Réa Delphine
Hôpital Saint-Louis, service d'hématologie adulte, AP-HP, Paris, France, et France Intergroupe des leucémies myéloïdes chroniques.
Rev Prat. 2023 Dec;73(10):1051-1055.
TYROSINE KINASE INHIBITORS FOR CHRONIC MYELOID LEUKEMIA. About 20 years ago, the discovery of imatinib, the first ATP-competitive inhibitor of BCR::ABL1 the driving oncoprotein of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), revolutionized patients' outcome by transforming a fatal condition into a chronic one. Today, five more tyrosin kinase inhobitors (TKIs) have been approved, allowing to some extent individualization of drug therapy. The main therapeutic objective is to protect patients from progression towards a fatal blast crisis and to restore of a near-to-normal life expectancy on lifelong TKI treatment. Only a minority of patients manage to achieve a state called treatment-free remission. Research efforts must go on as some challenges remain such as improving scoring systems, increasing TKI safety profile, fighting against resistance and finding how to cure CML.