Abstract
Purpose of Review
Treatment goals and ambitions have even been upwardly revised since demonstration was made that under certain conditions, treatment-free remission was possible. Herein, we will discuss on how to try tailoring treatment choices to the unique characteristics of each patient.
Recent Findings
Since the first-generation ATP-competitive TKI imatinib was made available in the clinic in 2001, second-generation drugs such as dasatinib, nilotinib and bosutinib and the third-generation TKI ponatinib have broadened the therapeutic armamentarium, providing effective salvage against intolerance and different types of resistance, or as frontline options.
Summary
Management and outcomes of patients with chronic myeloid leukemia have been revolutionized by the discovery, development, and approval of BCR-ABL tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs). Most patients can now expect a near-to normal life expectancy and acceptable quality of life on life-long treatment, providing awareness and avoidance of harmful adverse events, which depend on each TKI safety profile and patient personal background.
Similar content being viewed by others
Avoid common mistakes on your manuscript.
Introduction
Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) is a myeloid malignancy characterized by an acquired cytogenetic abnormality in hematopoietic stem cells named the Philadelphia chromosome (Ph1). Ph1 is caused by reciprocal translocation of chromosomes 9 and 22, the t(9;22)(q34;q11). This translocation fuses the breakpoint cluster region (BCR) gene on chromosome 22 to the Abelson murine leukemia viral oncogene homolog (ABL) gene on chromosome 9. The BCR-ABL oncoprotein, the driver of CML, is a constitutively deregulated intracellular tyrosine kinase that activates a large number of downstream signaling pathways, thereby promoting uncontrolled expansion of genetically unstable myeloid cells [1].
Before the era of therapies targeting the BCR-ABL kinase, most patients died within a few years from the consequences of blast crisis (BC), the terminal phase of the disease. Understanding CML biology as well as BCR-ABL structure and function led to the development and approval in the late 1990s early 2000s of the orally bioavailable first-generation ATP-competitive tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) imatinib. Imatinib shuts down BCR-ABL autophosphorylation and phosphorylation of downstream proteins, leading to the arrest of the pathological signal transduction cascade and leukemic cell death [2, 3]. In the phase 3 “International Randomized Study of Interferon and STI571” (IRIS) trial, rapid reduction in the BCR-ABL+ cells pool by imatinib at 400 mg QD in the majority of newly diagnosed chronic-phase (CP)-CML patients translated into a dramatic drop of progression to advanced-phase CML, an outstanding medical breakthrough [4]. The estimated rate of freedom from progression to accelerated phase (AP) or BC was 92.1% at 10 years [5]. In parallel, responses to TKI therapy were recognized as key prognostic markers for long-term outcomes [6••].
Unfortunately, it was rapidly realized that some patients were intolerant to imatinib while others developed resistance and remained at high risk of progression in the absence of salvage option. Resistance is often due to genetic changes such as acquired point mutations in BCR-ABL that alter the conformation of the kinase, thereby preventing proper drug binding to the catalytic groove and restoring BCR-ABL activity [7]. For these reasons, second-generation ATP-competitive TKIs with a greater native target inhibitory potency than imatinib, effective control of many kinase domain mutations and different off-target profile were designed. Dasatinib and nilotinib were licensed for patients with resistance or intolerance to imatinib in 2006 and 2007, respectively [8, 9]. Bosutinib, another second-generation drug was approved in 2012 for patients previously treated with at least one TKI and for whom imatinib, nilotinib, and dasatinib are not considered appropriate options [10]. Yet the so-called gatekeeper T315I mutation that completely blocks the access of imatinib and all second-generation drugs to the BCR-ABL ATP-binding site remained a matter of concern. This treatment gap was filled by the third-generation ATP-competitive TKI ponatinib, which displays activity against native and all single mutant forms of BCR-ABL including T315I [11]. In 2012, ponatinib received authorization for use in patients with all phases CML and resistance or intolerance to dasatinib or nilotinib and for whom subsequent treatment with imatinib is not clinically appropriate or who have the gatekeeper BCR-ABL T315I mutation [12]. Meanwhile, treatment options for newly diagnosed CP-CML expanded after second-generation TKIs were compared with imatinib. Dasatinib and nilotinib were approved in upfront treatment of CP-CML in 2010 and bosutinib in 2017 [13, 14, 15]. Attempts to register ponatinib frontline failed due to unacceptable drug-associated cardiovascular toxicity in this setting [16].
Treatment choice for CML patients used to be straightforward when reduced to imatinib. Since the arsenal of drugs includes second- and third-generation TKIs, physicians face the great challenge of making decision for which drug to start with, when to switch, and which TKI is best on an individual patient basis. Moreover, long-term progression-free survival (PFS) is no longer the sole treatment goal as treatment-free remission (TFR) marks the start of a new era for CML management. In this article, we will address the question of how to personalize CP-CML treatment.
Tailoring Front-Line Therapy
Efficacy of TKIs in Newly Diagnosed CP-CML
Second-generation TKIs have been compared with imatinib in the first-line setting, but head-to-head clinical trials allowing direct confrontation between them are lacking. Overall, these drugs allow fewer progression to advanced-phase CML than imatinib and produce higher rates of optimal molecular responses including deep molecular responses (DMR), the latter being a prerequisite for treatment cessation [17] (Table 1).
In the “Dasatinib versus Imatinib Study in Treatment-Naïve CML Patients” (DASISION) phase 3 randomized trial, early molecular responses (EMR: BCR-ABL IS % ≤ 10%) were obtained by 84% of 100 mg QD dasatinib-treated patients and 64% of 400 mg QD imatinib-treated patients [18••]. Cumulative incidences of major molecular responses (MMR: BCR-ABL IS % ≤ 0.1%) by 1 year were 46% in the dasatinib arm and 28% in the imatinib arm (p = 0.0001). By 5 years, cumulative MMR rates increased up to 76% and 64%, respectively (p = 0.0022) and MMR was more rapidly achieved with dasatinib. Although 5-year OS and PFS did not differ between treatment arms, transformation events to AP or BC were lower in the dasatinib arm (4.6%) than in the imatinib arm (7.3%). Moreover, DMR such as molecular response 4.5 (MR4.5: BCR-ABL IS% ≤ 0.0032% or undetectable BCR-ABL transcripts with at least 32,000 copies of ABL as control) were more frequently attained with dasatinib (42% by 5 years) than with imatinib (33% by 5 years) (p = 0.0251).
In the “Evaluating Nilotinib Efficacy and Safety in Clinical Trials-Newly Diagnosed Patients” (ENESTnd) phase 3 randomized study, EMR were achieved by 90.7% of nilotinib 300 mg BID-treated patients and 66.7% of 400 mg QD imatinib-treated [19]. Cumulative incidences of MMR by 1 year were 55% in the nilotinib 300 mg BID arm and 27% in the imatinib arm (p < 0.0001), and time to MMR was shorter in the former. By 5 years, cumulative MMR rates were 77% and 60%, respectively (p < 0.0001). MR4.5 rates by 5 years were 54% in the nilotinib 300 mg BID arm and 31% in the imatinib arm (p < 0.0001). Overall 5-year OS and PFS rates did not differ between nilotinib 300 mg BID and imatinib, but freedom from progression to AP/BC was significantly reduced in nilotinib 300 mg BID-treated patients (99.3%) as compared to imatinib (95.2%) (p = 0.0059).
In the “Bosutinib Trial in First-Line Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia Treatment” (BFORE) phase 3 randomized study, a greater proportion of patients treated with 400 mg QD bosutinib reached 3-month EMR as compared to patients receiving 400 mg QD imatinib (75.2% versus 57.3%) and MMR rate at 1 year with bosutinib was significantly superior to that obtained with imatinib arm (47.2% versus 36.9%) (p = 0.02) [15••]. The follow-up is still too short to properly compare PFS and DMR rates between the two treatment arms.
CML-Related Factors Affecting First-Line TKI Efficacy
The EuropeanLeukemiaNet (ELN) recommends the use of any of the TKIs approved in newly diagnosed CP-CML, considering that there are no sufficiently robust criteria for making the choice [19]. On the other hand, the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) clinical practice guidelines in CML suggest that patients with an intermediate or high Sokal or Hasford score at diagnosis may best benefit from second-generation TKIs upfront [20]. In the ENESTnd trial, the 5-year AP/BC rate was substantially reduced in intermediate and high Sokal score patients assigned to nilotinib 300 mg BID (2% and 9%, respectively) as compared to those treated with imatinib (9.9% and 14.1%, respectively) while patients with a low Sokal score had a very low 5-year risk of AP/BC with both TKIs (1% with nilotinib 300 mg BID versus 0% with imatinib) [21••]. However, it would be inappropriate to conclude that patients with a low Sokal score do not benefit from second-generation TKIs upfront. Indeed, achievement of DMR is clinically important for patients willing to stop therapy and second-generation TKIs offer higher DMR rates regardless of baseline risk. In ENESTnd, the 5-year cumulative incidence of MR4.5 was 53.4% with nilotinib 300 mg BID versus 36.5% with imatinib in patients with a low Sokal score, 60.4% with nilotinib 300 mg BID versus 32.7% with imatinib in patients with an intermediate Sokal score, and 44.6% with nilotinib 300 mg BID versus 23.1% with imatinib in patients with a high Sokal score [21••].
Apart from baseline risk scores, it is acknowledged that the presence additional chromosomal aberrations (ACA) in Ph1-positive metaphases which occur in about 5% of patients at diagnosis in the CP setting provide higher likelihood of progression when imatinib is chosen upfront, especially trisomy 8, trisomy 19, isochromosome 17, Philadelphia chromosome duplication, monosomy 7, or 3q26.2 rearrangements [22]. Whether the poor prognostic significance of these baseline ACA persists in patients receiving first-line or second-generation TKIs needs to be explored. It is thus difficult to firmly guide treatment choice based on this sole parameter.
Safety of First-Line TKIs and Patient-Related Factors
All TKIs display distinct adverse event profiles, possibly reflecting differences in their off-target activities (Table 1) [23]. Imatinib at the standard 400 mg QD dose rarely leads to severe injuries, but mild to moderate non-hematological toxicities such as fatigue, nausea, diarrhea, muscle cramps, musculoskeletal pain, and fluid retention are often chronic and may impair quality of life and adherence [24]. Although long-term use of imatinib is considered as safe, concerns have been raised about a potential renal damage as a rise in serum creatinine overtime has been reported [25]. Whether this is simply due to the inhibition of tubular creatinine secretion by imatinib, to a true drug-associated glomerular damage or to confounding causes of chronic kidney disease such as aging, diabetes, or hypertension has not been fully solved [26].
Main issues associated with nilotinib use consist in an excess risk of metabolic and cardiovascular disorders [23, 27]. In the ENESTnd trial, the incidence of ischemic heart disease, cerebrovascular events, and peripheral artery disease increased overtime in the nilotinib 300 mg BID arm and reached 7.5% by 5 years versus 2.1% in the imatinib arm [21••]. Such events are clearly influenced by individual background, patients already at high or very high cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk being the most vulnerable [28], [21••]. Nilotinib also impairs glucose and cholesterol homeostasis through mechanisms that are not completely understood [29] [30]. These parameters need to be tightly monitored and controlled throughout treatment as diabetes and dyslipidemia are well-known risk factors for CVD.
Iatrogenic lung damage is among the most common non-hematological toxicities linked to dasatinib administration. In the DASISION trial, pleural effusions were experienced by 28% of patients assigned to the dasatinib 100 mg QD arm by 5 years and occurred in about 6–9% of patients at risk annually, with continuous risk overtime [18••]. These may develop through an immune mechanism as suggested by their lymphocytic and exudative nature. Pleural effusions typically resolve upon dasatinib interruption but the risk of recurrence is noticeable when treatment is reintroduced. Older age is the main risk factor for developing pleural effusion [31]. In DASISION, pleural effusion occurred in 60% of patients aged ≥ 65 years and 25% in patients below 65 [18••]. Physicians should also be aware of pre-capillary pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), a very rare but potentially fatal complication of dasatinib therapy [32]. No risk factors for PAH have been identified; PAH may be totally or partially reversible after dasatinib withdrawal and permanent discontinuation of dasatinib is mandatory. Finally, altered megakaryopoiesis and platelet dysfunction have been described with dasatinib; thus, caution is needed in case of thrombocytopenia or antiplatelet therapy as major bleeding may occur [33][ [34].
Gastrointestinal and hepatic disorders represent the hallmark of bosutinib toxicity. Initial attempts to register bosutinib as frontline treatment failed when the drug was assessed at 500 mg QD. With 400 mg QD, the actually approved dosage of first-line bosutinib, 70.1% of patients in the BFORE trial reported all grades diarrhea (grade ≥ 3 7.8%) versus 33.6% (grade ≥ 3 0.8%) of patients treated in the imatinib control arm [15••]. All grades elevation of liver enzymes occurred in 39.9% (grade ≥ 3 24.3%) of patients receiving bosutinib and in 13.6% (grade ≥ 3 4.2%) of patients receiving imatinib.
Making First-Line Treatment Choices
The question of which generation of TKI to start with is important, as chance of reaching optimal end points in a timely fashion is undeniably greater with second-generation TKIs than with imatinib. However, second-generation TKIs at their currently approved doses may expose some patients to toxic effects on vital organs, especially elderly populations and those with comorbidities. We must also recognize that second-generation TKIs have not been able to demonstrate an OS advantage over first-line imatinib, but this may be due to the availability of salvage options. Nevertheless, goals of CML treatment have markedly evolved over the past few years. Durable TFR in patients with long-lasting DMR is widely recognized as an achievable reality, and second-generation TKIs offer greater opportunity of TKI discontinuation eligibility than imatinib [35]. TFR may not only be appealing to the youngest but also to those for which long-term TKI exposure is not desirable for safety, financial, or personal reasons. It is important to realize that CML incidence remains stable between 1 and 2 cases per 100, 000 inhabitants per year in the USA and Europe, but prevalence is steadily rising [36]. Thus, TFR also represents a great opportunity to mitigate the rise in healthcare expenditures on CML drugs.
Seeking for the best possible care and outcome including TFR, our position is to opt for second-generation TKIs upfront in all newly diagnosed CP-CML patients whenever affordable and available, regardless of baseline prognostic factors. Notable exceptions reside in the presence of what we consider prohibitive personal factors (Fig. 1). We still prefer imatinib in geriatric patients who are more prone to comorbidities and iatrogeny. We usually avoid first-line nilotinib in patients at very high cardiovascular risk and in diabetic patients, regardless of age. When nilotinib is chosen, we implement longitudinal cardiovascular disease risk prevention strategies proven to be effective in the general population [37]. We refrain from choosing first-line dasatinib in elderly patients or those with underlying chronic lung disease. Finally, it may be wise to keep away from first-line bosutinib in patients with active hepatic disease or chronic gastrointestinal disorders such as uncontrolled inflammatory bowel disease, although there are no data to strongly support this statement as such profiles were excluded from clinical trials. Finally, ease of administration is quite poor with nilotinib due to significant high-fat food effect on drug bioavailability and a BID schedule; thus, patient preference and lifestyle may impact drug choice. Regardless of which TKI is chosen frontline, treatment failure gathering intolerance or resistance should be recognized early as a prompt intervention increases the chance of achieving best possible global outcome.
Tailoring Strategy After Front-Line Therapy
Response-Driven Treatment Changes
During TKI treatment, the degree to which the bulk of leukemia is reduced is a key prognostic marker of PFS. Accurate quantification of residual disease is necessary to guide clinical decisions. Ideally, every patient should have access to regular molecular monitoring according to a well-defined surveillance program and reliable internationally standardized quantitative PCR methods [38]. Assessment of molecular responses is also indispensable to identify candidates for TKI discontinuation. Optimal responses enable a near-to normal life expectancy and do not require any therapeutic modification in the absence of safety issue, unless patients qualify for stopping treatment [20] [39] [40].
Identification of resistance necessitates a change in treatment strategy, primarily guided by results from BCR-ABL mutational analyses. In the absence of a BCR-ABL mutation, any second-generation TKI may be chosen in patients resistant to first-line imatinib although it is somewhat unfortunate that no direct comparison studies were performed [20] [19]. For those resisting a first-line second-generation TKI, ponatinib may be a more efficient option than another second-generation TKI but this has regrettably not been investigated in a randomized study [41]. In case of resistance to a second-line second-generation TKI, several lines of evidence point to greater results with ponatinib than with an alternate second-generation TKI [42]. Ponatinib at the registered dose of 45 mg QD exposes patients to a high burden of arterial occlusion events especially when atherosclerotic CVD or strong risk factors like diabetes or hypertension are already present; thus, CVD prevention is essential [12]. Ponatinib-associated newly occurring or worsening hypertension is another matter of concern, and it must be detected early as it can be controlled with dose adjustment and anti-hypertensive drugs [12] [16].
In the presence of a BCR-ABL mutation, selection of the most effective alternate TKI is possible, depending on localization within the different structural and functional domains of the kinase, in vitro sensitivity, and clinical efficacy data. Over 100 different mutations have been discovered in imatinib-resistant patients while the spectrum of mutations resistant to second-generation TKIs is much narrower. With the exception of T315I, mutations that confer resistance to nilotinib or dasatinib hardly overlap. Nilotinib is ineffective against BCR-ABL mutations Y253H, E255K/V, and F359V/C/I, both in vitro and in patients [43]. Of note, the initial recommended dose of nilotinib second line or beyond is 400 mg BID, substantially higher than what given first line. Awareness of the dose-dependency of cardiovascular toxic effects of nilotinib and vigilance is essential in order to avoid irreversible complications [21••]. The BCR-ABL mutations V299L, T315A, and F317L/V/I/C confer a high degree of resistance to dasatinib in vitro and dasatinib fails to rescue harboring those [44]. The BCR-ABL mutations E299V, G250E, E255K are associated with high or very high resistance to bosutinib both in vitro and in patients [45]. The T315I mutation is sensitive to ponatinib only and the prognosis of patients carrying this mutation impressively improved since approval of ponatinib. Five-year report of phase 2 “Ponatinib Ph1 ALL and CML Evaluation” (PACE) international study indicated a 70% rate of complete cytogenetic responses, a 58% rate of MMR, and a 38% rate of MR4.5 in the T315I+ cohort and responses were sustained, thus dispelling the specter of allogeneic stem cell transplantation (ASCT) [46] [47]. Although exceptionally performed, ASCT remains a key option in case of multi-resistance or progression to AP/BC.
Warning corresponds to a situation where TKIs decrease BCR-ABL transcripts below the 1% IS threshold during the first year of therapy, but MMR is not attained. Patients in the warning zone need to be carefully monitored as secondary resistance may finally emerge [6]. Alternatively, the molecular response may remain stable overtime or even spontaneously improve with longer duration of treatment; thus, a change in TKI is not absolutely required [20] [19]. However, in the absence of a switch to a more potent TKI, the likelihood of a DMR for patients in the warning zone is quite poor [48] [49], precluding any TKI discontinuation attempt. A switch from first-line imatinib to a second-generation TKI appears as an interesting option for those aiming at TFR. The randomized phase 3 “ENEST–Complete Molecular Remission” study investigated the probability to gain a DMR upon transition to nilotinib. For patients in the warning zone on long-term imatinib, the probability to achieve a MR4.5 was 33.3% by 4 years in the nilotinib 400 mg BID arm versus 3.6% for in the imatinib control arm [50•]. Earlier switch based on warning at specific time points during the first year of imatinib therapy may provide even better results as suggested by results from the “Therapeutic Intensification in De Novo Leukaemia (TIDEL)-II” study [51]. What to do for patients in the warning zone on first-line second-generation TKI is not straightforward. In our opinion, ponatinib is not an option to address such situation as risks of switching may outweigh benefits.
Toxicity-Driven Treatment Changes
Severe, recurrent, or chronic toxicity forces discontinuation of the relevant TKI unless manageable by supportive care or dose reduction. General rule for next TKI choice includes avoidance of cross-intolerance while efficacy should remain in focus. Cross-intolerance relates to the recurrence during treatment with a new TKI of the same adverse event that led to intolerance to the prior TKI. Pooled data from several clinical trials showed that among patients with severe non-hematological intolerance to imatinib, cross-intolerance with dasatinib was observed in 4% of the cases, mainly including skin rash, myalgia, and arthralgia [52]. Analysis of data from the pivotal phase 2 registration trial of nilotinib 400 mg BID showed that 7% of patients with severe or moderate but chronic non-hematological intolerance to imatinib developed side effects of the same nature on nilotinib, mainly including diarrhea [53]. Of note, there are some data to support the use of 300 mg BID of nilotinib instead of 400 mg BID in patients responding well but intolerant to first-line imatinib or dasatinib [54] [55]. Rate of cross non-hematological intolerance between imatinib and bosutinib was considered as low during development of bosutinib at 500 mg QD beyond the first-line setting, with the notable exception of gastrointestinal disorders such as nausea and diarrhea [45]. However, pleural effusion on bosutinib may occur at a very high frequency in patients with such a history on prior TKI, especially dasatinib [56]. Finally, it may not be wise to choose ponatinib in patients experiencing arterial occlusion on nilotinib for obvious safety reasons, except in patients deemed at high risk of disease progression in the absence of a suitable alternative option.
Conclusion and Perspectives
By enabling each patient to benefit from CML risk assessment, profiling of extent, and severity of co-morbidities and molecular monitoring during treatment, physicians have the possibility to select TKIs on an individual basis to ensure minimal harmful side effects and maximum successful outcome. Despite this impressive accomplishment, a number of challenges remain, such as more accurate CML prognostication, safer dosing options of TKIs, multi-resistance to therapy, expanded eligibility to and better outcome of TKI discontinuation. As somatic mutations outside the BCR-ABL gene may be present in CML, investigation of a patient’s genetic and epigenetic landscape with the use of modern sequencing technologies in order to improve existing CML risk prediction models not only at the time of diagnosis but also in case of resistance or progression and help choosing or developing treatments that are most likely to be successful is worth exploring [57]. Advances in the past 20 years with TKIs being the cornerstone of treatment have helped transform CML from a fatal malignancy to a chronic condition, and safety should be placed at the forefront of management together with efficacy. Following drug development and health agencies approval, the recommended dosage of TKIs consists in a standard one-size-fits-all dose, with dose adjustments solely envisaged on tolerance issue. We believe that it is time to revisit this conservative strategy in the era of personalized treatment. Maintenance with low doses of TKIs after achievement of an optimal response appeared safe and beneficial in the phase 2 “De-Escalation and Stopping Treatment with Imatinib, Nilotinib, or sprYcel” (DESTINY) [58]. Our team evaluates conversion to low-dose nilotinib after MMR achievement with a standard dose, and preliminary results point in the same direction [59]. Doses lower than the currently approved ones as frontline therapy in newly diagnosed CML patients are also investigated as new potential standard-of-care option [60]. Last but not least, allosteric BCR-ABL inhibitors, a new class of highly selective TKIs, are being evaluated in clinical trials. These inhibitors bind the myristoyl-binding pocket of BCR-ABL distantly located from the ATP-binding site and restore auto-inhibition mechanism of the kinase [61]. Whether these alone, combined to ATP-competitive TKIs or to CML stem cell targeting agents will have the potential to safely rescue, bring TFR, or even cure to more patients including those with a history of resistance is an open question.
References
Papers of particular interest, published recently, have been highlighted as: • Of importance •• Of major importance
Deininger MW, Goldman JM, Melo JV. The molecular biology of chronic myeloid leukemia. Blood. 2000;96(10):3343–56.
Druker BJ, Tamura S, Buchdunger E, Ohno S, Segal GM, Fanning S, et al. Effects of a selective inhibitor of the Abl tyrosine kinase on the growth of Bcr-Abl positive cells. Nat Med. 1996;2(5):561–6.
Schindler T, Bornmann W, Pellicena P, Miller WT, Clarkson B, Kuriyan J. Structural mechanism for STI-571 inhibition of abelson tyrosine kinase. Science. 2000;289(5486):1938–42.
Druker BJ, Guilhot F, O’Brien SG, Gathmann I, Kantarjian H, Gattermann N, et al. Five-year follow-up of patients receiving imatinib for chronic myeloid leukemia. N Engl J Med. 2006;355(23):2408–17.
Hochhaus A, Larson RA, Guilhot F, Radich JP, Branford S, Hughes TP, et al. Long-term outcomes of imatinib treatment for chronic myeloid leukemia. N Engl J Med. 2017;376(10):917–27.
•• Hughes TP, Hochhaus A, Branford S, Müller MC, Kaeda JS, Foroni L, et al. Long-term prognostic significance of early molecular response to imatinib in newly diagnosed chronic myeloid leukemia: an analysis from the International Randomized Study of Interferon and STI571 (IRIS). Blood. 2010;116(19):3758–65 Study highlighted prognostic significance of early molecular response to imatinib in newly diagnosed chronic myeloid leukemia.
Patel AB, O’Hare T, Deininger MW. Mechanisms of resistance to ABL kinase inhibition in chronic myeloid leukemia and the development of next generation ABL kinase inhibitors. Hematol Oncol Clin North Am. 2017;31(4):589–612.
Shah NP, Kantarjian HM, Kim D-W, Réa D, Dorlhiac-Llacer PE, Milone JH, et al. Intermittent target inhibition with dasatinib 100 mg once daily preserves efficacy and improves tolerability in imatinib-resistant and -intolerant chronic-phase chronic myeloid leukemia. J Clin Oncol. 2008;26(19):3204–12.
Kantarjian HM, Giles F, Gattermann N, Bhalla K, Alimena G, Palandri F, et al. Nilotinib (formerly AMN107), a highly selective BCR-ABL tyrosine kinase inhibitor, is effective in patients with Philadelphia chromosome-positive chronic myelogenous leukemia in chronic phase following imatinib resistance and intolerance. Blood. 2007;110(10):3540–6.
Khoury HJ, Cortes JE, Kantarjian HM, Gambacorti-Passerini C, Baccarani M, Kim D-W, et al. Bosutinib is active in chronic phase chronic myeloid leukemia after imatinib and dasatinib and/or nilotinib therapy failure. Blood. 2012;119(15):3403–12.
O’Hare T, Shakespeare WC, Zhu X, Eide CA, Rivera VM, Wang F, et al. AP24534, a pan-BCR-ABL inhibitor for chronic myeloid leukemia, potently inhibits the T315I mutant and overcomes mutation-based resistance. Cancer Cell. 2009;16(5):401–12.
Cortes JE, Kim D-W, Pinilla-Ibarz J, le Coutre P, Paquette R, Chuah C, et al. A phase 2 trial of ponatinib in Philadelphia chromosome-positive leukemias. N Engl J Med. 2013;369(19):1783–96.
Saglio G, Kim D-W, Issaragrisil S, le Coutre P, Etienne G, Lobo C, et al. Nilotinib versus imatinib for newly diagnosed chronic myeloid leukemia. N Engl J Med. 2010;362(24):2251–9.
Kantarjian H, Shah NP, Hochhaus A, Cortes J, Shah S, Ayala M, et al. Dasatinib versus imatinib in newly diagnosed chronic-phase chronic myeloid leukemia. N Engl J Med. 2010;362(24):2260–70.
•• Cortes JE, Gambacorti-Passerini C, Deininger MW, Mauro MJ, Chuah C, Kim D-W, et al. Bosutinib versus imatinib for newly diagnosed chronic myeloid leukemia: results from the randomized BFORE trial. J Clin Oncol. 2018;36(3):231–7 Comparaison of efficiency and safety of second generation TKI bosutinib vs imainib.
Lipton JH, Chuah C, Guerci-Bresler A, Rosti G, Simpson D, Assouline S, et al. Ponatinib versus imatinib for newly diagnosed chronic myeloid leukaemia: an international, randomised, open-label, phase 3 trial. Lancet Oncol. 2016;17(5):612–21.
Rea D, Cayuela J-M. Treatment-free remission in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia. Int J Hematol. 2018;108(4):355–64.
•• Cortes JE, Saglio G, Kantarjian HM, Baccarani M, Mayer J, Boqué C, et al. Final 5-Year Study Results of DASISION: The Dasatinib Versus Imatinib Study in Treatment-Naïve Chronic Myeloid Leukemia Patients Trial. J Clin Oncol. 2016;34(20):2333–40 Comparaison of efficiency and safety of second generation TKI dasatinib vs imainib.
Baccarani M, Deininger MW, Rosti G, Hochhaus A, Soverini S, Apperley JF, et al. European LeukemiaNet recommendations for the management of chronic myeloid leukemia: 2013. Blood. 2013;122(6):872–84.
Radich JP, Deininger M, Abboud CN, Altman JK, Berman E, Bhatia R, et al. Chronic myeloid leukemia, version 1.2019, NCCN clinical practice guidelines in oncology. J Natl Compr Canc Netw. 2018;16(9):1108–35.
•• Hochhaus A, Saglio G, Hughes TP, Larson RA, Kim D-W, Issaragrisil S, et al. Long-term benefits and risks of frontline nilotinib vs imatinib for chronic myeloid leukemia in chronic phase: 5-year update of the randomized ENESTnd trial. Leukemia. 2016;30(5):1044–54 Comparison of efficiency and safety of second generation TKI nilotinib vs imainib.
Fabarius A, Kalmanti L, Dietz CT, Lauseker M, Rinaldetti S, Haferlach C, et al. Impact of unbalanced minor route versus major route karyotypes at diagnosis on prognosis of CML. Ann Hematol. 2015;94(12):2015–24.
Pubmeddev, SJ et al.. European LeukemiaNet recommendations for the management and avoidance of adverse events of treatment in chronic myeloid leukaemia. - PubMed - NCBI [Internet]. [cité 20 août 2019].
Rea D. Management of adverse events associated with tyrosine kinase inhibitors in chronic myeloid leukemia. Ann Hematol. 2015;94(Suppl 2):S149–58.
Yilmaz M, Lahoti A, O’Brien S, Nogueras-González GM, Burger J, Ferrajoli A, et al. Estimated glomerular filtration rate changes in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia treated with tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Cancer. 2015;121(21):3894–904.
Vidal-Petiot E, Rea D, Serrano F, Stehlé T, Gardin C, Rousselot P, et al. Imatinib increases serum creatinine by inhibiting its tubular secretion in a reversible fashion in chronic myeloid leukemia. Clin Lymphoma Myeloma Leuk. 2016;16(3):169–74.
Valent P, Hadzijusufovic E, Schernthaner G-H, Wolf D, Rea D, le Coutre P. Vascular safety issues in CML patients treated with BCR/ABL1 kinase inhibitors. Blood. 2015;125(6):901–6.
Rea D, Mirault T, Raffoux E, Boissel N, Andreoli AL, Rousselot P, et al. Usefulness of the 2012 European CVD risk assessment model to identify patients at high risk of cardiovascular events during nilotinib therapy in chronic myeloid leukemia. Leukemia. 2015;29(5):1206–9.
Rea D, Mirault T, Cluzeau T, Gautier J-F, Guilhot F, Dombret H, et al. Early onset hypercholesterolemia induced by the second-generation tyrosine kinase inhibitor nilotinib in patients with chronic phase-chronic myeloid leukemia. Haematologica. 2014;99(7):1197–203.
Racil Z, Koritakova E, Sacha T, Klamova H, Belohlavkova P, Faber E, et al. Insulin resistance is an underlying mechanism of impaired glucose metabolism during nilotinib therapy. Am J Hematol. 2018;93(10):E342–5.
Hughes TP, Laneuville P, Rousselot P, Snyder DS, Rea D, Shah NP, et al. Incidence, outcomes, and risk factors of pleural effusion in patients receiving dasatinib therapy for Philadelphia chromosome-positive leukemia. Haematologica. 2019;104(1):93–101.
Shah NP, Wallis N, Farber HW, Mauro MJ, Wolf RA, Mattei D, et al. Clinical features of pulmonary arterial hypertension in patients receiving dasatinib. Am J Hematol. 2015;90(11):1060–4.
Gratacap M-P, Martin V, Valéra M-C, Allart S, Garcia C, Sié P, et al. The new tyrosine-kinase inhibitor and anticancer drug dasatinib reversibly affects platelet activation in vitro and in vivo. Blood. 2009;114(9):1884–92.
Mazharian A, Ghevaert C, Zhang L, Massberg S, Watson SP. Dasatinib enhances megakaryocyte differentiation but inhibits platelet formation. Blood. 2011;117(19):5198–206.
Cortes J, Rea D, Lipton JH. Treatment-free remission with first- and second-generation tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Am J Hematol. 2019;94(3):346–57.
Huang X, Cortes J, Kantarjian H. Estimations of the increasing prevalence and plateau prevalence of chronic myeloid leukemia in the era of tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapy. Cancer. 2012;118(12):3123–7.
Rea D, Ame S, Charbonnier A, Coiteux V, Cony-Makhoul P, Escoffre-Barbe M, et al. Management of the cardiovascular disease risk during nilotinib treatment in chronic myeloid leukemia: 2015 recommendations from the France Intergroupe des Leucémies Myéloïdes Chroniques. Bull Cancer. 2016;103(2):180–9.
Cross NCP, Hochhaus A, Müller MC. Molecular monitoring of chronic myeloid leukemia: principles and interlaboratory standardization. Ann Hematol. 2015;94(Suppl 2):S219–25.
Hughes TP, Ross DM. Moving treatment-free remission into mainstream clinical practice in CML. Blood. 2016;128(1):17–23.
Rea D, Ame S, Berger M, Cayuela J-M, Charbonnier A, Coiteux V, et al. Discontinuation of tyrosine kinase inhibitors in chronic myeloid leukemia: recommendations for clinical practice from the French Chronic Myeloid Leukemia Study Group. Cancer. 2018;124(14):2956–63.
Breccia M, Abruzzese E, Castagnetti F, Bonifacio M, Gangemi D, Sorà F, et al. Ponatinib as second-line treatment in chronic phase chronic myeloid leukemia patients in real-life practice. Ann Hematol. 2018;97(9):1577–80.
Lipton JH, Bryden P, Sidhu MK, Huang H, McGarry LJ, Lustgarten S, et al. Comparative efficacy of tyrosine kinase inhibitor treatments in the third-line setting, for chronic-phase chronic myelogenous leukemia after failure of second-generation tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Leuk Res. 2015;39(1):58–64.
Hughes T, Saglio G, Branford S, Soverini S, Kim D-W, Müller MC, et al. Impact of baseline BCR-ABL mutations on response to nilotinib in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia in chronic phase. J Clin Oncol. 2009;27(25):4204–10.
Müller MC, Cortes JE, Kim D-W, Druker BJ, Erben P, Pasquini R, et al. Dasatinib treatment of chronic-phase chronic myeloid leukemia: analysis of responses according to preexisting BCR-ABL mutations. Blood. 2009;114(24):4944–53.
Gambacorti-Passerini C, Cortes JE, Lipton JH, Kantarjian HM, Kim D-W, Schafhausen P, et al. Safety and efficacy of second-line bosutinib for chronic phase chronic myeloid leukemia over a five-year period: final results of a phase I/II study. Haematologica. 2018;103(8):1298–307.
Cortes JE, Kim D-W, Pinilla-Ibarz J, le Coutre PD, Paquette R, Chuah C, et al. Ponatinib efficacy and safety in Philadelphia chromosome-positive leukemia: final 5-year results of the phase 2 PACE trial. Blood. 2018;132(4):393–404.
Nicolini FE, Basak GW, Kim D-W, Olavarria E, Pinilla-Ibarz J, Apperley JF, et al. Overall survival with ponatinib versus allogeneic stem cell transplantation in Philadelphia chromosome-positive leukemias with the T315I mutation. Cancer. 2017;123(15):2875–80.
Branford S, Yeung DT, Ross DM, Prime JA, Field CR, Altamura HK, et al. Early molecular response and female sex strongly predict stable undetectable BCR-ABL1, the criteria for imatinib discontinuation in patients with CML. Blood. 2013;121(19):3818–24.
Sasaki K, Kantarjian H, O’Brien S, Ravandi F, Konopleva M, Borthakur G, et al. Prediction for sustained deep molecular response of BCR-ABL1 levels in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia in chronic phase. Cancer. 2018;124(6):1160–8.
• Hughes TP, Leber B, Cervantes F, Spector N, Pasquini R, Clementino NCD, et al. Sustained deep molecular responses in patients switched to nilotinib due to persistent BCR-ABL1 on imatinib: final ENESTcmr randomized trial results. Leukemia. 2017;31(11):2529–31.
Yeung DT, Osborn MP, White DL, Branford S, Braley J, Herschtal A, et al. TIDEL-II: first-line use of imatinib in CML with early switch to nilotinib for failure to achieve time-dependent molecular targets. Blood. 2015;125(6):915–23.
Khoury HJ, Goldberg SL, Mauro MJ, Stone RM, Deininger MW, Bradley-Garelik MB, et al. Cross- intolerance with dasatinib among imatinib-intolerant patients with chronic phase chronic myeloid leukemia. Clin Lymphoma Myeloma Leuk. 2016;16(6):341–349.e1.
Cortes JE, Hochhaus A, le Coutre PD, Rosti G, Pinilla-Ibarz J, Jabbour E, et al. Minimal cross-intolerance with nilotinib in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia in chronic or accelerated phase who are intolerant to imatinib. Blood. 2011;117(21):5600–6.
Hiwase D, Tan P, D’Rozario J, Taper J, Powell A, Irving I, et al. Efficacy and safety of nilotinib 300 mg twice daily in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia in chronic phase who are intolerant to prior tyrosine kinase inhibitors: results from the Phase IIIb ENESTswift study. Leuk Res. 2018;67:109–15.
Cortes JE, Lipton JH, Miller CB, Busque L, Akard LP, Pinilla-Ibarz J, et al. Evaluating the impact of a switch to nilotinib on imatinib-related chronic low-grade adverse events in patients with CML-CP: the ENRICH study. Clin Lymphoma Myeloma Leuk. 2016;16(5):286–96.
Cortes JE, Khoury HJ, Kantarjian HM, Lipton JH, Kim D-W, Schafhausen P, et al. Long-term bosutinib for chronic phase chronic myeloid leukemia after failure of imatinib plus dasatinib and/or nilotinib. Am J Hematol. 2016;91(12):1206–14.
Branford S, Kim DDH, Apperley JF, Eide CA, Mustjoki S, Ong ST, et al. Laying the foundation for genomically-based risk assessment in chronic myeloid leukemia. Leukemia. 2019;33(8):1835–50.
Clark RE, Polydoros F, Apperley JF, Milojkovic D, Rothwell K, Pocock C, et al. De-escalation of tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapy before complete treatment discontinuation in patients with chronic myeloid leukaemia (DESTINY): a non-randomised, phase 2 trial. Lancet Haematol. 2019;6(7):e375–83.
Rea D, Cayuela J-M, Dulucq S, Etienne G. Molecular responses after switching from a standard-dose twice-daily nilotinib regimen to a reduced-dose once-daily schedule in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia: a real life observational study (NILO-RED). Blood. 2017;130(Suppl 1):318–8.
Naqvi K, Jabbour E, Skinner J, Yilmaz M, Ferrajoli A, Bose P, et al. Early results of lower dose dasatinib (50 mg daily) as frontline therapy for newly diagnosed chronic-phase chronic myeloid leukemia. Cancer. 2018;124(13):2740–7.
Wylie AA, Schoepfer J, Jahnke W, Cowan-Jacob SW, Loo A, Furet P, et al. The allosteric inhibitor ABL001 enables dual targeting of BCR-ABL1. Nature. 2017;543(7647):733–7.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Conflict of Interest
Dr. Rea reports personal fees from Novartis, personal fees from BMS, personal fees from Pfizer, and personal fees from Incyte during the conduct of the study. Dr. Rabian and Dr. Lengline have nothing to disclose.
Human and Animal Rights and Informed Consent
This article does not contain any studies with human or animal subjects performed by any of the authors.
Additional information
Publisher’s Note
Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
This article is part of Topical Collection on Chronic Myeloid Leukemias
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.
About this article
Cite this article
Rabian, F., Lengline, E. & Rea, D. Towards a Personalized Treatment of Patients with Chronic Myeloid Leukemia. Curr Hematol Malig Rep 14, 492–500 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11899-019-00546-4
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11899-019-00546-4