Piccaluga Pier Paolo, Paolini Stefania, Martinelli Giovanni
Institute of Hematology and Medical Oncology L and A Seràgnoli S. Orsola-Malpighi Hospital, University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy.
Cancer. 2007 Sep 15;110(6):1178-86. doi: 10.1002/cncr.22881.
Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is a heterogeneous disorder, with the greatest prevalence in children, but it also affects adults, and has an increasing incidence with age. Chromosomal abnormalities in ALL have been frequently described, the most common is the Philadelphia chromosome (Ph). The resulting fusion gene, BCR-ABL1, encodes for a chimerical oncoprotein (BCR-ABL) with constitutive tyrosine kinase activity, which leads to uncontrolled cell proliferation, reduced apoptosis, and impaired cell adhesion. Treating Philadelphia chromosome-positive (Ph+) ALL patients with conventional chemotherapy has not substantially improved their long-term outcomes. Recently, however, BCR-ABL-targeted strategies have been successfully adopted. Imatinib is an oral competitive inhibitor of ABL with demonstrated phase 2 efficacy in patients with treatment-naive and pretreated ALL. Despite its efficacy, imatinib may induce specific resistance in a large proportion of patients, mainly because of the occurrence of ABL1 mutations. Therefore, novel inhibitors have been developed. Dasatinib is a multitargeted kinase inhibitor of BCR-ABL, SRC, C-KIT, PDGFRs, and ephrin A receptor kinases. Unlike imatinib, it binds both the active and inactive BCR-ABL as well as the majority of ABL mutants. Dasatinib is approved for treatment of imatinib-pretreated Ph+ ALL, and chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) on the basis of phase 2 trials that demonstrated impressive efficacy and favorable tolerability profiles. Nilotinib is another BCR-ABL targeted agent that is similar in structure to imatinib but has significantly greater binding affinity. It also has demonstrated promising efficacy in Ph+ ALL but is still being evaluated in phase 2 trials. In this article, the authors reviewed current knowledge on novel tyrosine-kinase inhibitors in adult Ph+ ALL patients.
急性淋巴细胞白血病(ALL)是一种异质性疾病,在儿童中发病率最高,但也会影响成人,且发病率随年龄增长而增加。ALL中的染色体异常已被频繁描述,最常见的是费城染色体(Ph)。由此产生的融合基因BCR-ABL1编码一种具有组成型酪氨酸激酶活性的嵌合癌蛋白(BCR-ABL),它会导致细胞不受控制地增殖、凋亡减少以及细胞黏附受损。用传统化疗治疗费城染色体阳性(Ph+)ALL患者并不能显著改善其长期预后。然而,最近已成功采用了针对BCR-ABL的策略。伊马替尼是一种ABL口服竞争性抑制剂,在初治和经预处理的ALL患者中显示出2期疗效。尽管其有效,但伊马替尼可能会在很大一部分患者中诱导特异性耐药,主要原因是ABL1突变的发生。因此,已开发出新型抑制剂。达沙替尼是一种多靶点激酶抑制剂,可抑制BCR-ABL、SRC、C-KIT、血小板衍生生长因子受体(PDGFRs)和ephrin A受体激酶。与伊马替尼不同,它能结合活性和非活性的BCR-ABL以及大多数ABL突变体。基于显示出令人印象深刻的疗效和良好耐受性的2期试验,达沙替尼被批准用于治疗伊马替尼预处理的Ph+ ALL以及慢性粒细胞白血病(CML)。尼洛替尼是另一种靶向BCR-ABL的药物,其结构与伊马替尼相似,但结合亲和力显著更高。它在Ph+ ALL中也显示出有前景的疗效,但仍在2期试验中进行评估。在本文中,作者回顾了关于成人Ph+ ALL患者新型酪氨酸激酶抑制剂的现有知识。