Abstract
CML in blast crisis (BC) and Philadelphia chromosome-positive (Ph+) ALL are incurable with conventional chemotherapy and in most cases respond only transiently to the Bcr-Abl kinase inhibitor imatinib mesylate. We hypothesized that pretreatment with imatinib would overcome inherent drug resistance to induction chemotherapy mediated by Bcr-Abl, and evaluated the combination in 17 patients with Ph+ acute leukemias (5 CML in BC, 6 de-novo Ph+ ALL, 6 relapsed Ph+ ALL). All patients received a 1-week prephase of imatinib alone at 600 mg daily. In CML in BC and relapsed Ph+ ALL, imatinib was continued concomitantly with induction chemotherapy (standard-dose idarubicin/ara-C with vincristine/prednisone added for lymphoid leukemias) for an additional week. Imatinib was then ceased, but recommenced as a single agent after blood-count recovery. Patients with de-novo Ph+ ALL received the imatinib prephase and then commenced the French LALA94 protocol without concomitant imatinib. Neutrophils recovered to ≥ 1.0 x 109/L at a median of day 28 (range 21–56) of induction chemotherapy. During induction, 1 patient died from sepsis and multi-organ failure, and 1 patient died on day 7 from CNS leukemia.
Subsequently, 1 patient died on day 37 from massive hemoptysis and 1 patient developed pulmonary fibrosis and died on day 144. Among 14 evaluable patients, combined imatinib and chemotherapy induction resulted in 9 (64%) complete hematological responses and there were 5 complete and 3 major cytogenetic responses. Notably, 2 out of 3 patients with CML in myeloid BC achieved major cytogenetic responses. The in-vivo effects of imatinib on Bcr-Abl activity were monitored in leukemic blasts during the imatinib-only prephase. Western blots revealed a decrease in CrkL phosphorylation to < 25% of the pretreatment level in peripheral-blood samples from 5 out of 6 evaluable cases and in marrow samples from 1 of 2 evaluable cases. Bcl-xL expression levels revealed no consistent in-vivo responses to imatinib. However, all 7 cases evaluable for Bcl-2 protein showed strong expression levels, which were unaffected by imatinib in 5 cases and decreased in 2 cases. Imatinib potently inhibited Bcr-Abl activity in vivo in Ph+ acute leukemic blasts and its combination with induction chemotherapy was tolerable and shows promising activity.
Author notes
Corresponding author
This feature is available to Subscribers Only
Sign In or Create an Account Close Modal