| Literature DB >> 32569380 |
Donia M Moujalled1,2, Diane T Hanna3,4,5, Soroor Hediyeh-Zadeh3,4, Giovanna Pomilio1,2, Lauren Brown6, Veronique Litalien1, Ray Bartolo6, Shaun Fleming2, Maïa Chanrion7, Sébastien Banquet8, Ana-Leticia Maragno7, Laurence Kraus-Berthier8, Marie Schoumacher8, Charles G Mullighan9, Angela Georgiou3, Christine A White3,4, Guillaume Lessene3,4, David C S Huang3,4, Andrew W Roberts3,4,10, Olivier Geneste7, Lorna Rasmussen11, Melissa J Davis3,4, Paul G Ekert6, Andrew Wei1,2, Ashley P Ng3,4,10, Seong L Khaw4,5,6.
Abstract
Improving survival outcomes in adult B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) remains a clinical challenge. Relapsed disease has a poor prognosis despite the use of tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) for Philadelphia chromosome positive (Ph+ ALL) cases and immunotherapeutic approaches, including blinatumomab and chimeric antigen receptor T cells. Targeting aberrant cell survival pathways with selective small molecule BH3-mimetic inhibitors of BCL-2 (venetoclax, S55746), BCL-XL (A1331852), or MCL1 (S63845) is an emerging therapeutic option. We report that combined targeting of BCL-2 and MCL1 is synergistic in B-ALL in vitro. The combination demonstrated greater efficacy than standard chemotherapeutics and TKIs in primary samples from adult B-ALL with Ph+ ALL, Ph-like ALL, and other B-ALL. Moreover, combined BCL-2 or MCL1 inhibition with dasatinib showed potent killing in primary Ph+ B-ALL cases, but the BH3-mimetic combination appeared superior in vitro in a variety of Ph-like ALL samples. In PDX models, combined BCL-2 and MCL1 targeting eradicated ALL from Ph- and Ph+ B-ALL cases, although fatal tumor lysis was observed in some instances of high tumor burden. We conclude that a dual BH3-mimetic approach is highly effective in diverse models of high-risk human B-ALL and warrants assessment in clinical trials that incorporate tumor lysis precautions.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32569380 PMCID: PMC7322969 DOI: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2019001416
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood Adv ISSN: 2473-9529