Literature DB >> 27771544

Switching to nilotinib in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia in chronic phase with molecular suboptimal response to frontline imatinib: SENSOR final results and BIM polymorphism substudy.

Koichi Miyamura1, Toshihiro Miyamoto2, Mitsune Tanimoto3, Kazuhito Yamamoto4, Shinya Kimura5, Tatsuya Kawaguchi6, Itaru Matsumura7, Tomoko Hata8, Hisashi Tsurumi9, Shigeki Saito10, Masayuki Hino11, Seiji Tadokoro12, Kuniaki Meguro13, Hideo Hyodo14, Masahide Yamamoto15, Kohmei Kubo16, Junichi Tsukada17, Midori Kondo18, Makoto Aoki19, Hikaru Okada20, Masamitsu Yanada21, Kazuma Ohyashiki22, Masafumi Taniwaki23.   

Abstract

Optimal management of patients with chronic myeloid leukemia in chronic phase with suboptimal molecular response (MR) to frontline imatinib is undefined. We report final results from SENSOR, which evaluated efficacy/safety of nilotinib in this setting. A substudy assessed whether BIM polymorphisms impacted response to nilotinib. In this single-arm, multicenter study, Japanese patients with suboptimal MR per European LeukemiaNet 2009 criteria (complete cytogenetic response, but not major MR [MMR]) after ≥18 months of frontline imatinib received nilotinib 400mg twice daily for 24 months. MR, BCR-ABL1 mutations/variants, and BIM polymorphisms were evaluated in a central laboratory. Primary endpoint was the MMR rate at 12 months (null hypothesis of 40%). Of 45 patients (median exposure, 22.08 months), 39 completed the study and six discontinued. At 12 and 24 months, 51.1% (95% CI, 35.8%-66.3%) and 66.7% (95% CI, 51.0%-80.0%) achieved MMR, respectively. Cumulative MMR incidence by 24 months was 75.6%. Of 40 patients analyzed, 10 of 12 (83.3%) with and 17 of 28 (60.7%) without BIM polymorphisms achieved MMR at 24 months. The safety profile was manageable with dose reductions and interruptions. Nilotinib provided clinical benefit for patients with suboptimal response to imatinib, and BIM polymorphisms did not influence MMR achievement. ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01043874. Copyright Â
© 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  BIM polymorphism; Chronic myeloid leukemia; Japanese; Molecular response; Nilotinib; Suboptimal response

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27771544     DOI: 10.1016/j.leukres.2016.09.009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Leuk Res        ISSN: 0145-2126            Impact factor:   3.156


  2 in total

1.  Persistent detection of alternatively spliced BCR-ABL variant results in a failure to achieve deep molecular response.

Authors:  Junichiro Yuda; Toshihiro Miyamoto; Jun Odawara; Yasuyuki Ohkawa; Yuichiro Semba; Masayasu Hayashi; Koichi Miyamura; Mitsune Tanimoto; Kazuhito Yamamoto; Masafumi Taniwaki; Koichi Akashi
Journal:  Cancer Sci       Date:  2017-09-21       Impact factor: 6.716

2.  The BCL2L11 deletion polymorphism is not associated with imatinib resistance in chronic myeloid leukemia patients: meta-analysis.

Authors:  Jinyun Xu; Jiaowei Gu; Yan Zhao; Huihua Meng; Li'an Du; Ruibo Zhang; Hao Jiang; Jianming Luo
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2017-09-22
  2 in total

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