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Title: | The clinical significance of ABCB1 overexpression in predicting outcome of CML patients undergoing first-line imatinib treatment | Austin Authors: | Eadie, LN;Dang, P;Saunders, VA;Yeung, David T;Osborn, Michael P;Grigg, Andrew P ;Hughes, Timothy P;White, Deborah L | Affiliation: | Cancer Theme, South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute (SAHMRI), Adelaide, South Australia, Australia Department of Medicine, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia Haematology Department, SA Pathology, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia Oncology Department, Women's and Children Hospital, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia Clinical Haematology, Austin Health, Heidelberg, Victoria, Australia Centre for Cancer Biology, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia Australasian Leukaemia and Lymphoma Group, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia Department of Paediatrics, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia |
Issue Date: | 15-Jul-2016 | Date: | 2016-07-15 | Publication information: | Leukemia 2016; online first: 15 July | Abstract: | Tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) therapy results in excellent responses in the majority of patients with chronic myeloid leukaemia. First-line imatinib treatment, with selective switching to nilotinib when patients fail to meet specific molecular targets or for imatinib intolerance, results in excellent overall molecular responses and survival. However, this strategy is less effective in cases of primary imatinib resistance; moreover, 25% of patients develop secondary resistance such that 20-35% of patients initially treated with imatinib will eventually experience treatment failure. Early identification of these patients is of high clinical relevance. Since the drug efflux transporter ABCB1 has previously been implicated in TKI resistance, we determined if early increases in ABCB1 mRNA expression (fold change from diagnosis to day 22 of imatinib therapy) predict for patient response. Indeed, patients exhibiting a high fold rise (⩾2.2, n=79) were significantly less likely to achieve early molecular response (BCR-ABL1IS ⩽10% at 3 months; P=0.001), major molecular response (P<0.0001) and MR4.5 (P<0.0001). Additionally, patients demonstrated increased levels of ABCB1 mRNA before the development of mutations and/or progression to blast crisis. Patients with high fold rise in ABCB1 mRNA were also less likely to achieve major molecular response when switched to nilotinib therapy (49% vs 82% of patients with low fold rise). We conclude that early evaluation of the fold change in ABCB1 mRNA expression may identify patients likely to be resistant to first- and second-generation TKIs and who may be candidates for alternative therapy. | URI: | https://ahro.austin.org.au/austinjspui/handle/1/16293 | DOI: | 10.1038/leu.2016.179 | Journal: | Leukemia | PubMed URL: | https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27416909 | Type: | Journal Article |
Appears in Collections: | Journal articles |
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