| Literature DB >> 34045662 |
Uwe Platzbecker1,2,3, Anne Sophie Kubasch4,5,6, Collin Homer-Bouthiette7, Thomas Prebet8.
Abstract
Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) represent a heterogeneous group of myeloid neoplasms that are characterized by ineffective hematopoiesis, variable cytopenias, and a risk of progression to acute myeloid leukemia. Most patients with MDS are affected by anemia and anemia-related symptoms, which negatively impact their quality of life. While many patients with MDS have lower-risk disease and are managed by existing treatments, there currently is no clear standard of care for many patients. For patients with higher-risk disease, the treatment priority is changing the natural history of the disease by delaying disease progression to acute myeloid leukemia and improving overall survival. However, existing treatments for MDS are generally not curative and many patients experience relapse or resistance to first-line treatment. Thus, there remains an unmet need for new, more effective but tolerable strategies to manage MDS. Recent advances in molecular diagnostics have improved our understanding of the pathogenesis of MDS, and it is becoming clear that the diverse nature of genetic abnormalities that drive MDS demands a complex and personalized treatment approach. This review will discuss some of the challenges related to the current MDS treatment landscape, as well as new approaches currently in development.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34045662 PMCID: PMC8324480 DOI: 10.1038/s41375-021-01265-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Leukemia ISSN: 0887-6924 Impact factor: 11.528
2016 WHO classification of MDS [19, 32].
| Dysplastic lineages | Cytopeniasa | Blasts in blood | Blasts in bone marrow | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MDS with single-lineage dysplasia (MDS-SLD) | 1 | 1 or 2 | <1% | <5% |
| MDS with multilineage dysplasia (MDS-MLD) | 2 or 3 | 1–3 | <1% | <5% |
| MDS with ring sideroblasts (MDS-RS)b | ||||
| MDS-RS-SLD | 1 | 1 or 2 | <1% | <5% |
| MDS-RS-MLD | 2 or 3 | 1–3 | <1% | <5% |
| MDS with excess blasts (MDS-EB) | ||||
| MDS-EB1 | 0–3 | 1–3 | 2–4% | 5–9% |
| MDS-EB2 | 0–3 | 1–3 | 5–19% | 10–19% |
| MDS with isolated del(5q) | 1–3 | 1–2 | <1% | <5% |
| MDS, unclassifiable (MDS-U)c | 0–3 | 1–3 | ≤1% | <5% |
MDS myelodysplastic syndromes, PB peripheral blood, WHO World Health Organization.
aCytopenias defined as hemoglobin <10 g/dl, platelet count <100 × 109/l, and absolute neutrophil count <1.8 × 109/l. In rare cases, MDS may present with mild anemia or thrombocytopenia above these levels. PB monocytes must be <1 × 109/l.
bPatients have ≥15% ring sideroblasts in marrow or ≥5% with SF3B1 mutation.
cMDS-U includes patients with 1% blood blasts, SLD and pancytopenia, or MDS-U based on defining cytogenetic abnormality.
Fig. 1Guideline-recommended treatment options for MDS [41].
A Symptomatic low-risk MDS. B High-risk MDS. aNot presently approved. bIntensified disease surveillance. cThese could be IDH or FLT3 inhibitors (not presently approved). dConsider posttransplant disease surveillance strategies. ATG antithymocyte globulin, BSC best supportive care, CsA cyclosporine, CTx chemotherapy, ESA erythropoiesis-stimulating agent, G-CSF granulocyte colony-stimulating factor, HCT hematopoietic cell transplantation, HMA hypomethylating agent, IC induction chemotherapy, LEN lenalidomide, LUSP luspatercept, MDS myelodysplastic syndromes, RBC-TD red blood cell transfusion dependence, RS ring sideroblast, sAML secondary acute myeloid leukemia, sEPO serum erythropoietin, TPO-RA thrombopoietin receptor agonist. This research was originally published in Blood; both figures have been adapted from the original publication. U Platzbecker. Treatment of MDS. Blood. 2019;133:1096-1107. © the American Society of Hematology.
Emerging therapies in MDS.
| Agent/regimen | Phase | MoA | Patient population | Key results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Luspatercept [ | 3 | Activin receptor fusion protein | IPSS-R very low-, low-, or intermediate-risk MDS-RS | Transfusion independence ≥8 weeks: 38% (vs. 13% with placebo; |
| Sotatercept [ | 2 | Activin receptor fusion protein | IPSS low- or INT-1-risk MDS | Hematologic response (erythroid): 49% |
| Roxadustat [ | 3 | HIF prolyl hydroxylase inhibitor | IPSS-R very low-, low-, or intermediate-risk MDS and low RBC transfusion burden | Transfusion independence ≥56 days: 38% |
| Imetelstat [ | 2 | Telomerase inhibitor | IPSS low- or INT-1-risk, RBC transfusion-dependent, non-del(5q) MDS that is relapsed/refractory to ESAs and HMA/lenalidomide naïve | Transfusion independence ≥8 weeks: 42%; Transfusion independence ≥24 weeks: 29% |
| CC-486 [ | 3 | Oral azacitidine | IPSS low-risk, RBC transfusion-dependent MDS | Transfusion dependence ≥56 days: 31% (vs. 11% with placebo; |
| Guadecitabine [ | 2 | Second-generation HMA (decitabine linked to guanosine) | IPSS INT-2- or high-risk MDS after azacitidine failure | Hematologic response: 14.3%; primary azacitidine failure, low to high IPSS-R, and higher demethylation in blood were associated with better OS |
| ASTX727 [ | 3 | Second-generation HMA (fixed decitabine and cedazuridine) | MDS by FAB classification; IPSS INT-1, INT-2, or high-risk MDS | Response rate: 61%; Complete response rate: 21% |
| Pevonedistat ± azacitidine [ | 2 | NEDD8 inhibitor | IPSS-R high-risk MDS | Response rate: 79% (vs. 57% with azacitidine alone) Complete response rate: 52% (vs. 27% with azacitidine alone) |
| Enasidenib ± azacitidine [ | 2 | IDH2 inhibitor | HMA-naïve and IPSS INT-2- or high-risk MDS; HMA relapsed/refractory | Response rate: 67%; 100% in HMA-naïve patients (enasidenib + azacitidine), 50% in HMA-failure patients (enasidenib alone) |
| Enasidenib [ | 1/2 | IDH2 inhibitor | RAEB-1, RAEB-2, or IPSS-R high-risk MDS | Response rate: 53%; 46% in patients with prior HMA Complete response rate: 0% |
| Olutasidenib ± azacitidine [ | 1/2 | IDH1 inhibitor | Response rate: 59%; 33% with olutasidenib alone, 73% with olutasidenib + azacitidine | |
| Venetoclax ± azacitidine [ | 1b | BCL2 inhibitor | HMA relapsed/refractory MDS | Response rate: 7% with venetoclax alone; 50% with venetoclax + azacitidine |
| Venetoclax + azacitidine [ | 1b | BCL2 inhibitor | Treatment-naïve high-risk (IPSS score ≥1.5) MDS | Response rate: 70% |
| Durvalumab + azacitidine [ | 2 | PD-L1 inhibitor | Treatment-naïve IPSS-R intermediate-, high-, or very high-risk MDS | Response rate: 62% (vs. 48% with azacitidine alone) |
| Atezolizumab ± azacitidine [ | 1b | PD-L1 inhibitor | Treatment-naïve or HMA-failure, IPSS-R intermediate-, high-, or very high-risk MDS | Response rate: 0% with atezolizumab monotherapy (HMA failure); 9% with atezolizumab + azacitidine (HMA failure); 62% with atezolizumab + azacitidine (HMA naïve) |
| Nivolumab or ipilimumab ± azacitidine [ | 2 | PD-1/CTLA-4 inhibitor | Treatment-naïve or HMA-failure MDS | Response rate: 75% with nivolumab + azacitidine (HMA naïve); 71% with ipilimumab + azacitidine (HMA naïve); 13% with nivolumab monotherapy (HMA failure); 35% with ipilimumab monotherapy (HMA failure) |
| Sabatolimab + azacitidine or decitabine [ | 1b | TIM-3-targeted antibody | HMA-naïve IPSS-R high- or very high-risk MDS | Response rate: 63%, including 50% in high-risk MDS and 85% in very high-risk MDS |
| Rigosertib + azacitidine [ | 2 | Multikinase inhibitor | Treatment-naïve IPSS INT-1-, INT-2-, or high-risk MDS | Response rate: 90% |
| Glasdegib + cytarabine/daunorubicin [ | 2 | Hedgehog pathway inhibitor | Treatment-naïve AML or RA with excess blasts high-risk MDS | Complete response rate: 46% (includes patients with AML) |
| Eprenetapopt + azacitidine [ | 2 | Small-molecule inhibitor of apoptosis in | HMA-naïve, IPSS-R intermediate-, high-, or very high-risk | Response rate: 75% |
| Eprenetapopt + azacitidine [ | 1b/2 | Small-molecule inhibitor of apoptosis in | Response rate: 71% | |
| Magrolimab + azacitidine [ | 1b | CD47-targeted antibody | Treatment-naïve, IPSS-R intermediate- to very high-risk MDS | Response rate: 100% (including 2 patients with |
AML acute myeloid leukemia, BCL2 B-cell lymphoma 2, CTLA-4 cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen 4, ESA erythropoiesis-stimulating agent, HIF hypoxia-inducible factor, HMA hypomethylating agent, IDH1 isocitrate dehydrogenase 1, IDH2 isocitrate dehydrogenase 2, INT-1 intermediate-1, INT-2 intermediate-2, IPSS International Prognostic Scoring System, IPSS-R revised version of the International Prognostic Scoring System, MDS myelodysplastic syndromes, MDS-RS myelodysplastic syndromes with ring sideroblasts, MoA mechanism of action, NEDD8 neural precursor cell expressed, developmentally downregulated 8, OS overall survival, PD-1 programmed death-1, PD-L1 programmed death-ligand 1, RA refractory anemia, RAEB refractory anemia with excess blasts, RBC red blood cell.