scholarly journals Strategizing the Treatment Approach to Acute Myeloid Leukemia

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-6
Author(s):  
Laura Finn ◽  
Michael Lunski ◽  
Saikrishna Gadde ◽  
Matthew Alberti ◽  
Danny Markabawi ◽  
...  

For decades acute myeloid leukemia, the primary acute leukemia affecting adults, had limited treatment options. Since 2017, we have seen discovery and development in cytogenetic and molecular classification of acute myeloid leukemia, improved understanding of cell signaling pathways, and development of new treatment for acute myeloid leukemia. These new treatments include novel combinations of agents and therapy targeting molecular alterations improving rates of remission and overall survival. Treatment discovery provides therapeutic opportunity to older patients and populations previously excluded from intense induction chemotherapy. In this review, we discuss the timing of first therapy, non-intense treatment regimens achieving remission, and new targets for directed therapy. We reference key clinical trials to expand our discussion of newly approved agents for acute myeloid leukemia. In this review, we highlight the discovery of treatment strategies to improve patient outcomes and ongoing research in leukemia.

Cancers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (22) ◽  
pp. 5722
Author(s):  
Maximilian Fleischmann ◽  
Ulf Schnetzke ◽  
Andreas Hochhaus ◽  
Sebastian Scholl

Treatment of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) has improved in recent years and several new therapeutic options have been approved. Most of them include mutation-specific approaches (e.g., gilteritinib for AML patients with activating FLT3 mutations), or are restricted to such defined AML subgroups, such as AML-MRC (AML with myeloid-related changes) or therapy-related AML (CPX-351). With this review, we aim to present a comprehensive overview of current AML therapy according to the evolved spectrum of recently approved treatment strategies. We address several aspects of combined epigenetic therapy with the BCL-2 inhibitor venetoclax and provide insight into mechanisms of resistance towards venetoclax-based regimens, and how primary or secondary resistance might be circumvented. Furthermore, a detailed overview on the current status of AML immunotherapy, describing promising concepts, is provided. This review focuses on clinically important aspects of current and future concepts of AML treatment, but will also present the molecular background of distinct targeted therapies, to understand the development and challenges of clinical trials ongoing in AML patients.


Author(s):  
Heidi D. Klepin ◽  
Elihu Estey ◽  
Tapan Kadia

Most patients with newly diagnosed acute myeloid leukemia (AML) are at least age 65 and continue to have short survival, with many patients receiving no specific anti-AML therapy, particularly if they are older than age 75. Although consensus regarding optimal treatment of this growing population is lacking, treatment options are expanding even for the oldest patients. A fundamental question when seeing an older patient with AML is whether to recommend “more intensive” or “less intensive” induction therapy. Existing data can support more intensive treatment strategies for selected older adults, although there is growing evidence to support less intensive therapies as well. Randomized trials to provide clear comparisons between treatment strategies among well-characterized older adult populations are lacking. Reliance on age alone to determine treatment choice is problematic, as “fitness” or “unfitness” varies dramatically among patients of the same chronologic age and remains poorly characterized in existing studies. This article will provide differing perspectives on the “more” versus “less” question, with particular attention to recent drug approvals. Issues relevant to both treatment decision-making in practice and alternative trial design to inform gaps in knowledge will be discussed. Given the heterogeneity, an important conclusion will be that there is unlikely to be a single best approach and that appropriate decision-making requires considerations of many factors specific to individual patients.


Cancers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 22
Author(s):  
Serena Brancati ◽  
Lucia Gozzo ◽  
Giovanni Luca Romano ◽  
Calogero Vetro ◽  
Ilaria Dulcamare ◽  
...  

Despite the progress in the development of new therapeutic strategies, relapsed/refractory (R/R) acute myeloid leukemia (AML) still represents a high unmet medical need. Treatment options in this setting include enrollment into clinical trials, allogeneic stem cell transplantation and/or targeted therapy. Nevertheless, it is associated with poor outcomes. Thus, the development of new treatments, which could ameliorate the prognosis of these patients with a good safety profile are highly demanded. Recently, venetoclax (VEN) has been approved for naïve AML patients unfit for intensive chemotherapy. In this regard, regimens including VEN could represent a valuable treatment option even in those with R/R disease and several studies have been conducted to demonstrate its role in this clinical setting. This review aims to summarize the current evidence on the use of VEN regimens in the treatment of R/R AML.


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 2769-2769
Author(s):  
Jacob E. Higgins ◽  
Lindsey N. Williams ◽  
Sarah A Buckley ◽  
Christopher S. Hourigan ◽  
Jerald P. Radich ◽  
...  

Abstract Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a challenging disease to treat: most patients achieve remission after induction chemotherapy, but the majority eventually relapse. Minimal residual disease (MRD) after initial treatment is the best predictor of relapse and is thus a critical metric around which to develop new treatments. However, conventional MRD diagnostics, including cytology and flow cytometry, are of variable sensitivity and often only perform well in specialty centers, and there is no gold standard. Molecular tests developed to measure trace MRD in other hematological malignancies (i.e. CML) are high-resolution but assay a single, universally-present mutation, while many different genetic drivers exist in AML and these are spread among dozens of genes. Virtually every AML patient harbors a unique combination of mutations, making it difficult to design an effective universal assay. As such, most reported molecular AML MRD assays are either sensitive for mutations that are only found in a narrow subset of patients, or can screen many potential sites of mutation, but with low sensitivity. Here we present a broadly applicable Duplex Sequencing-based AML MRD assay that can readily detect mutant allele frequencies (MAF) below 1/10,000 across a large panel of genes, and below 1/100,000 in a focused panel. Conventional next generation sequencing (NGS) introduces errors during amplification and sequencing, creating a background of artifactual noise that obscures true mutations present below ~1%. Duplex Sequencing improves accuracy >100,000-fold through a molecular tagging approach whereby both strands of each original DNA duplex are ligated with a unique molecular barcode and amplified such that the reads generated from each strand can be related back to their unique original duplex. Reads can also be distinguished from those of their mate strand, thus the two strands of each DNA duplex can be compared and any discrepant nucleotide positions are discounted as errors. Our complete AML panel targets 151 exons or hotspot codons in 29 genes with a 59 kilobase (kb) hybrid-capture footprint. This region comprises loci containing single-nucleotide and short indel mutations found in approximately 90% of adult AMLs. A mean Duplex error-corrected sequence depth of 10,837 and a maximum Duplex depth of 14,967 was obtained across these targets from a single library preparation using 250 ng of sheared leukocyte DNA (Fig. 1). Duplex depth can be readily increased by preparing additional Duplex libraries from the same source DNA to achieve proportionally higher sensitivity for rarer variants. This stands in contrast to conventional NGS where, beyond a modest level, an increase in depth simply increases the number of background errors identified (Fig. 2A). We simulated low-level residual disease by mixing control DNA from a healthy young blood donor with DNA from 9 human cell lines harboring known AML mutations at dilutions from 1:100 to 1:100,000 (Table 2). The genomic loci of these 9 mutations in NRAS, KRAS and TP53 were captured with a small 1 kb probe panel. This mixture was sequenced to a mean Duplex depth of >1,000,000-fold, with the highest and lowest MAFs shown in Fig. 2B. All were close to expected frequencies (r2=0.96) with MAF as low as 6x10-6 (Fig. 3). As proof of specificity, we examined all coding nucleotide positions (excluding the 9 expected variants) and identified only 241 background variant counts out of 414,452,402 total Duplex BP, for an aggregate mutation frequency of 5.8x10-7, consistent with the estimated background of normal human aging. Our Duplex Sequencing-based AML MRD assay is flexible, broadly applicable and extremely sensitive. The assay is easily implemented using standard NGS equipment and automated cloud-based analysis software. The ~90% of AML patients served by this SNV-focused panel can be expanded to nearly 100% with complementary indel detection via targeted NGS RT-PCR. Optionally, when a patient's mutation profile from time-of-diagnosis is known, MRD testing can focus exclusively on those targets using a subset of pre-validated probes to reduce sequencing cost. Improved MRD testing will facilitate accurate prognostication, better selection among treatment options, and could serve as a surrogate endpoint in clinical trials to bring new treatments to patients faster. We are currently evaluating Duplex Sequencing MRD tests in both retrospective and prospective clinical trials. Disclosures Higgins: TwinStrand Biosciences: Employment. Williams:TwinStrand Biosciences: Employment. Buckley:CTI Biopharma: Employment; TwinStrand Biosciences: Consultancy. Radich:TwinStrand Biosciences: Research Funding. Salk:TwinStrand Biosciences: Employment, Equity Ownership.


BMJ ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. n2026
Author(s):  
Laura F Newell ◽  
Rachel J Cook

ABSTRACT Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is an uncommon but potentially catastrophic diagnosis with historically high mortality rates. The standard of care treatment remained unchanged for decades; however, recent discoveries of molecular drivers of leukemogenesis and disease progression have led to novel therapies for AML. Ongoing research and clinical trials are actively seeking to personalize therapy by identifying molecular targets, discovering patient specific and disease specific risk factors, and identifying effective combinations of modalities and drugs. This review focuses on important updates in diagnostic and disease classifications that reflect new understanding of the biology of AML, its mutational heterogeneity, some important genetic and environmental risk factors, and new treatment options including cytotoxic chemotherapy, novel targeted agents, and cellular therapies.


2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 147-155 ◽  
Author(s):  
Prajwal Dhakal ◽  
Bimatshu Pyakuryal ◽  
Prasun Pudasainee ◽  
Venkat Rajasurya ◽  
Krishna Gundabolu ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Philipp Makowka ◽  
Verena Stolp ◽  
Karoline Stoschek ◽  
Hubert Serve

Abstract Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a heterogeneous, highly malignant disease of the bone marrow. After decades of slow progress, recent years saw a surge of novel agents for its treatment. The most recent advancement is the registration of the Bcl-2 inhibitor ventoclax in combination with a hypomethylating agent (HMA) in the US and Europe for AML patients not eligible for intensive chemotherapy. Treatment of newly diagnosed AML patients with this combination results in remission rates that so far could only be achieved with intensive treatment. However, not all AML patients respond equally well, and some patients relapse early, while other patients experience longer periods of complete remission. A hallmark of AML is its remarkable genetic, molecular and clinical heterogeneity. Here, we review the current knowledge about molecular features of AML that help estimate the probability of response to venetoclax-containing therapies. In contrast to other newly developed AML therapies that target specific recurrent molecular alterations, it seems so far that responses are not specific for a certain subgroup. One exception is spliceosome mutations, where good response has been observed in clinical trials with venetoclax/azacitidine. These mutations are rather associated with a more unfavorable outcome with chemotherapy. In summary, venetoclax in combination with hypomethylating agents represents a significant novel option for AML patients with various molecular aberrations. Mechanisms of primary and secondary resistance seem to overlap with those towards chemotherapy.


Author(s):  
Meredith Beaton, RN, MSN, AG-ACNP ◽  
Glen J. Peterson, RN, DNP, ACNP ◽  
Kelly O'Brien, RN, MSN, ANP-C, ACNP-BC

Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is the most common acute leukemia in adults, diagnosed in approximately 21,450 individuals annually in the US with nearly 11,000 deaths attributable to this disease (National Cancer Institute, 2020). Acute myeloid leukemia is a disease of the elderly, with the average age of diagnosis being 68 years old (Kouchkovsky & Abdul-Hay, 2016). It is a heterogeneous disease with widely varying presentations but universally carries a poor prognosis in the majority of those affected. Unfortunately, the 5-year overall survival rate remains poor, at less than 5% in patients over 65 years of age (Thein, Ershler, Jemal, Yates, & Baer, 2013). The landscape of AML is beginning to change, however, as new and improved treatments are emerging. Advanced practitioners (APs) are often involved in the care of these complex patients from the time of initial symptoms through diagnosis, treatment, and potentially curative therapy. It is vitally important for APs to understand and be aware of the various presentations, initial management strategies, diagnostic workup, and treatment options for patients with AML, especially in the elderly population, which until recently had few treatment options. This Grand Rounds article highlights the common presenting signs and symptoms of patients with AML in the hospital, including a discussion of the upfront clinical stability issues, oncologic emergencies, diagnostic evaluation, and current treatment options for elderly patients and those with poor performance status.


Hematology ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 2003 (1) ◽  
pp. 82-101 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bob Löwenberg ◽  
James D. Griffin ◽  
Martin S. Tallman

Abstract The therapeutic approach to the patient with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) currently evolves toward new frontiers. This is particularly apparent from the entree of high-throughput diagnostic technologies and the identification of prognostic and therapeutic targets, the introduction of therapies in genetically defined subgroups of AML, as well as the influx of investigational approaches and novel drugs into the pipeline of clinical trials that target pathogenetic mechanisms of the disease. In Section I, Dr. Bob Löwenberg reviews current issues in the clinical practice of the management of adults with AML, including those of older age. Dr. Löwenberg describes upcoming possibilities for predicting prognosis in defined subsets by molecular markers and reviews experimental strategies to improve remission induction and postinduction treatment. In Section II, Dr. James Griffin reviews the mechanisms that lead to activation of tyrosine kinases by mutations in AML, the consequences of that activation for the cell, and the opportunities for targeted therapy and discusses some examples of developing novel drugs (tyrosine kinase inhibitors) and their effectiveness in AML (FLT3). In Section III, Dr. Martin Tallman describes the evaluation and management of patients with acute promyelocytic leukemia, a notable example of therapeutic progress in a molecularly defined entity of leukemia. Dr. Tallman focuses on the molecular genetics of APL, current curative treatment strategies and approaches for patients with relapsed and refractory disease. In addition, areas of controversy regarding treatment are addressed.


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