| Literature DB >> 26980736 |
Simona Soverini1, Caterina De Benedittis1, Katerina Machova Polakova2, Jana Linhartova2, Fausto Castagnetti1, Gabriele Gugliotta1, Cristina Papayannidis1, Manuela Mancini1, Hana Klamova2, Marzia Salvucci3, Monica Crugnola4, Alessandra Iurlo5, Francesco Albano6, Domenico Russo7, Gianantonio Rosti1, Michele Cavo1, Michele Baccarani1, Giovanni Martinelli1.
Abstract
In chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) and Philadelphia-positive (Ph+) acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) patients who fail imatinib treatment, BCR-ABL1 mutation profiling by Sanger sequencing (SS) is recommended before changing therapy since detection of specific mutations influences second-generation tyrosine kinase inhibitor (2GTKI) choice. We aimed to assess i) in how many patients who relapse on second-line 2GTKI therapy next generation sequencing (NGS) may track resistant mutations back to the sample collected at the time of imatinib resistance, before 2GTKI start (switchover sample) and ii) whether low level mutations identified by NGS always undergo clonal expansion. To this purpose, we used NGS to retrospectively analyze 60 imatinib-resistant patients (CML, n = 45; Ph+ ALL,n = 15) who had failed second-line 2GTKI therapy and had acquired BCR-ABL1 mutations (Group 1) and 25 imatinib-resistant patients (CML, n = 21; Ph+ ALL, n = 4) who had responded to second-line 2GTKI therapy, for comparison (Group 2). NGS uncovered that in 26 (43%) patients in Group 1, the 2GTKI-resistant mutations that triggered relapse were already detectable at low levels in the switchover sample (median mutation burden, 5%; range 1.1%-18.4%). Importantly, none of the low level mutations detected by NGS in switchover samples failed to expand whenever the patient received the 2GTKI to whom they were insensitive. In contrast, no low level mutation that was resistant to the 2GTKI the patients subsequently received was detected in the switchover samples from Group 2. NGS at the time of imatinib failure reliably identifies clinically relevant mutations, thus enabling a more effective therapeutic tailoring.Entities:
Keywords: BCR-ABL1; Next-generation sequencing; acute lymphoblastic leukemia; chronic myeloid leukemia; tyrosine kinase inhibitors
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26980736 PMCID: PMC5008338 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.8010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1(A) Comparison between the number of patients found to harbor BCR-ABL KD mutations by NGS as against SS. At the time of imatinib failure, patients were switched to dasatinib or nilotinib after routine BCR-ABL1 KD mutation screening, so no patient positive for the T315I by SS is included in this study. (B) Breakdown of the 60 low level mutations detected by NGS according to their resistance profile. Number of mutations within each category is in brackets. ‘Mutations resistant to nilotinib only’ include Y253H, E255K, E255V, F359V/C. ‘Mutations resistant to dasatinib only’ refer to F317L (since no low level V299L was detected at switchover). Abbreviations: res, resistant; sens, sensitive; IM, imatinib; DAS, dasatinib, NIL, nilotinib; 2GTKI, second generation tyrosine kinase inhibitor.
Figure 3Mutations detected by NGS as against SS detailed for each of the 60 patients (Y axis), grouped by disease phase/type and by 2GTKI received
Light grey indicates mutations detectable both by SS and by NGS, dark grey indicates mutations detectable by NGS only. The bold font highlights the low level mutations that became detectable by SS at the time of relapse, two to nine months later. In all cases in which the 2GTKI to whom they were insensitive happened to be selected, low level mutations invariably expanded, alone or in combination with pre-existing mutations (See also Table S2). Abbreviations: CP, chronic phase; AP, accelerated phase; MBC, myeloid blast crisis; LBC, lymphoid blast crisis; ALL, acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Definitions of AP and BC as per ELN criteria.