Exploring the Significance of TP53, ABCB1 and GST Polymorphisms on Susceptibility and Pharmacogenetics in Argentinian Patients with Chronic Myeloid Leukemia

Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 5134-5134
Author(s):  
Natalia Weich ◽  
Cristian Ferri ◽  
Elena Beatriz Moiraghi ◽  
Raquel Maria Nelida Bengio ◽  
Isabel Amanda Giere ◽  
...  

Abstract Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) is specifically associated with the t(9;22)(q34;q11) reciprocal translocation giving rise to the Philadelphia chromosome and the subsequent formation of the BCR/ABL1 fusion gene, encoding a constitutively active tyrosine kinase. Advances in targeted therapies in chronic phase CML, notably the use of tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) such as imatinib mesylate (IM), have achieved successful treatment outcomes. However, some patients fail to achieve optimal response, and a substantial proportion of patients develop resistance to IM, which is frequently associated with mutations in the ABL kinase domain. Although BCR/ABL1 fusion oncogene is a key molecular marker involved in the pathogenesis and the clinical course of CML, molecular or cellular events that initiate leukemogenesis or drive translocation of the BCR/ABL1 genes are incompletely understood and little is known about individual susceptibility to this disease. Moreover, it is still unclear whether BCR/ABL1 oncoprotein alone is sufficient to explain the full range of clinical responses to ITKs. There is mounting evidence that genetic factors may play an important role in susceptibility to CML and variability in drug responsiveness. Polymorphic variants of several genes are linked to variations in expression, function, drug disposition and drug response and are potential factors accounting for susceptibility to complex diseases or drug resistance as they can uniquely influence the quality and quantity of gene product. Association studies have been performed to identify genetic variants associated with CML susceptibility and progression, but data are lacking for Argentina. In the present study, we determined the distribution of polymorphisms on TP53 tumor suppressor gene, drug transporter (ABCB1) and drug-metabolizing (glutathione-S-transferases, GSTs) genes to identify markers of susceptibility and pharmacogenetic response in Argentinian patients with CML. Genomic DNA samples from peripheral blood of 141 patients (69 females/72 males, median age 50.8 ± 1.3 years,) treated with IM and 141 age and sex matched healthy controls were evaluated. IM therapy failure was defined by cytogenetics and qRT-PCR in 2 consecutive studies, finding 76 cases that fail treatment. All individuals provided their informed consent according to institutional guidelines and the study was approved by the Ethics Committee of our Institution. GSTM1 and GSTT1 gene deletion polymorphisms and single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in GSTP1 (313A> G), TP53 (215C> G) and ABCB1 (3435C> T, 1236 C> T and 2677G>T/A) were determined using PCR-based methods. BCR/ABL1 transcript level was analyzed using RT-PCR and ABL1 mutations were identified by RT-PCR and sequencing. Comparison of genotypes between patients and controls as well as regarding clinical parameters was performed by logistic regression. The Kaplan-Meier curves were analyzed using the log-rank test. The level of significance was p <0.05. The case/control association analysis highlighted that carriers of TP53 CC+CG genotypes influence CML susceptibility (p=0.007; OR: 4.5; CI: 1.5-13.3), but no other markers were significantly involved. Next, the pharmacogenetic analysis was performed associating different genotypes with molecular response and treatment failure. We determined that patients carrying GSTM1 -present genotype did not reached major molecular response (p=0.038; OR: 2.9; CI: 1.16-7.4). In addition, average time to treatment change was significantly lower for carriers of the following genotypes: ABCB1 1236TT (23 months), ABCB1 3435TT (13.6 months) and GSTM1 -present (53 months), respect to patients with other variants (p=0.017; p=0.0046 and p=0.04, respectively). Finally, patients with TP53 CC+CG polymorphisms had an increased risk of progression (p=0.039) and lower overall survival (p=0.017). These results indicate that TP53 genotype may represent a genetic cofactor that influences susceptibility to CML and genotypic variations of TP53, ABCB1 and GSTM1 may modulate the response to imatinib. Disclosures Moiraghi: Bristol Myers Squibb: Speakers Bureau; Novartis: Speakers Bureau. Bengio:Novartis: Speakers Bureau; Bristol Myers Squibb: Speakers Bureau.

2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-36
Author(s):  
Sailaja Kagita ◽  
Raghunadharao Digumarti ◽  
Sadhashivudu Gundeti

Introduction: We aimed to investigate the possible role of antioxidant enzyme polymorphisms CAT -21A/T (rs7943316), CAT -262C/T (rs1001179), GPX1 -198C/T (rs1050450), MPO -463G/A (rs2333227), GSTM1 (rs366631) & GSTT1 (rs17856199) with susceptibility to chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) and their association with tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI, imatinib) response.Methods: Six single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in antioxidant enzyme genes were genotyped in a total of 325 samples, of which 125 were from CML patients and 200 from healthy controls. The SNPs were correlated with various confounding variables lke BCR-ABL1 levels and tyrosine kinase domain mutation status in CML patients.Results: Genotyping results revealed statistically significant associations with CAT -21A/T (p=0.037) and GPX1 -198C/T (p=<0.0001) polymorphisms with risk of CML. No associations were observed between CAT -262C/T, MPO -463G/A, GSTM1 & GSTT1 polymorphisms and CML. The CAT -21A/T polymorphism conferred 2.95 folds increased risk of CML under co-dominant model (p=0.024) and 2.51 folds risk under dominant models (p=0.05). In addition, the haplotypes of CAT -21A/T and -262C/T polymorphisms, ATCC and ATCT conferred higher incidence of CML risk by 2.67 times (p=0.05) and 2.99 times (p=0.045). The GPX1 -198C/T polymorphism conferred significantly increased risk of CML under co-dominant model [CC vs CT (p=<0.0001), CC vs TT (p=<0.0001)] and dominant models [CC vs CT+TT (p=<0.0001)]. The heterozygous GPX1 CT genotype frequency significantly elevated in poor molecular responders (p=0.005) and TKD mutation carriers (p=0.114) as compared to respective groups.Conclusions: Our results suggest that the reduced activity of antioxidant enzymes caused by the CAT -21A/T and GPX1-198C/T polymorphisms might contribute to increased risk of CML. In addition, the GPX1-198C/T polymorphism was associated with poor molecular response and acquired TKD mutations. Hence, the present study indicates that defective antioxidant defense system might have a strong influence on CML susceptibility and TKI (imatinib) response through oxidative stress.


Author(s):  
Francesco Mennini ◽  
Andrea Marcellusi ◽  
Raffaella Viti ◽  
Giuseppe Saglio

Background: Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) have dramatically improved survival in chronic myeloid leukemia in chronic phase (CML‐CP), with a high percentage of patients reaching a major molecular response (MMR). Recently, several clinical trials demonstrated that some patients with CML-CP who achieve a sustained MMR on tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) therapy can safely discontinue their therapy and attempt treatment-free remission (TFR).Objective: The aim of the study was to evaluate the clinical and economic impact of TFR in naïve patients with CML-CP who start treatment with nilotinib, imatinib or dasatinib as first-line therapy, from the perspective of the Italian National Health Service (NHS).Methods: An Excel-based budget impact model was developed, in order to estimate the costs of the patients in first-line pharmacological treatment with CML. A specific Markov model was built, to simulate seven years of treatment with different TKIs. A systematic literature review was carried out, to identify the epidemiological and economic data, which were subsequently used to inform the model. The model considers two scenarios: 1) a Standard of Care (SoC) scenario, with the current estimated distribution of patients over the various TKI treatment, versus 2) an innovative scenario, characterized by an increase in the use of nilotinib (+28%) and generic imatinib (+35%) and a decrease in the use of dasatinib (-17%). A one-way deterministic sensitivity analysis was performed, in order to consider the variability of the results as a function of the main parameters considered in the model.Results: The model estimated that 775 patients with CML-CP could be treated with a TKI as first-line drug. The innovative scenario could increase TFR patients by approximately 60% and reduce the costs by more than € 30 million over 7 years. The increase in the use of nilotinib and the generic imatinib would generate a significant expenditure reduction.Conclusions: This study demonstrates the economic effects of discontinuing TKIs in CML-CP patients. The increase in the use of nilotinib and the generic imatinib could generate an increase in the number of patients who achieve TFR, as well as an actual cost reduction.


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.


2017 ◽  
Vol 59 (3) ◽  
pp. 766-769 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emilie Cayssials ◽  
Florence Tartarin ◽  
Joëlle Guilhot ◽  
Nathalie Sorel ◽  
Jean Claude Chomel ◽  
...  

1999 ◽  
Vol 189 (9) ◽  
pp. 1399-1412 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shaoguang Li ◽  
Robert L. Ilaria ◽  
Ryan P. Million ◽  
George Q. Daley ◽  
Richard A. Van Etten

The product of the Philadelphia chromosome (Ph) translocation, the BCR/ABL oncogene, exists in three principal forms (P190, P210, and P230 BCR/ABL) that are found in distinct forms of Ph-positive leukemia, suggesting the three proteins have different leukemogenic activity. We have directly compared the tyrosine kinase activity, in vitro transformation properties, and in vivo leukemogenic activity of the P190, P210, and P230 forms of BCR/ABL. P230 exhibited lower intrinsic tyrosine kinase activity than P210 and P190. Although all three oncogenes transformed both myeloid (32D cl3) and lymphoid (Ba/F3) interleukin (IL)-3–dependent cell lines to become independent of IL-3 for survival and growth, their ability to stimulate proliferation of Ba/F3 lymphoid cells differed and correlated directly with tyrosine kinase activity. In a murine bone marrow transduction/transplantation model, the three forms of BCR/ABL were equally potent in the induction of a chronic myeloid leukemia (CML)–like myeloproliferative syndrome in recipient mice when 5-fluorouracil (5-FU)–treated donors were used. Analysis of proviral integration showed the CML-like disease to be polyclonal and to involve multiple myeloid and B lymphoid lineages, implicating a primitive multipotential target cell. Secondary transplantation revealed that only certain minor clones gave rise to day 12 spleen colonies and induced disease in secondary recipients, suggesting heterogeneity among the target cell population. In contrast, when marrow from non– 5-FU–treated donors was used, a mixture of CML-like disease, B lymphoid acute leukemia, and macrophage tumors was observed in recipients. P190 BCR/ABL induced lymphoid leukemia with shorter latency than P210 or P230. The lymphoid leukemias and macrophage tumors had provirus integration patterns that were oligo- or monoclonal and limited to the tumor cells, suggesting a lineage-restricted target cell with a requirement for additional events in addition to BCR/ABL transduction for full malignant transformation. These results do not support the hypothesis that P230 BCR/ABL induces a distinct and less aggressive form of CML in humans, and suggest that the rarity of P190 BCR/ABL in human CML may reflect infrequent BCR intron 1 breakpoints during the genesis of the Ph chromosome in stem cells, rather than intrinsic differences in myeloid leukemogenicity between P190 and P210.


2015 ◽  
Vol 4 (6S) ◽  
pp. 13-16
Author(s):  
Fausto Palmieri

Here we describe a case of a young patient with chronic myeloid leukemia, at high-risk according to the Sokal index, who started imatinib at standard dose and obtained a sub-optimal response at 12 months. This condition was not automatically an indication to change therapy, but considering the patient as suboptimal, we decided to switch to a second-generation tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI), nilotinib 800 mg/die, obtaining soon a complete cytogenetic response (CCYR), thereafter a major molecular response (MMolR). Delayed achievement of cytogenetic and molecular is associated with increased risk of progression among patients with chronic myeloid leukemia in early chronic phase receiving imatinib therapy. Therefore we can hypothesise that this kind of patient could be elegible for an early switch to second-generation TKI.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document