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Current Status of Therapy for Chronic Myeloid Leukemia: A Review of Drug Development Swami Padmanabhan; Saritha Ravella; Tyler Curiel; Francis Giles Future Oncol. 2008;4(3):359-377. ©2008 Future Medicine Ltd. Posted 07/15/2008 Abstract and Introduction Abstract Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) has led the way for developing rational drug development in cancer. Most cases of CML diagnosed and treated in chronic phase are extremely well controlled with imatinib monotherapy, and primary resistance is very uncommon. Even though the treatment failure rate is low, the emergence of drug resistance and the lack of eradication of the hematopoietic stem cell clone has prompted a wave of drugs to address one or both these problems. Several clinical trials (Phase I and II) of dasatinib or nilotinib in the treatment of imatinib-resistant or -intolerant Ph chromosome-positive leukemia have already reported a remarkable rate of hematologic response greater than 90% for chronic-phase patients. These drugs minimize the risk of acquired drug resistance that is particularly seen within the first 24-36 months of therapy, and can prevent early failure in these patients, Furthermore, rational, noncrossresistant combinations that include a T315I inhibitor and drugs that can eradicate the hematopoietic stem cell clone may extend the coverage to virtually all patients with bcrabl. Here we review the 6-year impact of the 'magic pill', Gleevec®, (Glivec®), including the emerging problems with its treatment, the efficacy data of dasatinib and nilotinib and the very promising data of the newer generation of drugs for CML. Introduction Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) is a myeloproliferative disorder that can occur in a bi- or tri-phasic course. CML occurs with an incidence of approximately 1-1.5 cases per 100,000 population, and accounts for approximately 7-15% of newly diagnosed cases of leukemia in adults.[1] As per the NCI's Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Cancer Statistics Review, it is estimated that 4830 men and women (2800 men and 2030 women) will be diagnosed with CML, and 450 men and women will die from the disease in 2008. The median age at presentation is around 66 years. In the preimatinib era, the median survival was 4-6 years (range <1 year to >10 years). Survival after the development of an accelerated phase is usually less than 1 year and only a few months after blastic transformation. The typical course of disease is characterized by an initial chronic phase lasting for 3-6 years, followed by an accelerated, then blastic phase usually of short duration. A total of 75-80% of patients go through an accelerated phase before the blastic phase. The definition for accelerated phase is not uniform, which needs to be verified when evaluating treatments. Specific criteria associated with a survival shorter than 18 months by multivariate analysis have been proposed, including the presence of ≥15% blasts, or ≥30% blasts and promyelocytes, or ≥20% basophils in blood or platelet count <100. A cytogenetic clonal evolution is also considered criteria for acceleration. Recent analysis suggests its prognostic effect depends on the specific abnormality, its predominance in marrow metaphases and the time of appearance. The cytogenetic hallmark of CML is a reciprocal t(9,22)(q34;q11) chromosomal translocation that creates a derivative 9q+ and a small 22q-, known as the Ph chromosome. The latter harbors the bcr-abl fusion gene encoding the chimeric bcr-abl protein with a deregulated tyrosine kinase activity, the expression of which has been shown to be necessary and sufficient for the transformed phenotype of CML cells. The activation of multiple signal transduction pathways in bcr-abl transformed cells leads to increased proliferation, reduced growth-factor dependence and apoptosis, and perturbed interaction with the extracellular matrix and stroma. CML is a quintessential example in human neoplasia, wherein a single oncogenic fusion abnormality plays a central role in its pathology. Bcr-abl as the Target for Drug Development: Paradigm Shift With Imatinib This understanding of the cytogenetic and molecular pathophysiology underlying CML has paved a way for the development of effective targeted molecular therapies. This ultimately led to the development of imatinib mesylate (STI-571, Gleevec®, Glivec®), an oral inhibitor of bcr-abl kinase activity. The clinical success of imatinib mesylate in the treatment of CML, especially the high durable response rates in patients with chronic phase CML, has validated the therapeutic strategy of rationally targeting the causative molecular abnormality of CML. In the international randomized study of IFNα versus STI571 (IRIS) study, of 343 patients in whom at least 20 cells in metaphase had been cytogenetically analyzed in 3 months, 152 had a major cytogenetic response (no more than 35% Ph+ cells in metaphase).[2] Whereas CML progressed in only five of the patients with major cytogenetic response (3.3%), disease progression was documented in 22 of the 191 patients without such a response (11.5%; p = 0.005 by the log rank test). This is evident from the higher rates of complete hematologic response (95 vs 56% of patients; p < 0.001) and major cytogenetic response (85 vs 22% of patients; p < 0.001). A median follow-up of 19 months demonstrated that imatinib mesylate was associated with predominantly better responses than IFN-α and Ara-C combination therapy. On the basis of these results, imatinib mesylate was approved in 2001 by the US FDA for treatment of patients with Ph+ CML in blastic-phase, accelerated-phase and chronic-phase patients who failed IFN-α therapy. Subsequently, in 2002, imatinib mesylate also received accelerated approval for the treatment of newly diagnosed Ph+ CML in chronic phase. Imatinib has changed the management of CML and has become the current standard of treatment for CML. Dose & Duration of Imatinib Therapy & the Race for the Cure Imatinib Dose Schedules The optimal dose of imatinib is yet to be clearly defined. Although the maximum tolerated dose was not identified in the Phase I study, 400 mg per day is the dose selected for subsequent studies, as imatinib at 400 mg daily could achieve a blood concentration higher than IC50 in vitro.[3,4] Moreover, reliable clinical responses were seen at doses of 300-400 mg daily, especially in chronic-phase patients. In Phase II trials of accelerated- and blastic-phase CML patients, imatinib at 600 mg/800 mg daily demonstrated greater efficacy over 400 mg.[5,6] There is also a correlation of clinical responses with the steady-state trough plasma concentrations (Cmin) of imatinib mesylate and its major active metabolite, CGP74588.[7] A total of 551 patients in the IRIS study had trough pharmacokinetic samples (24 h post dose) obtained at day 1 and steady state (day 29). The overall mean coefficient of variation (CV) for the steady-state trough levels (Cmin) is a reflection of imatinib mesylate clearance and metabolism in CML patients. Pharmacokinetic trough levels obtained for imatinib could be divided into three groups - the lower and upper quartile ranges (below Q1 = 25th percentile, above Q3 = 75th percentile) and the interquartile range. Times to complete cytogenetic response (no Ph+ metaphases) and the major molecular response within these complete cytogenetic response patients were different in these three groups. Mean (±SD) trough plasma imatinib concentrations were significantly higher in the group with major molecular response (34 patients) than in the group without (1452.1 ± 649.1 ng/ml versus 869.3 ± 427.5 ng/ml, p < 0.001), whereas there was no difference in the imatinib daily dose. For trough plasma imatinib concentrations and their discrimination potential for major molecular response, the area under receiver-operating characteristic curve was 0.775, with best sensitivity (76.5%) and specificity (70.6%) at a plasma threshold of 1002 ng/ml. By 4 years, an estimated 53% achieved major molecular response despite low steady-state Cmin levels compared with 80% for patients with high Cmin (and 72% for patients within the interquartile range). These results suggest that achieving and maintaining an adequate plasma concentration (by therapeutic drug monitoring) of imatinib mesylate is important for a good clinical response. High-dose imatinib mesylate (800 mg daily), as front-line treatment has been studied in newly diagnosed chronic-phase CML patients. Responses in 175 patients (with a median follow-up of 30 months) have been evaluated in comparison with historical controls (n = 50) receiving standard-dose imatinib (median follow-up of 53 months).[8] A complete cytogenetic response with imatinib was achieved in 90% of high-dosetreated patients, in contrast to only 78% of standard-dose-treated patients (p = 0.03). At 12 months, the major molecular response rates were 54% with high dose, versus 24% with standard dose (p = 0.001), and complete molecular response rates at 24 months were 27 and 10%, respectively. Based on the pharmacokinetic data from the IRIS studies it is very likely that due to higher Cmin patients receiving high-dose imatinib mesylate (800 mg daily) upfront (in newly diagnosed patients) they achieve complete cytogenetic response at a rapid rate, but not necessarily at a significantly higher rate. The results of these studies are somewhat difficult to compare, owing to differences in follow-up. In addition, the reverse transcriptase (RT)-PCR technology was not standardized. Nonetheless, the emerging picture is that the rates of major molecular remission and complete cytogenetic response in the combination studies are comparable with the IRIS trial, but higher in patients treated with 800 mg imatinib daily, while the rates of major molecular response and complete molecular response are generally higher compared to standard-dose imatinib. This increased efficacy comes at the cost of increased toxicity. For example, the incidence of grade 3/4 neutropenia was 63% in patients treated with imatinib and pegylated IFN, and 41% experienced grade 3/4 nonhematologic toxicity. As a result, only a fraction of the planned IFN dose was actually administered. Taken together, these results clearly suggest that early intensification of therapy may increase the frequency of profound remissions, although at the price of more toxicity. Standard-dose and high-dose imatinib are currently compared in a Phase III intergroup study taking place in the USA, and are part of several multi-armed studies in Europe. Initial results suggest higher rates of major molecular response and complete molecular response, although it is being observed that the standard-dose arm is catching up with time. Duration of Imatinib Therapy The optimal duration of imatinib therapy is yet to be determined. In 2006, 5-year follow-up data for imatinib mesylate from the Phase III, multicentered, randomized, open-label, international IRIS trial of 1106 patients showed long-term survival and safety in newly diagnosed Ph+ CML in chronic phase.[9] An estimated 89% (95% CI: 86-92%) of patients were alive at 5 years, while the overall survival (OS) in the IFN arm was 86%. In addition, an estimated total of 93% of patients had not progressed to advanced phases of Ph+ CML, while only approximately 2.4% of patients discontinued imatinib mesylate owing to drug-related adverse events. Furthermore, the annual rates of progression events decreased with the passing years, with 1.5% in the first year, 2.8% in the second year and tapering down to less than 1% in the fourth and fifth years. Approximately 382 out of 553 (69%) patients randomized to imatinib mesylate were still receiving first-line therapy, while only 16 out of 553 in the group given IFN plus Ara-C continued their treatments. From the latter group, 359/553 (65%) had crossed over to imatinib mesylate. The progression-free survival (PFS) in the intent-to-treat group was 83.2% (95% CI: 79-87) for imatinib mesylate and 64.1% (95% CI: 59-69) in the IFN arm. In terms of confirmed responses, the complete hematologic response rate was 96.6%, the major cytogenetic response rate was 85.2%, and the complete cytogenetic response rate was 73.1%. The evolving imatinib mesylate data from the IRIS trial are summarized in Table 1 . Given this outstanding response with imatinib mesylate, it is prudent to continue this treatment indefinitely. Furthermore, there is currently no evidence to indicate that imatinib mesylate can be discontinued safely even after attaining undetectable bcr-abl transcript levels. Most patients who have stopped imatinib mesylate therapy have experienced molecular or cytogenetic relapse even after achieving a sustained complete molecular response for a considerable duration of time.[10-12] Thus, the current recommendation suggests continuation of imatinib mesylate therapy indefinitely unless the patient experiences unacceptable toxicity or treatment failure. It is also not clear if imatinib mesylate can be stopped when patients achieved major molecular response or complete molecular response. To date, information is mostly limited to anecdotal observations of patients who stopped therapy in complete cytogenetic response or complete molecular response for various reasons, such as sideeffects or pregnancy.[10,11,13] Most of them had disease recurrence, which should not be confused with relapse, since rechallenge with imatinib mesylate usually restored response. The only patients who maintained response were individuals who had received imatinib mesylate for relapse after allogeneic transplantation or who had been treated with IFN-α before they commenced imatinib. Thus, it can be surmised from all these clinical data that imatinib alone is not capable of eradicating the leukemic stem cell clone.[14] Adverse Events to Imatinib The majority of CML patients treated with imatinib mesylate experienced adverse events at some time. Most events were of mild-to-moderate grade, but the drug was discontinued for adverse events in 1% of patients in the chronic phase, 2% in the accelerated phase and 5% in blast crisis. The most frequently reported drug related (>25%) adverse events were nausea, vomiting, edema and muscle cramps. Edema was most frequently periorbital or in lower limbs, and the frequency of severe edema was 15%. These events appear to be dose-related, were more common in the blast crisis and accelerated phase studies (where the dose was 600 mg/day), and are more common in the elderly. The fluid retention events were usually managed by interrupting imatinib mesylate treatments and with diuretics, or other appropriate supportive care measures. In a recent 2006 report, imatinib was associated with cardiotoxicity and congestive heart failure,[15] although this toxicity is a rare event in clinical practice.[16] One such reported serious and life-threatening event was seen in a patient with blast crisis who subsequently died after pleural effusion, congestive heart failure and renal failure. Grade 3-4 hematologic adverse events were infrequent, except for neutropenia (14%) and thrombocytopenia (8%).[2] Monitoring the Disease Responses & Measuring Minimal Residual Disease Even though routine cytogenetic analysis is still considered the gold standard for evaluating response in CML, the studies are often somewhat cumbersome in practice and require analysis in metaphase. As most patients are able to achieve complete cytogenetic responses with tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs), sensitive and accurate monitoring of bcr-abl is required to measure residual disease. In CML patients who achieved a complete cytogenetic response, fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) is more sensitive than conventional cytogenetics to monitor Ph negativity, and thus a biologic response to treatment.[17] Since FISH studies typically involve looking for the bcr-abl fusion fluorescence in at least 200 interphase cells, this precludes the sensitivity of FISH in making judgments on the extent of residual disease. Furthermore, since most CML studies have assessed long-term outcomes by monitoring cytogenetics and not FISH, quantitative RT-PCR (qRT-PCR) is currently used for assessing the depth of the molecular response and measurement of residual disease with a sensitivity of up to 10-8. Molecular remission can thus be defined in this fashion as a reduction in the quantification of bcr-abl transcripts to an undetectable level, and can be considered as a surrogate marker for cure and/or long-term disease control. It has been shown that such precision might help to predict disease outcome in a better way. Major molecular response is defined as a reduction of bcr-abl transcript levels by 3 or more logs, compared with a standardized baseline, obtained from newly diagnosed and untreated CML patients. So for the standardized baseline in the IRIS trial, which was the average ratio from 30 patients and was 36%, the major molecular response was defined as achieving levels of 0.036% or less. A complete molecular response is defined as undetectability of bcr-abl transcripts if confirmed on a second occasion. Given the variations in the technical aspects of the assay, there is a need for standardization. Therefore, to maximize the consistency and reliability of the qRT-PCR or real-time quantitative PCR (RQ-PCR) techniques, a recent consensus proposal suggested optimization of several procedural aspects of the complex RQ-PCR technique used for measuring bcr-abl transcripts (measuring the molecular response of imatinib mesylate therapy).[18-20] An International Scale (IS) was proposed to generate comparable values when tested in any laboratory, and the scale is fixed to a major molecular response at a value of 0.1%. It allows for differences generated by various RQ-PCR methods and controls. The ongoing validity of conversion is reliant on maintaining performance of analysis within a laboratory. The speed and amount of response are both believed to play an important role in the determination of prognosis. In the IRIS trial, patients who achieved a major molecular response at 18 months had 100% progression-free survival (without progression to accelerated phase/blastic phase at 5 years), whereas patients who failed to achieve complete cytogenetic response had a PFS of 83% (p < 0.001).[9] Major molecular remission rates and PFS (at 12 months, 40 and 2%, respectively) were also found to be better with imatinib mesylate therapy. The patients who achieved a complete cytogenetic response by 12 months had only a 3% probability of progression to acute phase or loss of complete hematologic remission of major molecular remission over the subsequent 12 months, compared with a 15% probability of progression for those patients who did not achieve a major molecular remission. This study demonstrates that achievement of major molecular remission, complete cytogenetic response and complete molecular response are valid efficacy end points in CML, as they correlate with clinical benefit. The unsolved challenges with imatinib mesylate include: Residual disease, even in those who have undetectable bcr-abl transcripts, relapses with discontinuation of imatinib mesylate; Development of resistance, especially in the advanced stages: CML patients in phases other than chronic-phase CML do not show a better treatment response and survival, as is seen in chronic-phase CML patients, despite dose increases to 800 mg daily. In addition, since the introduction of imatinib, median survival in blast crisis has increased from 2-3 months to only 7.5 months, with few longterm survivors; Intolerance; Long-term effects of imatinib mesylate therapy on chromosomal aberrations in the bone marrow[21,22] (the chromosomal changes most commonly reported with imatinib are trisomy 8 and monosomy 7), on bone and mineral metabolism[23] or cardiac function are unknown.[15] We will now illustrate the first two of these issues and how further drug development can address these. Role of Measurement of Residual Disease in CML in the Understanding of Relapse & Imatinib Mesylate Resistance There is substantial variation in the responses observed among different patients. Residual disease in imatinib-treated patients persists because of bcr-abl kinase activity due to likely overlapping mechanisms, explaining imatinib mesylate resistance and an ineradicable reservoir of stem-cell activity. A recent 5-year update of the IRIS trial provided a separate estimate of imatinib mesylate resistance.[9] After 5 years, 31% of patients (171 of 553 patients) who received imatinib as first-line therapy discontinued it (including 4% for adverse events [AEs], 11% for unsatisfactory therapeutic effect and 2.5% to cross-over to IFN-α treatment). Even in this group, approximately 33% of imatinib-treated patients had not achieved a complete hematologic response, and 39% had not achieved a major cytogenetic response. Primary resistance to imatinib only occurred occasionally in chronic-phase, showing a low and decreasing annual rate of progression (resulting in death) after 1, 2, 3 and 4 years of therapy of 3.4, 7.5, 4.8 and 1.5%, respectively - possibly as a result of patients with the worse prognosis progressing relatively early.[24] Leukemic Stem Cells The presence of minimal residual disease in patients treated with imatinib mesylate may be due to the reservoir of disease, the diseased quiescent hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) subpopulation (which is approximately 0.5% of Ph+ HSC population) present within the cells, insensitive to imatinib mesylate therapy. The etiology of disease 'persistence' (residual disease) at the molecular level may be multifactorial. Primitive HSC cells are resistant to imatinib mesylate, and exhibit drug-transport mechanisms, for example PgP, a MDR1 resistance gene product, evolving mutations in the kinase domain. The relative resistance of CML HSCs (lin-CD34+CD38-cells) to imatinib mesylate may be explained at least in part by their elevated expression of bcr-abl, and the higher tyrosine kinase activity than is seen in the more prevalent lin-CD34+CD38+ leukemic cells. Expression of the three transporter genes (OCT1, ABCB1 and ABCG2) was studied in a bcr-abltransduced BaF3 cell line, in which p210 bcr-abl expression was modulated (by a tetracycline inducible system) and allowed to undergo differentiation. The most primitive (lin-CD34+CD38-) cells revealed very low expression of OCT1 (low imatinib mesylate uptake) and highly elevated expression of ABCB1 and ABCB2 (high drug efflux), and bcr-abl (elevated kinase activity), suggesting HSC-mediated imatinib mesylate resistance. There is also emerging data on some of the new drugs under development suggesting that these recalcitrant clones can be inhibited. BMS-214662, a cytotoxic farnesyltransferase inhibitor (FTI), has been shown to target primitive progenitor cells (PPC) in CML.[25] In long-term culture-initiating cell (LTC-IC) assays with both chronic-phase CML and normal CD34+ progenitors, addition of BMS-214662 to dasatinib in vitro has been shown to dramatically reduce the PPC colonies and also overcome kinase domain mutation transfectants in Baf3 cell lines. Advanced CML & Development of Resistance Due to Bcr-abl Inhibition In contrast to responses seen in the chronic phase, most patients with CML in accelerated phase and blast crisis fail to achieve a complete cytogenetic response and frequently develop resistance to therapy and relapse. Imatinib resistance is uncommon in patients with early chronic-phase CML, whereas its estimated 2-year incidence is 1020% in chronic-phase CML post-IFN-α failure, 40-50% in accelerated-phase CML, and 70-80% in blast-phase CML or Ph+ acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Approximately 60% of patients with advanced stage CML (blast crisis) do respond initially; while responses to imatinib treatment in chronic-phase CML are durable, remissions observed in blast crisis patients are typically short-lived, with relapse occurring within 6 months despite continued therapy. Furthermore, even in imatinib- treated patients, subsequent failure to respond has typically been associated with acquired resistance within the leukemic cell to imatinib mesylate. Underlying mechanisms that account for this include clonal evolution (as the CML patients progress through the different phases), gene amplification or point mutation in the bcr-abl kinase domain, and overactivity of the networking kinases, such as the Src family kinases. Of these, point mutations within the Abl kinase domain of the bcr-abl gene are emerging as the most frequent mechanism for resistance to imatinib mesylate and resultant reactivation of kinase activity. The risk of mutation development is particularly high in patients who are beyond the chronic phase, as well as those with a long duration of disease prior to imatinib therapy. ATP-competitive TKIs inhibit bcr-abl activity by blocking the ATP-binding site on the bcr-abl kinase domain. Some ATP-competitive TKIs bind only to the inactive conformation of bcr-abl, which blocks the protein in its inactive conformation and prevents its activation. This accounts for the specificity of these agents, as the inactive conformation of bcr-abl is structurally unique, whereas the active conformation is structurally similar to that of other kinases. Some ATP-competitive TKIs bind to bcr-abl through an extremely complex and energetically-inefficient 'induced fit' mechanism, so these drugs have only a modest affinity for the target. This induced fit binding can be impaired by the substitution of even a single amino acid in the bcr-abl kinase domain. Shah et al. have conducted comprehensive bcr-abl kinase domain sequencing analysis of 45 CML patients who demonstrated imatinib resistance.[26] Mutations were detected in over 90% of patients (29/32) who relapsed after an initial response to imatinib, including those with chronic phase, myeloid blast crisis and lymphoid blast crisis CML. Mutations were also detected in 4/13 chronic phase patients with stable disease and correlated with subsequent clinical relapse. In general, the most resistance-conferring mutations are distributed throughout the Abl kinase domain. The most resistant mutations occur in the P-loop and are close to or near residues that are in direct contact with the drug. Thus, there is a range of resistance based on the location, from a few-fold for some of the A-loop mutants, up to complete resistance for the T315I mutation. To date, more than 30 mutant forms of bcr-abl have been detected in patients. Of these, the most common arising in CML appears to be Glu255Lys/Val, Thr315Ile and Met351Thr. The mutants possess varying degrees of imatinib desensitization, with the most resistant mutants being Tyr253His, Thr315Ile, Gly250Glu and Glu255Lys. Structural studies suggest that most point mutations in the bcr-abl kinase domain cause resistance to imatinib by impairing the flexibility of the kinase domain, restricting its ability to adopt the inactive conformation required for optimal imatinib binding, rather than by directly interfering with drug contact residues. This leads to reactivation of bcr-abl kinase activity within the leukemic cell, despite the presence of imatinib. The Thr315Ile (T315I) mutation is one of the most resistant mutations in vitro. Investigators have demonstrated that the T315I mutant is highly resistant to imatinib with a IC50 value greater than tenfold higher than wild-type bcr-abl.[27] The IC50 values in the T315I mutant greatly exceed the therapeutically attainable concentration of imatinib.[28] It has been recommended that because the T315I mutation completely prevents imatinib binding, its detection in a patient should probably lead to cessation of imatinib, and the use of other therapy should be considered. This has stimulated the development of new kinase inhibitors that are able to override resistance to imatinib. Based on data from recently published clinical trials of dasatinib (BMS-354825)[29-43] and nilotinib (AMN107),[44-49] it is obvious that neither of these agents will be beneficial in patients with the T315I mutation either. The 'Sons of Imatinib' The new inhibitors of Abl tyrosine kinase can be distinguished by their nature of binding to the ATP site - namely, competitive-ATP inhibitors and noncompetitive ATP inhibitors. The drugs developed in this class are the 2-phenylaminopyrimidin-based compounds, such as nilotinib (AMN107), and the Src/Abl inhibitors, such as dasatinib (formerly BMS-354825), AP23464, bosutinib and PD166326. The affinity of the competitive ATP inhibitors is many folds higher than the first generation, imatinib, and hence they are efficacious in most imatinib mesylate-resistant patients. Both dasatinib and nilotinib appear to have activity in CML patients with mutations within the abl kinase domain, including in the P-loop, A-loop and catalytic domains. Dasatinib and nilotinib have recently undergone testing in clinical trials (summarized in Table 2 ), and the clinical data are discussed below. Dasatinib Dasatinib (SPRYCELTM, Bristol-Myers Squibb, NJ, USA), is an orally available novel multitargeted TKI, with approximately 325-fold higher potency against native bcr-abl, and also blocks several other critical oncogenic proteins, such as Src family kinases (Src, Lck, Lyn, c-KIT, PDGFR-β, and ephrin A receptor kinase) at low nanomolar concentrations.[50,51] Unlike imatinib mesylate, dasatinib binds both the active and inactive conformations of the abl protein and has demonstrated preclinical activity against 21 out of 22 imatinib-resistant bcr-abl mutants.[26-28] Dasatinib Development. In late 2003, dasatinib entered clinical trials and was clinically assessed in one dose-finding study and five subsequent studies involving more than 900 imatinib mesylate-resistant or -intolerant patients (the START program). In the dasatinib Phase I dose-escalation clinical trial (CA180002), 63 evaluable patients with CML and Ph+ ALL resistant or intolerant to imatinib have been treated with dasatinib, showing both efficacy and durability of response.[29] Nine patients have gone off study due to progressive disease. Of these, three had T315I detected prior to treatment, and two patients had the T315I mutation at the time of disease progression. The Phase II dose of dasatinib was chosen as 70 mg twice a day (plasma half-life of 3-4 h; Cmax of 90 nM)[30-34] for the Phase II studies. START-R is an international trial of dasatinib 70 mg twice daily and imatinib mesylate 800 mg/day in patients with chronicphase CML resistant to prior imatinib mesylate 400-600 mg/day. In total, 150 patients were randomized (2:1): 101 to dasatinib, 49 to imatinib mesylate. With a minimum follow-up of 10 months, the complete hematologic response rate was 92% (93 dasatinib patients) versus 82% (40 imatinib mesylate patients), and the major cytogenetic response rate was 48% for dasatinib versus 33% for imatinib mesylate. Of importance, the primary difference was the complete cytogenetic response rate of 35% (35/101) for dasatinib versus 16% (8/49) for imatinib mesylate, suggesting that dasatinib can achieve deeper responses in this patient population. Of patients with no prior cytogenetic response to imatinib mesylate, 44% (17/39) achieved a major cytogenetic response with dasatinib, versus 7% (1/15) with higher dose imatinib mesylate. Major cytogenetic response rates of 40% for dasatinib and 20% for imatinib mesylate were achieved in patients with baseline imatinib mesylate-resistant bcr-abl mutations, with 47% of dasatinib patients versus 0 imatinib mesylate patients with difficult-to-treat P-loop mutations achieving a major cytogenetic response. Patients with no prior cytogenetic response to imatinib mesylate were able to achieve major cytogenetic response with dasatinib, but dose escalation of imatinib mesylate was not effective. A total of 23% of dasatinib patients versus 80% of imatinib mesylate patients had treatment failure. Grade 3/4 nonhematologic toxicity was minimal in both arms. All grades of superficial edema and fluid retention were more common with imatinib mesylate than dasatinib, whereas pleural effusion was seen only with dasatinib. Cytopenia was more frequent and severe with dasatinib. CA180035, a randomized, global multicenter, open-label trial of dasatinib 140 mg once a day versus 70 mg twice a day, was conducted in patients with accelerated- or blasticphase CML or Ph+ ALL, which were resistant to or intolerant of imatinib mesylate.[35] Patients were stratified by phase of disease (accelerated, myeloid blast, or lymphoid blast/Ph+ ALL) and by prior imatinib mesylate (resistant or intolerant). The primary objective of the study was to compare the major hematologic response rate between the two regimens. Dose escalation to 180 mg once a day or 90 mg twice a day was allowed for inadequate response, and dose reduction to 100 or 80 mg once a day or 50 or 40 mg twice a day for drug toxicity. From June 2005 through March 2006, 612 patients were randomized. Of all patients who received prior imatinib mesylate, 42% had more than 600 mg/day, and 37% were treated for more than 3 years. Other prior therapy included IFN in 42% of patients, chemotherapy in 57% of patients and stem-cell transplant in 14% of patients. The major hematologic response rate was 35%, including 21% complete hematologic response, and the major cytogenetic response rate was 33%, including 23% complete cytogenetic response. The most common nonhematologic drug-related toxicities included diarrhea (24%, grade 3/4: 3%), headache (17%, grade 3/4: 1%), nausea (17%, grade 3/4: 2%), pleural effusion (15%, grade 3/4: 4%), and fatigue (12%, grade 3/4: 3%). Hematologic toxicity included neutropenia grade 3 and grade 4 in 22 and 40% of patients, respectively, and thrombocytopenia grade 3 and 4 in 16 and 50% of patients, respectively. A FDA-approved summary of interim results from four single-arm Phase II studies showed efficacy data in 445 patients.[36] In patients with chronic-phase CML, the major cytogenetic response rate was 45%, with a complete cytogenetic remission rate of 33%. Major cytogenetic response rates were 59, 32, 31 and 42% in patients with acceleratedphase CML, myeloid CML, lymphoid-blast CML and Ph+ ALL, respectively. Molecular Responses in Imatinib Mesylate-resistant Patients. In addition, dasatinib was associated with molecular responses in patients with imatinib-resistant/intolerant CML and multiple bcr-abl kinase domain mutations.[37-41] Similar response rates were attained irrespective of whether patients had bcr-abl mutations within the kinase domain. In a study of imatinib mesylate-refractory patients treated with dasatinib,[37] 46 different bcr-abl mutations involving 36 amino acids were detected in 202/394 patients (51%) prior to the treatment. A total of 162 patients showed one mutation, 33 patients showed two mutations, six patients showed three mutations, and one patient showed four mutations. Mutations were observed in 84 patients in chronic phase (42%), 47 patients in accelerated phase (60%), 23 patients in myeloid blast crisis (43%), and 48 patients in lymphoid blast crisis and ALL (74%). In patients with mutations, hematologic response was 91% in chronic phase, 62% in accelerated phase, 41% in myeloid blast crisis and 34% in lymphoid blast crisis/ALL (p < 0.01). Major and complete cytogenetic response did not differ significantly (47 and 34% in chronic phase, 35 and 27% in accelerated phase, 33 and 28% in myeloid blast crisis, 53 and 51% in lymphoid blast crisis/ALL, respectively). Major cytogenetic response rates were comparable in patients bearing no mutations (44%), mutations within the P-loop (43%), SH2 domain (47%), activation loop (56%) or other sites (49%), but not for T315I (0%, p < 0.001). Sorting individual patients by the underlying mutation and cellular IC50 values of dasatinib revealed clearly higher hematologic and cytogenetic response rates in those with lower IC50 values. In line with the virtual insensitivity to dasatinib in vitro, none of the 17 patients carrying a T315I mutation showed any hematologic response. Two distinct patterns of response were observed: A parallel decrease of the bcr-abl load and the mutated clone A decrease of the bcr-abl load followed by a decrease of the mutated clone after a delay of up to 4-6 months Up until now, five patients developed new mutations associated with dasatinib resistance (T315I, n = 2, accelerated phase and myeloid blast crisis patients; F317L + F486S, n = 2, lymphoid blast crisis and myeloid blast crisis patients; E507G, n = 1, chronic-phase patient). Adverse Events to Dasatinib & Dose Optimization. Most dasatinib patients also experienced adverse drug reactions at some time,[29-43] most of which were dose dependent. The drug was discontinued for adverse reactions in 6% of patients in chronic-phase CML, 5% in accelerated-phase CML and 11% in myeloid blast-phase CML. The most frequently reported adverse events included fluid retention events, such as pleural effusion;[42] gastrointestinal events, including diarrhea, nausea, abdominal pain and vomiting; and bleeding events. The most frequently reported serious AEs included pyrexia (9%), pleural effusion (8%), febrile neutropenia (7%), gastrointestinal bleeding (6%), pneumonia (6%), thrombocytopenia (5%), dyspnea (4%), anemia (3%), cardiac failure (3%) and diarrhea. In a published correspondence in the New England Journal of Medicine, the authors report the rate of drug-related pleural effusion as 21% in a series of five Phase II studies involving a total of 511 patients with chronic-phase, accelerated-phase, blast-crisis or Ph+ ALL.[52] Furthermore, in the Phase I study, ten patients (four in chronic-phase CML and six in blast crisis) underwent thoracentesis and two underwent pleurodesis. In the dasatinib dose-optimization study of 100 mg/day versus 140 mg/day as reported by Shah et al.,[43] the hematologic and cytogenetic response (complete hematologic response, major cytogenetic response and complete cytogenetic response) were similar among all arms. The PFS significantly favored 100 mg once a day as compared with 70 mg twice a day (p = 0.032). The 100 mg/day dose arm exhibited significantly superior toxicity profile and superior tolerability compared with other arms. Thus the clinically optimal dose of dasatinib without the inadvertent side effect is 100 mg/day, and longterm follow-up of this study will help determine the durability of this response. Dasatinib received FDA approval in June 2006 for the treatment of adults in all phases of CML (with chronic-phase, accelerated-phase, or myeloid or lymphoid blastic-phase CML) with resistance or intolerance to prior therapy including imatinib. It is also approved for the treatment of adults with Ph+ ALL, which is resistant or intolerant to previous therapy. Nilotinib Nilotinib (Tasigna®; Novartis, Basel, Switzerland) is a novel aminopyrimidine ATPcompetitive inhibitor of bcr-abl. This TKI also binds to other kinases, such as KIT, PDGFR, ABL-related kinase ARG and ephrin receptor EPHB4, with the exception of the Src-family of tyrosine kinases. Nilotinib was designed to fit into the ATP-binding site of the bcr-abl protein with higher affinity than imatinib. Crystallographic models show that it requires less of a topographical fit in order to inhibit bcr-abl; thus, in addition to being more potent than imatinib (IC50 <30 nM) against wild-type bcr-abl, nilotinib is also significantly active against 32/33 imatinib-resistant bcr-abl mutants, with the exception of T315I.[44,45] Because of the selectivity and broad efficacy of nilotinib in known mutants, it has the potential to benefit patients in all stages of Ph+ CML by achieving and maintaining the best possible response, including one at the molecular level. Hence, the clinical trials designed and discussed thus far include individuals likely to respond, such as de novo patients, patients intolerant of less selective therapy, patients who become resistant to imatinib mesylate and patients who achieve a suboptimal molecular response on less selective therapy. Nilotinib Clinical Development. The first in-human study (CAMN107A2101), is a Phase I/II multicenter, dose escalation study of oral nilotinib on a continuous daily dosing schedule in adult patients with imatinib-resistant/-intolerant CML in chronic phase, accelerated phase or blastic crisis, relapsed/refractory Ph+ ALL and other hematologic malignancies. The Phase I portion is complete and the Phase II is ongoing. In the Phase I portion of the (CAMN107A2101) study, 119 patients with CML-chronic phase, accelerated phase, BC and Ph+ ALL and resistant to imatinib were treated with nilotinib in dose cohorts from 50 to 1200 mg on a once-daily dosing schedule.[46] No dose-limiting toxicity dose level has been defined to date. Efficacy was assessed in 114 patients in the Phase I portion. In this study, nilotinib was not associated with the edema, as seen frequently with imatinib. Among patients with chronic, accelerated and blast-phase CML, hematological/cytogenetic responses were achieved in 92/53, 72/48 and 39/27%, respectively. The best responses were seen at doses of 400 mg twice a day. Two of the imatinib-resistant Ph+ ALL patients also responded. Pharmacokinetic analysis of patients receiving 400 mg twice a day, which was the dose selected for Phase II trials, showed mean peak and trough plasma levels of 3.6 and 1.7 M, respectively, with an apparent half-life of 15 h. Nilotinib is now being studied in three ongoing Phase II trials conducted in patients with imatinib-resistant or -intolerant CML. Currently, data is available from one clinical trial cohort of 145 patients who were administered nilotinib at a dose of 400 mg twice a day. Results from this study indicate that nilotinib achieved complete hematologic response in 69, 16 and 4% of patients with chronic-phase, accelerated-phase, and blastic-phase disease, respectively, and major cytogenetic responses were seen in 46, 28 and 29% of patients. The trial design also allowed for dose escalation to 600 mg twice a day for Ph+ ALL, accelerated-phase CML, chronic-phase CML and blast-crisis CML patients, to allow higher drug exposure for suboptimal responders. In a recently published update of this Phase II open-label study, nilotinib 400 mg was administered orally twice daily to 280 patients with Ph+CML in chronic phase after imatinib failure or intolerance.[47] Patients had at least 6 months of follow-up and were evaluated for hematologic and cytogenetic responses, as well as for safety and OS. At 6 months, the rate of major cytogenetic response (Ph ≤35%) was 48%: complete (Ph 0%) in 31%, and partial (Ph 1-35%) in 16%. The estimated survival at 12 months was 95%. Adverse events were mostly mild-tomoderate, and there was minimal cross-intolerance with imatinib. Grade 3-4 neutropenia and thrombocytopenia were observed in 29% of patients; pleural or pericardial effusions were observed in 1% (none severe). Clinical data suggest that nilotinib may overcome most of the mutation-associated resistance to imatinib mesylate (except T315I), and may have an important therapeutic role in imatinib mesylate resistance and in front-line CML therapy to prevent emergence of resistant clones. Prior to nilotinib, 28 different bcr-abl mutations involving 22 amino acids were detected in 61/101 patients (60%). Nine patients showed two, three patients three and one patient four mutations. Mutations were observed in 37 patients in chronic phase (49%), 15 patients in accelerated phase (68%) and nine patients in blast crisis (60%). In patients with mutations, the overall rate of hematologic response was 70% (78% in chronic phase, 75% in accelerated phase, 25% in blast crisis), compared with 88% in patients without mutations. In chronic-phase CML, complete cytogenetic response was achieved within 3-6 months in patients with mutations with high in vitro sensitivity to nilotinib.[48] Response dynamics depend on the individual type of the mutation, which may be the basis for individualized dosage of nilotinib according to the mutation pattern. Based on these results, nilotinib is now approved by the FDA for the treatment of chronic-phase and accelerated-phase Ph+ CML in adult patients resistant to or intolerant to prior therapy that included imatinib. Nilotinib in imatinib mesylate-resistant or intolerant accelerated chronic myeloid leukemia. A Phase II trial was designed to characterize the efficacy and safety of nilotinib (400 mg twice daily) in patients with imatinib-resistant or -intolerant accelerated-phase chronic myelogenous leukemia with hematologic response as the primary efficacy end point.[49] A total of 119 patients were enrolled and had a median duration of treatment of 202 days (range, 2-611 days). An hematologic response was observed in 56 patients (47%; 95% CI: 38-56%). Major cytogenetic response was observed in 35 patients (29%; 95% CI: 21-39%). The median duration of hematologic response has not been reached. Overall survival rate among the 119 patients after 12 months of follow-up was 79% (95% CI: 70-87%). Non-hematologic adverse events were mostly mild to moderate. Severe peripheral edema and pleural effusions were not observed. The most common grade 3 or higher hematologic adverse events were thrombocytopenia (35%) and neutropenia (21%). Grade 3 or higher bilirubin and lipase elevations occurred in 9 and 18% of patients, respectively, resulting in treatment discontinuation in one patient. Adverse Events for Nilotinib. Safety data are available for 371 patients with CMLaccelerated phase and accelerated phase enrolled in the Phase II part of study (CAMN107A2101), and 428 patients with chronic-phase CML, accelerated-phase CML, blast-crisis CML, Ph+ ALL, hypereosinophilic syndrome, systemic mastocytosis and gastrointestinal stromal tumor enrolled in other ongoing clinical trials. The safety and tolerability profile of nilotinib is favorable at 400 mg taken orally twice a day, with commonly reported AEs in Phase I and II studies being myelosuppresion (grade 3-4 in 10-20% of patients), mild-to-moderate rashes, pruritis, nausea and vomiting, diarrhea, fatigue, constipation, arthralgia and peripheral edema.[53-56] Severe clinical consequences, such as febrile neutropenia, sepsis, pneumonia and bleeding associated with thrombocytopenia occurred infrequently in both disease phases. The reported nonlaboratory AEs were manageable with symptomatic treatment and were reversible. Elevations in serum lipases were commonly observed (all grades ~38%). Patients with elevated lipase were generally asymptomatic, those with symptoms of abdominal pain were reported in 3-5%, and both were transient and easily managed with brief treatment interruptions. Low-grade elevations of bilirubin and hepatic transaminases were frequently observed; elevations of bilirubin occurred early, were transient, and the more severe cases were managed with brief treatment interruptions or dose reductions, rarely requiring treatment discontinuation. Of interest, a significant increase in relative risk of hyperbilirubinemia was seen in patients with the (TA)7(TA)7 genotype at the (A[TA]nTAA) element of the UGT1A1, suggesting that genetic susceptibility may contribute to the development of hyperbilirubinemia in some patients.[57] Nilotinib has demonstrated a modest dose-dependent potential for QT interval prolongation as observed in both CML patients and healthy male volunteers. In general, cardiac events occurred in patients with other risk factors for cardiac disease, and the incidence of these events seems to reflect the underlying cardiac risk for a population of the same age. Other ATP-competitive Bcr-abl Inhibitors Bosutinib Bosutinib (SKI-606; Wyeth, NJ, USA) is an orally available, dual Src/Abl kinase inhibitor shown to be 200-fold more potent than imatinib as an inhibitor of bcr-abl phosphorylation in biochemical assays.[53,58] However, unlike dasatinib, bosutinib does not block KIT or PDGFR.[58] The phosphorylation of the autoactivation site of the Srcfamily kinases (LYN and/or HCK) is also decreased by bosutinib therapy. It had been demonstrated that bosutinib has in vitro activity against all imatinib-resistant mutants, except T315I. In nude mice, bosutinib caused complete regression of large K562 (leukemia cell line) xenografts, when administered orally for 5 days at a once-daily dose of 100 mg/kg body weight.[53] Ongoing Phase I/II clinical trials in imatinib-resistant CML and Ph+ ALL reported evidence of bosutinib's efficacy, safety and tolerability.[54] In the Phase I portion of this Phase I/II study, patients in chronic phase with imatinib relapsed or refractory disease were eligible for treatment with bosutinib once-daily dosing. A total of 18 patients have been enrolled in the following dose cohorts (mg/day): 400 (three patients), 500 (three patients) and 600 (12 patients), and have been on treatment for 30-192 days. A total of 17 out of 18 patients remain on study; one patient discontinued with disease progression. The following bosutinib-related AEs have been reported (n = 15, Grade 1/2): diarrhea (87%), nausea (33%), vomiting (20%), abdominal pain (13%), rash (13%), asthenia (13%) and increased AST/ALT levels (7%). Two patients treated at 600 mg experienced Grade 3 toxicity: rash and thrombocytopenia. Five patients (four patients at 600 mg and one patient at 500 mg) had dose reductions for rash, thrombocytopenia, diarrhea, fever and increased AST/ALT levels. No pleural effusion or pulmonary edema has been reported. Of the seven patients who entered the study in hematologic relapse and have completed 1 month of treatment, all have achieved complete hematologic response. Of the seven patients on treatment for 12 weeks (time of first cytogenetic assessment), three have achieved complete cytogenetic response and one patient has had a minimal cytogenetic response. A total of six out of seven patients who have achieved complete hematologic response had pretreatment imatinib-resistant bcr-abl mutations: M351T, F359V, T315I, and F359(V,F); and two patients had multiple mutations (L248[L,V] and H396[H,R]; H396[H,P] and E286[E,G] and M351[T,M]). The three patients with complete cytogenetic response had the following mutations: M351T, M244V, H396(H,P), E286(E,G) and M351(T,M). Based on the emergence of one dose-limiting toxicity of grade 3 rash, and additional grade 2, grade 1 and dermatologic toxicities observed at 600 mg, 500 mg has been selected as the dose for the Phase II portion of the study. INNO-406 INNO-406 (Innovive, NY, USA; originally developed by Nippon Shinyaku as NS-187) is a dual bcr-abl and LYN TKI, structurally related to imatinib and nilotinib, and is currently being studied as a potential treatment for CML patients in a Phase I trial. INNO-406 demonstrated a 25- to 55-fold greater potency than imatinib against the bcrabl-positive leukemia cell lines K562 and KU812, and against Ba/F3 mouse hematopoietic cells designed to express parental p210 bcr-abl.[55] As INNO-406 is a selective inhibitor of LYN kinase and not a broad Src-family kinase inhibitor,[55] it may be less toxic in comparison with the broad Src-family inhibitors. However, further clinical data is needed to prove if this can be of any clinical benefit. Once again, INNO406 inhibits various imatinib-resistant mutants, except T315I. AP23464 AP23464 is a potent ABL kinase and SFK inhibitor that inhibits proliferation and promotes apoptosis in CML cell lines.[56] Furthermore, AP23464 has antiproliferative activity against cell lines expressing a different imatinib-sensitive bcr-abl mutant (Q252H, Y253F, E255K, M351I or H396P). AP23464 had no inhibitory effect on bcrabl T315I mutants. Non-ATP-competitive Inhibitors of Bcr-abl Aurora Kinase Inhibitors Aurora kinases are a family of serine/threonine kinases that are essential for protein phosphorylation events regulating the mitotic progression of the cell cycle.[59] The investigation of Aurora kinase inhibitors as potential therapeutic agents in cancer is based on the fact that Aurora kinases are overexpressed in various human cancers. MK-0457. MK-0457 (Merck, NJ, USA; originally developed by Vertex Pharmaceuticals as VX-680) is an Aurora kinase inhibitor that targets bcr-abl mutants resistant to all available TKIs, including the T315I mutant. It is a potent inhibitor of all three Aurora kinases and FLT3 in the nanomolar range, and also a moderate-to-strong inhibitor of other kinases, including ABL and JAK2, which are potential targets for a variety of myeloproliferative disorders.[60,61] In Phase I clinical trials, MK-0457 has been studied as a 5-day intravenous infusion (20 mg/m2/h, delivering plasma levels of 1-3 µM), administered every 2-3 weeks to patients with a wide range of relapsed or refractory leukemias, including CML and Ph+ ALL patients.[61] This treatment regimen is well-tolerated, with mucositis being one of the few reported side effects, and has shown efficacy in patients with highly refractory CML, including some who express bcr-abl with the T315I mutation. Efficacy seems to correlate with the level of phosphorylation of CRKL, a downstream element in the bcr-abl signaling pathway. A Phase II study has been started to assess the efficacy of MK-0457 in patients with CML and Ph+ ALL who carry the T315I mutation, and in patients resistant or intolerant to second-generation bcr-abl inhibitors. PHA-739358. PHA-739358 (Nerviano Medical Sciences) is an orally bioavailable inhibitor of Aurora kinases A, B and C. It has significant inhibitory action against tumor growth in several animal tumor models at well-tolerated doses because of its potent antiproliferative activity on a broad range of cancer cell lines.[62] PHA-739358 has currently entered a Phase II clinical study in CML patients who have relapsed after treatment with imatinib. ON012380 ON012380 (Onconova Therapeutics, PA, USA) inhibits the kinase activity by a nonATP competitive allosteric mechanism, which involves bcr-abl inhibition by interacting with the substrate-binding sites of the protein kinases, rather than involving the ATP binding site.[63] In mice, it causes regression of leukemias induced by injection of cells expressing the most resistant T315I mutant, by promoting apoptosis of bcr-abl and mutant bcr-abl-expressing cells with an IC50 in the nanomolar range. However, the drug has not yet entered clinical trials. Stem-cell Transplantation The role of allogeneic stem-cell transplantation has changed from first-line therapy to a second-line or third-line therapy, given the success of bcr-abl inhibitors. However, allogeneic stem cell transplant is still the only documented treatment that offers potential cure as the graft versus leukemia does seem to eradicate this reservoir of 'quiescent' stem cells. However, stem-cell transplantation as a therapeutic option needs to be weighed against the possible associated treatment-related life-threatening morbidity, such as infections, graft versus disease, risk of secondary malignancy and, ultimately, transplant-related mortality. Recent estimates of current outcomes after stem-cell transplantation include data that were analyzed from 131 chronic-phase CML patients undergoing stem-cell transplantation (bone marrow or peripheral blood) from related donors at a single institution in the USA between the years 1995 and 2000.[64] The probability of disease-free survival at 3 years was estimated to be 78%, while survival and disease recurrence rates were estimated at 86 and 8%, respectively. Updated data from all European patients undergoing stem-cell transplantation for CML between 2000 and 2003 (n = 3018) was collated by The Chronic Leukemia Working Party of the European Group for Blood and Marrow Transplantation.[65] Analysis of this data estimated the 2-year survival rate as 61%, the transplant-related mortality rate as 30%, and the rate of disease recurrence as 22%. As per the guidelines developed for the American Society of Hematology,[66] approximately 50% of patients who underwent allogeneic stem-cell transplantation from a matched related donor in their first chronic phase were alive as well as leukemia-free after 5 years. Subsequent follow-up studies conformed to these data, demonstrating survival extending to 10 and 15 years.[67,68] Survival following stem-cell transplantation is mainly dependent on five defined risk factors: Age of the patient Stage (phase) of CML at transplantation Transplantation from HLA-mismatched donor (unrelated donor) Male recipient/female donor Time from diagnosis to transplantation All these factors can be used to evaluate the relative transplant risk.[69] Furthermore, there are opportunities to treat the residual or recurrent disease after transplantation, as cytogenetic and molecular monitoring of the disease enables detection of early posttransplant relapse. Several studies now show that relapse in this setting responds well to therapy with donor lymphocyte infusions, IFN-α or imatinib.[70-72] In fact, CML was the first hematologic disease where donor lymphocyte infusion has been shown to induce durable remissions in most patients with a relapse.[73] A recently published study from the MD Anderson Cancer Center evaluated outcomes of 64 CML patients with advanced-phase disease (80% beyond first chronic phase) not eligible for myeloablative preparative regimens owing to older age or comorbid conditions; these patients were treated with fludarabine-based reduced-intensity conditioning regimens.[74] The transplant characterisitics include: donor type matched related (n = 30), one antigen-mismatched related (n = 4), or one antigen-matched unrelated (n = 30). With median follow-up of 7 years, OS and PFS were 33 and 20%, respectively, at 5 years. The incidence of treatment-related mortality was 33, 39 and 48% at 100 days, and 2 and 5 years after hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation, respectively. In multivariate analysis, only disease stage at time of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation was significantly predictive for both OS and PFS. The authors conclude that reduced-intensity conditioning hematopoietic stem cell transplantation provides adequate disease control in chronic-phase CML patients, but alternative treatment strategies need to be explored in patients with advanced disease as treatmentrelated mortality rates in this high-risk population do increase over time. Currently, there is no evidence for increased transplant-related toxicity either with prior imatinib mesylate use or the use of novel TKI therapy before allogeneic stem-cell transplantation.[75,76] The results of a recent retrospective study of 12 patients who were treated with dasatinib or nilotinib or both for imatinib mesylate-resistant CML before hematopoietic stem cell transplantation has not shown an increase in transplant-related toxicity.[76] To summarize, current guidelines recommend allogeneic stem-cell transplantation as second-line or third-line treatment after kinase inhibitors failure, except in those patients with high disease risk and very low transplantation risk,[69] in those patients who prefer an alternative treatment, or for economic reasons. Conclusions The current recommendation is to start imatinib as the first-line therapy in a newly diagnosed CML patient. Despite the fact that imatinib has revolutionized the management of CML based on the encouraging positive results even after a follow-up of 5 years, it still has some unresolved challenges. These include minimal residual disease, resistant mutations, and unknown long-term effects on chromosomes, cardiac function, and bone and mineral metabolism. Some of these problems are answered by the newer second-generation TKIs and other targeted therapies based on the different converging signaling events with the bcr-abl as in figure1; however, none so far has been proven to eradicate the HSC clone. Currently, research work (investigation) is focused on newer ways to overcome these pitfalls from the existing therapies. Figure 1. Bcr-abl, Src family and emerging cellular pathways for drug development in chronic myelogenous leukemia. ABL = Abelson tyrosine kinase; Akt = Protein kinase B; BCR = Breakpoint cluster region; CRKL = V-crk sarcoma virus CT10 oncogene homolog (avian)-like; FAK = Focal adhesion kinase; FTI = Farnesyl transferase inhibitor; Grb-2 = Growth factor receptor-bound protein 2; Hck = Hemopoietic cell kinase; JAK = Janus kinase; Lyn = V-yes-1 Yamaguchi sarcoma viral related oncogene homolog; MAPK = Mitogen-activated protein kinase; P = Phosphate group; PI3K = Phosphatidylinositol-3kinase; SFK = Src family kinases; SHC = Src homology 2 domain-containing; SRC = Homolog of Rous sarcoma virus; Stat = Signal transducer and activator of transcription. Future Perspective There is a growing hypothesis supported by in vitro data that a combination of multiple Abl kinase inhibitors, such as nilotinib, dasatinib, imatinib and T315I inhibitors, could be used to delay or prevent the emergence of drug-resistant clones. As these optimal sequential and/or combinatorial treatment options are evolving, there is strong evidence to show that these treatment decisions should be based on rational evaluation of the emerging bcr-abl mutations. Preliminary data suggest that synergy between imatinib and nilotinib, or dasatinib and BMS-214662, may occur at the level of the CML stem cell owing to the ability of both imatinib and nilotinib to inhibit or act as substrates of the multidrug efflux transporter ABCG2, which confers resistance toward several anticancer drugs.[25,77] Thus, CML undoubtedly can be referred to as a 'poster child' that not only helps comprehend the underlying molecular mechanisms causing cancer, but also paves the way for successful tailor-made drug development and combinations in order to achieve a cure. Table 1. Summary of Clinical Trial Data of Imatinib Cytogenetic Follow-up Complete time hematologic (months) response (%) Major response (%) Complete response (%) 69 Estimated response rates 12 96 85 19 95 85 Cumulative best observed response rates* 60 97 92 Molecular response (%) Ref. 40% 87 *In CML patients who remained on first-line imatinib mesylate therapy. Imatinib survival rates: overall survival: 89%; overall survival excluding non-CML deaths: 95%; event-free survival: 83%; survival without progressing to AP/BP: 93%. AP = Accelerated phase; BP = Blastic phase; CML = Chronic myeloid leukemia. Data taken from the imatinib IRIS trial Phase III (n = 1106).[9] Table 2. Summary of Clinical Trial Data of the Different Bcr-abl Inhibitors in Patients Who Received Imatinib Mesylate* [2] [9] Hematologic response (%) Drug Cytogenetic response (%) Number of patients Partial Complete Major Complete Ref. CP (40) 92 92 45 35 AP (11) 82 45 27 18 My BP (23) 61 35 35 26 Ly BP and Ph+ ALL (10) 80 70 80 30 CP (186) Imatinib mesylate resistant (127) Imatinib mesylate intolerant (59) ––– 90 87 97 52 39 80 39 28 64 [30] AP (174) Imatinib mesylate resistant (161) Imatinib mesylate intolerant (13) 64 45 39 32 [31,38] My BP (74) 34 26 31 27 [32] Ly BP (42) 35 26 50 43 [32] Ph+ ALL (36) 50 33 58 58 [39] CP (17) 11/12 = 92‡ 11/12 = 92‡ 35 35 [45] AP (56) 38/51 = 74‡ 26/51 = 51‡ 27 14 My BP (24) 42 8 21 4 Ly BP (9) 33 0 11 11 CP (279) Imatinib mesylate resistant (193) Imatinib mesylate intolerant (86) 137/185 = 74‡ 137/185 = 74‡ 52 34 [46] AP (64) Imatinib mesylate resistant (52) Imatinib mesylate intolerant (12) 36 23 36 22 [48] My BP (87) 27 21 NA NA [47] Ly BP (27) 30 26 NA NA Ph+ ALL active (37) 24 24 NA NA Dasatinib Phase I Phase II [29] Nilotinib Phase I Phase II *Careful consideration of the various differing factors, such as patient selection criteria, response criteria and duration of treatment and duration of follow-up between individual trials is necessary when comparing different agents in different trials. ‡ Responses are evaluated only in patients with active disease. 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Sidebar: Executive Summary Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) is a myeloproliferative stem-cell disorder with a tri-phasic course, with a pathagnomonic t(9,22) giving rise to the bcr-abl fusion protein that drives the disease course. Imatinib is the first signal transduction inhibitor binding competitively to the ATP-binding site of bcr-abl, which has shown a remarkable clinical response including complete cytogenetic and molecular response in over 80% of CML patients in the chronic phase. Stem-cell transplant still plays a potentially curative role in a subset of CML patients; drug development, such as for BMS-214662, is also focused on eradicating the hematopoietic stem-cell clone. Imatinib treatment is a subset that is marred by the development of over 30 mutations in the bcr-abl region reducing its activity; second-generation bcr-abl inhibitors, such as nilotinib and the combined src/abl inhibitor dasatinib, have already overcome almost all these mutations, except for T315I. ATP-non-competitive inhibitors, such as MK-0457 and ON012380, are able to overcome the T315I mutation. Future treatments for CML will be towards developing a rational combination of these drugs that can overcome resistance and also deplete the abnormal stem cell, paving the way for a cure. Disclaimer No writing assistance was utilized in the production of this manuscript. Reprint Address Francis Giles, CTRC Institute for Drug Development, University of Texas Health, Science Center at San Antonio, 7979 Wurzbach Road, Suite 400, San Antonio, TX 78229, USA; E-mail: [email protected] Swami Padmanabhan, Saritha Ravella, Tyler Curiel, Department of Hematology/Oncology, Institute for Drug Development, Cancer Therapy and Research Center, San Antonio, TX, USA Francis Giles, CTRC Institute for Drug Development, University of Texas Health, Science Center at San Antonio, 7979 Wurzbach Road, Suite 400, San Antonio, TX 78229, USA Disclosure: The authors have no relevant affiliations or financial involvement with any organization or entity with a financial interest in or financial conflict with the subject matter or materials discussed in the manuscript. This includes employment, consultancies, honoraria, stock ownership or options, expert testimony, grants or patents received or pending, or royalties.