such as 5-Azacytidine (5-Aza) and Decitabine have been shown not only to have an antileukemic activity, but are also capable of inducing an antileukemic cytotoxic T lymphocyte response as well as reversal in the ratio of Tregs to Th17 CD4 cellular reactions. We therefore evaluated the role of these agents in 17 patients who have relapsed post-transplant. The indications for transplant were AML (n=13), of whom 9 had transformed from either MDS (n=5), aplastic anaemia (n=1), MDS/MPD (n=1), myelofibrosis (n=1) or CML (n=1); Of the remainder: Refractory anaemia with excess blasts II (n=2); plasmacytoid dendritic cell leukemia (n=1); MPD/MDS with trisomy 21 (n=1). 13 were treated with 5-Aza; 6 Decitabine and 2 had both 5-Aza and Decitabine as separate courses. In total, there were 20 courses of treatment, each comprising of a variable number of cycles of 5-Aza or Decitabine. 5-Aza was administered at a standard dosage of 75mg/m2 for 7 days every 28 days and Decitabine 20mg/m2 for 5 days every 28 days. There was no toxicity from the treatment such that patients required a dose reduction. charcteristics mean (RANGE) Age (yrs) 52 (35–67) Days from transplant before starting demethylating agent for overt relapse 559 (38–1956) Blast % before starting 5-Aza or Decitabine 25.7 (1–91) Number of cycles of 5-Azacytidine per course completed (n=14) 4 (1–15) Number of cycles of Decitabine (n=6) 2.5 (2–3) Duration of response from stopping 5-Aza or Decitabine treatment before relapse 186 (177–195) Pre-treatment blast % in responders (n=11) 22 (1–89) Pre-treatment blast % in non-responders (n=9) 31 (4–91) Responses were categorized as stable disease (SD), partial response (PR), morphological (MR) or complete cytogenetic remission (CCR) and were seen in 11 of 20 courses of treatment (55%) of which SD = 2, PR = 2, MR = 7, CCR = 0. Specifically 2 patients had SD whilst they remained on 5-Azacytidine. Of the 2 with PR, 1 had a drop in blast percentage but did not enter into remission. The other with plasmacytoid dendritic cell leukemia relapsed with recurrence of biopsy proven skin lesions had a transient response on 5-Azacytidine but progressed during the 5th cycle. 7 achieved a MR (<5% bone marrow blasts), none went into cytogenetic remission. Amongst the group of responders, 5 out of 9 patients (55%) had AML, 4 out of the 5 achieved MR and 1 PR. The mean duration of morphological remission was 186 days. Of the remainder 9 courses of treatment that did not respond, all had a pre-transplant diagnsosis of AML, of which 6 had pre-existing MDS and I myelofibrosis. There was no difference in response according to the pre-treatment blast percentage in the marrow. Conversely, one patient achieved a morphological remission after 3 cycles of Decitabine with a pre-treatment blast percentage of 89%. Equally there was no difference in response according to cytogenetic risk at first presentation or pre-treatment relapse between responders and non-responders. Importantly, 30% of patients treated with DNMT3A inhibitors are alive. In the majority of patients, donor chimersm remained unchanged pre and post 5-Aza and Dec. 2 patients received DLI immediately post 5-Azacyditine as consolidation. Out of the 17 patients, 5 had graft-versus-host-disease (GVHD) temporally associated with commencing 5-Aza or Decitabine. 2 in this group had GVHD (grade 1–3) and 3 chronic GVHD (grade 1–3). These results suggest that demethylating agents are effective following allogeneic BMT. It is encouraging that of the patients who responded, over half had a pre-transplant diagnosis of AML however more numbers are required to support this. The effect of these agents are thought to be both antileukemic for example by increasing expression of tumour associated antigens, and immunomodulatory by delaying the effect on the methylation pattern of genes that result in a significant decrease in Tregs. Disclosures: Mufti: Celgene Corporation: Consultancy, Research Funding, Speakers Bureau.

2013 ◽  
Vol 59 (2) ◽  
pp. 111-114
Author(s):  
Judit Beáta Köpeczi ◽  
I Benedek ◽  
Erzsébet Benedek ◽  
Enikő Kakucs ◽  
Aliz Tunyogi ◽  
...  

AbstractIntroduction: Plasmacytoid dendritic cell leukemia is a rare subtype of acute leukemia, which has recently been established as a distinct pathologic entity that typically follows a highly aggressive clinical course in adults. The aim of this report is to present a case of plasmacytoid dendritic cell leukemia due to its rarity and difficulty to recognize and diagnose it.Case report: We present a case of a 67 year-old man who presented multiple subcutaneous lesions on his face, neck, chest and upper extremities with reddish-brown, brown colour. In the bone marrow aspirate 83% of the blast cells were found. Immunophenotypically the blasts were positive for CD4, CD56, CD123 (high intensity), CD36, CD22, CD10 (10.42%), CD33, HLA-DR, CD7 (9.24%), CD38 (34.8%) and negative for CD13, CD64, CD14, CD16, CD15, CD11b, CD11c, CD3, CD5, CD2, CD8, CD19, CD20, CD34. The skin biopsy showed lymphohistiocytoid infiltration in the dermis. The patient was diagnosed with acute plasmacytoid dendritic cell leukemia and received polychemotherapy with rapid response of skin lesions and blastic infiltration of the bone marrow. After 3 courses of polychemotherapy the cutaneous lesions reappeared and multiplied. The blast infiltration in the bone marrow increased to 70%. A more aggressive polychemotherapy regimen was administered, but the patient presented serious complications (febrile neutropenia) and died in septic shock 8 months after the initiation of treatment.Conclusions: Immunophenotyping of blasts cells is indispensable in the diagnosis of plasmacytoid dendritic cell leukemia. The CD4+, CD56+, lin-, CD123 ++high, CD11c-, CD36+, HLA-DR+, CD34-, CD45+ low profile is highly suggestive for pDCL. The outcome of plasmacytoid dendritic cell leukemia is poor. Despite the high rate of initial response to treatment, early relapses occur and the patients die of disease progression.


Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 4251-4251
Author(s):  
Alex F. Sandes ◽  
Rodrigo S. Barroso ◽  
Eliza Y.S. Kimura ◽  
Mihoko Yamamoto

Abstract Plasmacytoid dendritic cell leukemia (pDCL) is a rare hematological malignancy, characterized by the expression of CD123hi, CD4+, CD56+ and absence of myeloid or lymphoid markers. Patients usually have an aggressive clinical course, short survival and increased rates of relapse after chemotherapy. We report the clinical, biological, phenotypic features of three cases of pDCL and their multidrug resistance profile (MDR) and FLT3 internal tandem duplication (FLT3-ITD) status. Methods and Results: we reanalyzed 193 patients with acute leukemia, studied at the laboratory of Cellular Biology and Flow Cytometry at diagnosis, between 2002 and 2006. Among them three patients presented imunnophenotypic features of dendritic cell malignancy. At diagnosis, patients (2M/1F, aged 63, 64 and 74 y) presented anemia, thrombocytopenia and the WBC count was 6.7, 12.6 and 45.1×109/L, with circulating blast cells in two cases (69% and 80%). Bone marrow blasts showed L2/M0 (one case) or monocytoid morphology (2 cases). Lymph nodes enlargement and splenomegaly in one case and cutaneous lesions in one other case were observed. Multiparametric flow cytometry using a large panel of monoclonal antibodies showed the presence of CD123hi, CD4, HLA-DR and CD45dim in all cases, CD56 in two and the absence of any lineage-associated markers expression (CD13-, CD117-, CD15-, CD14-, CD64-, MPO-, CD41-, CD3-, CD19-, CD16-). Karyotype was available in one patient and it was normal. MDR was studied on leukemic cells by Rhodamine 123 efflux test in the presence/absence of Verapamil, using flow cytometry. All three cases showed increased rates of functional drug efflux. The FLT3-ITD was assessed by polymerase chain reaction in mononuclear cells DNA using the following primers: 14F (GCAATTTAGGTATGAAAGCAGC) and 15R (CTTTCAGCATTTTGACGGCAACC) and it was negative in all patients. Two patients were submitted to chemotherapy (BFM-ALL-5/93 protocol in one and Idarubicin + Cytarabine in another). One patient was resistant to IDA+ Cytarabine and the other died 20 days after BFM protocol induction by infection. The untreated patient died one month later. Discussion To our knowledge, these are the first cases of dendritic cell malignancies where the MDR functional expression and FLT3-ITD status were evaluated. Additionally, they are the first Brazilian cases of pDCL reported. None of the patients presented the FLT3-ITD; moreover a recent study (Dijkman R et al, Blood, 2007) of gene expression profile using microarray demonstrated that FLT3 mRNA was upregulated on pDCL. Our results suggest that the expression of MDR might contribute to the adverse outcome in this rare entity and to the poor response to chemotherapy described by others. Literature data suggest intensive treatment with bone marrow transplantation for pDCL but the addition of MDR-modulators to the chemotherapy schedules might be useful for the management of this disorder, especially in elderly patients.


Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 2180-2180
Author(s):  
Christian M. Capitini ◽  
Sarah Herby ◽  
Crystal L. Mackall ◽  
Terry J. Fry

Abstract BACKGROUND: Acute graft versus host disease (GVHD) remains as the major complication after allogeneic bone marrow transplant (BMT) resulting in organ toxicity and immune dysfunction. Indeed, we have previously demonstrated that GVHD impairs responses to dendritic cell vaccines. The pathophysiology of GVHD involves preparative regimen-induced inflammation of target organs, release of inflammatory mediators such as gamma interferon (IFNg), and subsequent activation of alloreactive T cells. Given that IFNg can both contribute to GVHD and provide beneficial immune responses, we explored the potential role of IFNg on GVHD and post-transplant immunocompetence. METHODS: We utilized a minor histocompatibility antigen mismatched, T cell-depleted BMT model, with delayed donor lymphocyte infusions (DLIs) as a means of controlling the induction of acute GVHD and to provide a source of immunocompetence in a thymectomized mouse. To study the role of IFNg on GVHD, we chose either IFNg receptor 1 (IFNgR1) −/− marrow or DLI to permit the normal production of IFNg in GVHD while influencing which cells that can respond to the cytokine. Normal C57BL/6 (B6) or IFNgR1 −/− B6 mice were used as bone marrow donors on day 0 into lethally irradiated, thymectomized B6 × C3H.SW (F1) mice. Normal B6 or IFNgR1 −/− DLIs given with or without a dendritic cell vaccine were introduced at days 14 and 28 post-BMT both to control the induction of GVHD and to provide a population of vaccine-responding cells. F1 recipients were observed for signs of GVHD. ELISPOT of the number of antigen-reactive IFNg-producing splenocytes were also performed to measure functional response to vaccine. RESULTS: The absence of IFNgR1 in the DLI abrogates GVHD as shown by % change in weight (B6 DLI = −6.3 +/− 4.7 vs. IFNgR1−/− DLI = 6.6 +/− 6.1, p=0.001) and allows for greater doses of DLI to be tolerated by the host, however, there is also decreased vaccine responses by ELISPOT (B6 DLI = 1631 vs. IFNgR1−/− DLI = 72, p=0.03). Surprisingly, using IFNgR1−/− bone marrow also abrogates GVHD as shown by % change in weight (B6 marrow = −6.3 +/− 4.7 vs. IFNgR1−/− marrow = 4.4 +/− 4.2, p less than 0.05) and splenocyte count (B6 marrow = 31.48 +/− 12.54 vs. IFNgR1−/− marrow = 63.54 +/− 15.92, p=0.008), but vaccine responses by ELISPOT can be restored to levels that are equivalent of syngeneic control mice, even in the presence of a normal B6 DLI (B6 marrow = 1631 vs. IFNgR1−/− marrow = 9283, p=0.0002). The abrogation of GVHD by IFNgR1−/− marrow does not appear to be a dominant effect since mixtures of IFNgR1 −/− and normal B6 bone marrow still cause GVHD. CONCLUSIONS: Recipients of allogeneic bone marrow and T cells developed GVHD and had decreased vaccine responses by ELISPOT. Loss of IFNgR1 on allogeneic donor lymphocytes abrogates their ability to cause GVHD, but also diminished their ability to respond to vaccine. Surprisingly, loss of IFNgR1 on a donor bone marrow-derived, non T cell results in equivalent abrogation of GVHD, while restoring immunocompetence through favorable responses to a vaccine. Further studies will attempt to identify the phenotype of the responsible bone marrow-derived cell. These results demonstrate a strategy of providing higher doses of DLIs to enhance anti-tumor activity without exacerbating GVHD, and thus, have implications for immune modulation post-allogeneic BMT.


2013 ◽  
Vol 31 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. TPS3105-TPS3105
Author(s):  
Arthur E. Frankel ◽  
Jung Hee Woo ◽  
Jeremy Preston Mauldin ◽  
Hetty Eileen Carraway ◽  
Olga Frankfurt ◽  
...  

TPS3105^ Background: Blastic Plasmacytoid Dendritic Cell Neoplasm (BPDCN), a rare and aggressive dendritic cell-derived hematologic malignancy that typically involves the skin and invariably progresses to a leukemic phase, has a dismal prognosis with a median survival of approximately 14 months. Since BPDCN cells express high levels of the interleukin-3 receptor (IL-3R), SL-401, a novel targeted therapy directed to IL-3R, is being developed to treat BPDCN and other IL-3R-expressing hematologic malignancies. SL-401 is a recombinant biologic comprised of IL-3 conjugated to a truncated diphtheria toxin, a potent inhibitor of protein synthesis (Frankel et al, Prot Eng 13, 575, 2000). SL-401 is cytotoxic in vitro to IL-3R-expressing leukemia blasts (Frankel et al, Leukemia 14, 576, 2000) and inhibits tumor growth in vivo (Black et al, Leukemia 17, 155, 2003). Recently, SL-401 demonstrated ultra-high anti-tumor potency against BPDCN cells in the femtomolar (10-15 M) range (Angelot-Delettre et al, Blood 118 Suppl 2588, 2011). Methods: In a Phase I/II trial of SL-401 in patients with IL-3R-expressing advanced hematologic malignancies, 4 patients with heavily pretreated BPDCN received a single cycle of SL-401 as a 15-minute infusion daily for 5 days. Results: All patients had CD4+/CD56+/CD123+ (IL-3Ralpha) expressing blasts and had failed previous combination chemotherapy regimens and allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. There were no serious adverse events. Three patients treated with SL-401 at 12.5 μg/kg/day (the planned pivotal Phase IIb trial dose) experienced complete responses (CRs). The CRs included disappearance of BPDCN in the skin, bone marrow, peripheral blood, spleen and lymph nodes. CR durations are 5, 3+, and 1+ months to date. Conclusions: Given these robust clinical responses, as well as the mechanistic rationale for SL-401 in BPDCN, additional BPDCN patients are being evaluated in the study and a pivotal Phase IIb multi-cycle trial in this ultra-orphan indication is being planned. Clinical trial information: NCT00397579.


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