| Literature DB >> 27367039 |
Stéphanie Dulucq1, Francois-Xavier Mahon2.
Abstract
Several clinical trials have demonstrated that some patients with chronic myeloid leukemia in chronic phase (CML-CP) who achieve sustained deep molecular responses on tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) therapy can safely suspend therapy and attempt treatment-free remission (TFR). Many TFR studies to date have enrolled imatinib-treated patients; however, the feasibility of TFR following nilotinib or dasatinib has also been demonstrated. In this review, we discuss available data from TFR trials and what these data reveal about the molecular biology of TFR. With an increasing number of ongoing TFR clinical trials, TFR may become an achievable goal for patients with CML-CP.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic myeloid leukemia; deep molecular response; treatment-free remission; tyrosine kinase inhibitors
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27367039 PMCID: PMC5055167 DOI: 10.1002/cam4.801
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Med ISSN: 2045-7634 Impact factor: 4.452
Molecular biology criteria in TFR studies
| Study | Evaluation to determine eligibility for attempting TFR | Molecular monitoring during TFR |
|---|---|---|
| STIM1 | CMR sustained for ≥2 years, with UMRD in five assessments and confirmed at screening in a central laboratory with sensitivity to >4.7‐log reduction in | Monthly for the first 12 months, every 2 months in year 2, and every 3 months thereafter |
| TWISTER | UMRD sustained for ≥2 years, with monitoring at local laboratories and confirmed at screening in a central laboratory with ≥4.5‐log sensitivity | Monthly for 12 months, every 2 months in year 2, and every 3 months thereafter |
| A‐STIM | Confirmed CMR—either stable (UMRD in all assessments) or unstable (occasional detectable | Monthly for the first 12 months, every 2 months in year 2, and every 3 months thereafter |
| KIDS | UMRD sustained for ≥2 years, with duplicate analyses at >6 time points and a screening assessment performed in a central laboratory with ≥4.5‐log sensitivity with nested RT‐PCR and duplicate RQ‐PCR assessments | Monthly for the first 6 months, every 2 months through month 12, and every 3 months thereafter |
| EURO‐SKI | MR4 in three consecutive assessments over the course of >12 months, with final confirmation of MR4 performed in a standardized laboratory | Every 4 to 6 weeks for the first year and every 3 months in year 2 and 3 |
| STOP 2G‐TKI | UMRD (undetectable MR4.5) for ≥24 months | Monthly for the first 12 months, every 2–3 months in year 2, and every 3–6 months thereafter |
| DADI | Deep molecular response sustained for ≥1 year, with assessments every 3 months at a central standardized laboratory (assay sensitivity, 10 copies in 200 ng total RNA; corresponding to | Monthly for the first 12 months, every 3 months in year 2, and every 6 months in year 3 |
| ISAV | CMR sustained for ≥18 months, with ≥3 RQ‐PCR tests performed locally | Monthly for the first 6 months, then every 2 months for 36 months |
A‐STIM, According to STIM; CMR, complete molecular response; cDNA, complementary DNA; DADI, Dasatinib Discontinuation; EURO‐SKI, European Stop Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor; ISAV, Imatinib Suspension and Validation; IS, International Scale; KIDS, Korean Imatinib Discontinuation Study; MMR, major molecular response (BCR‐ABL1 IS ≤ 0.1%); MR4, BCR‐ABL1 IS ≤ 0.01%; MR4.5, BCR‐ABL1 IS ≤ 0.0032%; RQ‐PCR, real‐time quantitative polymerase chain reaction; RT‐PCR, reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction; STIM, Stop Imatinib; STOP 2G‐TKI, Stop Second‐Generation Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor; TFR, treatment‐free remission; UMRD, undetectable minimal residual disease.
Molecular response trigger for reinitiation of TKI therapy according to BCR‐ABL1 IS transcript levels in selected TFR studies
| Study | Trigger for reinitiation of therapy | |
|---|---|---|
| Detectable transcripts | Loss of MMR | |
| STIM1 | Two consecutive assessments (≥1‐log increase between measurements) | Single assessment |
| STIM2 | Two consecutive assessments (≥1‐log increase between measurements) | Single assessment |
| TWISTER | Two consecutive assessments | Single assessment |
| A‐STIM | Single assessment | |
| KIDS | Two samples within 4 weeks | |
| EURO‐SKI | Single assessment | |
| STOP 2G‐TKI | Single assessment | |
| DADI | Single assessment ( | |
| ISAV | Two consecutive assessments ( | |
A‐STIM, According to STIM; DADI, Dasatinib Discontinuation; EURO‐SKI, European Stop Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor; ISAV, Imatinib Suspension and Validation; IS, International Scale; KIDS, Korean Imatinib Discontinuation Study; MMR, major molecular response (BCR‐ABL1 IS ≤ 0.1%); STIM, Stop Imatinib; STOP 2G‐TKI, Stop Second‐Generation Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor; TFR, treatment‐free remission; TKI, tyrosine kinase inhibitor; UMRD, undetectable minimal residual disease.
Ongoing TFR studies without results reported 55, 56, 66, 67
| Study | Treatment prior to suspension of therapy | Study criteria for suspension of therapy | Trigger to reinitiate therapy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nilo Post‐STIM (NCT01774630) | 2 years of nilotinib in patients who failed TFR in STIM1, STIM2, or EURO‐SKI | Stable CMR for 2 years | Confirmed loss of CMR |
| ENESTop (NCT01698905) | ≥3 years of TKI therapy prior to enrollment, including ≥4 weeks of frontline imatinib and ≥2 years of second‐line nilotinib, followed by a 1‐year nilotinib consolidation phase on study | ≥1 year MR4.5 | Loss of MMR or confirmed loss of MR4 |
| ENESTpath (NCT01743989) | ≥2 years of imatinib followed by 2 or 3 years of nilotinib | MR4 (≥1 year or ≥2 years) | Loss of MMR or confirmed loss of MR4 |
| ENESTgoal (NCT01744665) | ≥1 year of imatinib followed by ≥2 years of nilotinib | ≥2 years deep MR | Loss of MMR |
| ENESTfreedom (NCT01784068) | ≥2 years of frontline nilotinib prior to enrollment followed by a 1‐year nilotinib consolidation phase on study | ≥1 year MR4.5 | Loss of MMR |
| DASFREE (NCT01850004) | ≥2 years of dasatinib | ≥1 year MR4.5, confirmed at screening by a central laboratory | Loss of MMR |
| Dasatinib Stop (NCT01627132) | Dasatinib | CMR | Loss of CMR |
| Study for Cure D‐NEWS (NCT01887561) | Dasatinib | CMR | Loss of CMR |
| TIGER (NCT01657604) | Nilotinib or nilotinib + PEG‐IFNα | Stable MR4 | Loss of MMR |
| DESTINY (NCT01804985) | ≥3 years of imatinib, nilotinib, or dasatinib followed by 1 year at half‐standard dose | MMR or MR4 before dose de‐escalation | Loss of MMR |
| Imatinib or nilotinib with pegylated interferon‐α 2b in chronic myeloid leukemia (NCT00573378) | ≥2 years of nilotinib or imatinib followed by same TKI + PEG‐IFNα 2b | 24 months of combination therapy | Not specified |
CMR, complete molecular response; DESTINY, De‐Escalation and Stopping Treatment of Imatinib, Nilotinib, or Sprycel in Chronic Myeloid Leukemia; ENEST, Evaluating Nilotinib Efficacy and Safety; EURO‐SKI, European Stop Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor; IS, International Scale; MMR, major molecular response (BCR‐ABL1 IS ≤0.1%); MR4, BCR‐ABL1 IS ≤0.01%; MR4.5, BCR‐ABL1 IS ≤0.0032%; PEG‐IFNα, pegylated interferon α; STIM, Stop Imatinib; TFR, treatment‐free remission; TIGER, Tasigna and Interferon Alpha Evaluation Initiated by the German Chronic Myeloid Leukemia Study Group; TKI, tyrosine kinase inhibitor.
Factors associated with successful TFR observed in clinical trials
| TFR rates, % | Study (TFR time point) | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| STIM1 | TWISTER | KIDS | A‐STIM | EURO‐SKI | STOP 2G‐TKI | DADI | JALSG‐STIM213 | ISAV | |
| Age | Not significant | Above median: 32.8%Below median: 55.0%( | Not significant | <55.1 year: 69.7%>55.1 years: 57.5%( | Not evaluated | Not significant | <45 years: 29.4%≥45 years: 54.3%( | Not significant | Significant |
| Sex | Not significant | Male: 52.6%Female: 36.7%( | Male: 55.1%Female: 60.7%( | Male: 64.3%Female: 63.0%( | Not evaluated | Not significant | Male: 39.0%Female: 63.6%( | Not significant | Not evaluated |
| Sokal score | Low Sokal risk( | Low: 51.1%Intermediate: 36.5%High: 25.0%( | Low: 62.1%Intermediate: 60.6%High: 46.7%( | Low: 65.9%Intermediate: 63.6%High: 58.1%( | Not evaluated | Not evaluated | Low: 51.2% ( | Not significant | Not significant |
| TKI treatment duration | Not significant | Above median: 45.0%Below median: 42.9%( | <62 month: 40.0%≥62 months: 65.7%( | <78.7 month: 62.4%>78.7 months: 65.0%( | <8 years: 53%>8 years: 4%( | Not significant | <50 months: 35.3%≥50 months: 52.2%( | Not significant | Not significant |
| Time to UMRD | Not significant | <244 days after switching from IFN to imatinib: 75.0%>244 days: 33.3%( | <24 month: 48.6%≥24 months: 64.8%( | <29.1 months: 59.8%>29.1 months: 67.5%( | Not applicable | Not evaluated | Not evaluated | Not applicable | Not evaluated |
| Duration of UMRD prior to discontinuation | Not significant | Above median: 33.7%Below median: 50.0%( | <36 months: 48.4%≥36 months: 64.8%( | <41.3 months: 57.5%>41.3 months: 69.6%( | Not applicable | Not significant | Not evaluated | Not applicable | Not significant |
| Prior IFN exposure | Not significant | Yes: 51.9%No: 33.7%( | Not evaluated | Yes: 71.2%No: 55.3%( | Not evaluated | Not significant | Yes: 53.8%No: 46.0%( | Not significant | Not significant |
| 2G‐TKI type | Not applicable | Not applicable | Not applicable | Not applicable | Not evaluated | Not significant | Not applicable | Not applicable | Not applicable |
| Reason for treatment with 2G‐TKI | Not applicable | Not applicable | Not applicable | Not applicable | Not evaluated | SoR/resistance: 41.7%Other: 67.3%( | Patient's choice: 50.0%Resistance: 7.7%( | Not applicable | Not applicable |
2G, second‐generation; A‐STIM, According to STIM; DADI, Dasatinib Discontinuation; EURO‐SKI, European Stop Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor; IFN, interferon; ISAV, Imatinib Suspension and Validation; JALSG, Japanese Adult Leukemia Study Group; KIDS, Korean Imatinib Discontinuation Study; NK, natural killer; SoR, suboptimal response; STIM1, Stop Imatinib 1; TFR, treatment‐free remission; TKI, tyrosine kinase inhibitor; UMRD, undetectable minimal residual disease.
TFR rates were not reported according to each baseline factor.
Additional baseline characteristics associated with TFR success were digital PCR negativity at screening (positive, 37.5%; negative, 63.8%; P = 0.021) and imatinib withdrawal (yes, 79.5%; no, 49.2%; P = 0.003).
High NK‐cell (CD3‐/CD56+ [P = 0.017] and CD16+/CD56+ [P = 0.0053]) and NK‐cell large granular lymphocyte (CD56+/CD57+; P = 0.022) counts and low γδ+ T‐cell (P = 0.0022) and CD4+ regulatory T‐cell (P = 0.011) counts were also associated with successful TFR.
In JALSG‐STIM213, patients attempting TFR (n = 68) were required to have had ≥3 years of imatinib treatment, MR4 for >24 month, and MR4.5 confirmed at screening. Molecular relapse was defined as loss of MMR.
Patients ≥45 years of age with negative digital PCR at enrollment had a lower risk of molecular relapse (36.1%) compared with patients <45 years of age with positive digital PCR at enrollment (100%).
Median values were not reported.
An inverse relationship between age and risk of relapse was observed. Specific rates of TFR according to age were not reported.
An earlier multivariate regression analysis in STIM1 after a median follow‐up duration of 30 months identified low Sokal risk score (P = 0.0009) and ≥60 months of prior imatinib therapy (P = 0.0183) as predictive of successful TFR 52.
A trend for a higher rate of TFR in patients with ≥8 years of imatinib treatment was reported (P = 0.238).
Rate of TFR at 6 months was not significantly different in patients with a duration of MR4 >5 years (68%) versus <5 years (54%; P = 0.07).