| Literature DB >> 18492956 |
Constantine S Tam1, Hagop Kantarjian, Guillermo Garcia-Manero, Gautam Borthakur, Susan O'Brien, Farhad Ravandi, Jenny Shan, Jorge Cortes.
Abstract
To determine when patients with incomplete responses on second-line tyrosine kinase inhibitor (2TKI) therapy should consider alternative treatment, we analyzed the outcome of 113 patients receiving nilotinib (n = 43) or dasatinib (n = 70) after imatinib failure. After 12 months of 2TKI therapy, patients achieving a major cytogenetic response (12MMCyR) had a significant survival advantage over patients in minor cytogenetic response or complete hematologic response, with a projected one-year survival of 97% and 84% respectively (P = .02). Projected 1-year progression to hematologic failure, accelerated phase, or blast phase was also significantly different (3% vs 17%, P = .003). Early cytogenetic response was strongly predictive of achievement of 12MMCyR, with less than 10% of patients showing no cytogenetic response at 3 to 6 months eventually attaining the target of 12MMCyR. These results suggest that patients receiving 2TKI with no cytogenetic response at 3 to 6 months should be considered for alternative therapies.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18492956 PMCID: PMC4082324 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2008-02-141580
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113