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Query: UMLS:C0023473 (
chronic myeloid leukemia
)
18,916
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The
BCR-ABL1
oncoprotein transforms pluripotent HSCs and initiates
chronic myeloid leukemia
(
CML
). Patients with early phase (also known as chronic phase [CP]) disease usually respond to treatment with ABL tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs), although some patients who respond initially later become resistant. In most patients, TKIs reduce the leukemia cell load substantially, but the cells from which the leukemia cells are derived during CP (so-called leukemia stem cells [LSCs]) are intrinsically insensitive to TKIs and survive long term. LSCs or their progeny can acquire additional genetic and/or epigenetic changes that cause the leukemia to transform from CP to a more advanced phase, which has been subclassified as either accelerated phase or blastic phase disease. The latter responds poorly to treatment and is usually fatal. Here, we discuss what is known about the molecular mechanisms leading to blastic transformation of
CML
and propose some novel therapeutic approaches.
...
PMID:Chronic myeloid leukemia: mechanisms of blastic transformation. 2059 75
In patients with
chronic myeloid leukemia
(
CML
), resistance against imatinib is associated with mutations in the kinase domain (KD) of the
BCR-ABL1
fusion gene and/or with additional chromosomal abnormalities (ACAs) secondary to the Philadelphia chromosome. To evaluate associations between these molecular and cytogenetic events, we correlated cytogenetic data with results of KD mutation analysis in 205
CML
patients with acquired resistance to imatinib (100 females, 105 males, 17.9-90.3 years). In 79/205 patients (38.5%), at least one KD mutation was detected; in 13/79 (16.5%) even two different mutations were observed. A second KD mutation was frequent in cases with G250E (4/9), E255V (1/3), T315I (5/18), F317L (2/7), F359C/V (4/7), or H396R (2/3), but was never detected in cases with V299L (n = 3) or Y253H (n = 4). With respect to cytogenetics, ACAs were identified in 76/205 patients (37.1%), in 29 (36.7%) together with KD mutations. ACAs were frequent in cases with E255V (2/3), T315I (8/18), F317L (4/7), F359C/V (4/7), or H396R (2/3), but rare in those with M351T (1/9). Therefore, some KD mutations (e.g., T315I) might be associated with higher genetic instability paving the way to additional cytogenetic and molecular genetic events.
...
PMID:Associations between imatinib resistance conferring mutations and Philadelphia positive clonal cytogenetic evolution in CML. 2060 47
RNA-binding proteins of the Musashi (Msi) family are expressed in stem cell compartments and in aggressive tumors, but they have not yet been widely explored in the blood. Here we demonstrate that Msi2 is the predominant form expressed in hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), and its knockdown leads to reduced engraftment and depletion of HSCs in vivo. Overexpression of human MSI2 in a mouse model increases HSC cell cycle progression and cooperates with the
chronic myeloid leukemia
-associated
BCR-ABL1
oncoprotein to induce an aggressive leukemia. MSI2 is overexpressed in human myeloid leukemia cell lines, and its depletion leads to decreased proliferation and increased apoptosis. Expression levels in human myeloid leukemia directly correlate with decreased survival in patients with the disease, thereby defining MSI2 expression as a new prognostic marker and as a new target for therapy in acute myeloid leukemia (AML).
...
PMID:Musashi-2 regulates normal hematopoiesis and promotes aggressive myeloid leukemia. 2082 75
The
BCR-ABL1
fusion gene results from a reciprocal translocation rearrangement, t(9;22)(q34;q11.2), and is a hallmark of
chronic myeloid leukemia
(
CML
). The breakpoint on chromosome 9 is mostly 5' to ABL1 exon 2, whereas on chromosome 22, the breakpoint can occur in various regions involving the major breakpoint cluster region (M-bcr) in
CML
and the minor breakpoint cluster region (m-bcr) in acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Described here is a rare case of Philadelphia-positive
CML
with intronic splice sites. This atypical
BCR-ABL1
transcript was detected along with a classic e13a2 transcript, using reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). Nucleotide sequence analysis revealed a joining of BCR intron 13 with ABL1 intron 1a. Both transcripts were detected when the patient was on hydroxyurea treatment; with imatinib mesylate therapy, the atypical transcript disappeared. To our knowledge, this is the first report of
BCR-ABL1
transcript with breakpoint occurring within both BCR and ABL1 introns and fusion of intronic sequences from both BCR and ABL1 genes.
...
PMID:A unique BCR-ABL1 transcript with the insertion of intronic sequence from BCR and ABL1 genes in a patient with Philadelphia-positive chronic myeloid leukemia: a case study. 2063 71
As a result of the excellent responses achieved in chronic phase
chronic myeloid leukemia
since the introduction of imatinib, sensitive techniques such as reverse transcriptase real-time PCR are warranted to monitor patients receiving tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI). Our objective was to determine the value of molecular monitoring Ph-positive leukemias under dasatinib treatment. We used real-time PCR and ABL1 kinase domain sequencing on sequential samples from 11 patients with Philadelphia-positive leukemias who received dasatinib. We were able to detect pre-existing mutations in the kinase domain of
BCR-ABL1
in four patients, particularly in patients with high
BCR-ABL1
transcript levels. Most mutations disappeared with dasatinib, however, in five patients a clone with T315I appeared during dasatinib treatment. We conclude that sensitive molecular monitoring with real-time PCR for
BCR-ABL1
transcripts and mutation screening of the ABL1 kinase domain of patients with Philadelphia-positive leukemias are valuable for patient management, however, mutation findings should be interpreted with caution, as mutant clones not always behave in vivo as predicted by in vitro assays.
...
PMID:Molecular monitoring and mutation analysis of patients with advanced phase CML and Ph+ ALL receiving dasatinib. 2065 55
Non-receptor protein tyrosine kinases are responsible for signal transduction during many physiologic cellular processes, including cell growth and proliferation, apoptosis, differentiation, regulation of actin cytoskeleton, cell shape, adhesion, motility and migration. Aberrant activity of protein tyrosine kinases (acquired as a result of chromosomal translocation or point mutation) has been implicated in the stimulation of cancer growth and progression, the induction of drug-resistance, tumour neovascularization, tissue invasion, extravasation and the formation of metastases. Small molecule tyrosine kinase inhibitors interfere with these pathophysiological circuits by blocking the signalling cascades triggered by the aberrantly activated protein tyrosine kinases (e.g.
BCR-ABL1
, FIP1L1-PDGFRA or ETV6-PDGFRB).Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (imatinib, nilotinib, dasatinib) now belong to established anti-cancer agents with clinical activity in patients with
CML
, Ph+ ALL, and myeloid neoplasms with overexpression of PDGFRA, PDGFRB and wild-type KIT. New generation tyrosine kinase inhibitors (e.g. dasatinib) with extended activity against SRC and EPH kinases belong to promising anti-cancer agents with documented preclinical activity in several solid tumours (e.g. prostate cancer).
...
PMID:[ABL1, SRC and other non-receptor protein tyrosine kinases as new targets for specific anticancer therapy]. 2080 17
Although orphan drug applications required by the EMEA must include assessments of similarity to pre-existing products, these can be difficult to quantify. Here we illustrate a paradigm in comparing nilotinib to the prototype kinase inhibitor imatinib, and equate the degree of structural similarity to differences in properties. Nilotinib was discovered following re-engineering of imatinib, employing structural biology and medicinal chemistry strategies to optimise cellular potency and selectivity towards
BCR-ABL1
. Through evolving only to conserve these properties, this resulted in significant structural differences between nilotinib and imatinib, quantified by a Daylight-fingerprint-Tanimoto similarity coefficient of 0.6, with the meaning of this absolute measure being supported by an analysis of similarity distributions of similar drug-like molecules. This dissimilarity is reflected in the drugs having substantially different preclinical pharmacology and a lack of cross-intolerance in
CML
patients, which translates into nilotinib being an efficacious treatment for
CML
, with a favourable side-effect profile.
...
PMID:Structural resemblances and comparisons of the relative pharmacological properties of imatinib and nilotinib. 2081 38
Genetic instability due to increased DNA damage and altered DNA repair is of central significance in the initiation and progression of inherited and sporadic human leukemias. Although very rare, some inherited DNA repair insufficiency syndromes (e.g., Fanconi anemia, Bloom's syndrome) have added substantially to our understanding of crucial mechanisms of leukemogenesis in recent years. Conversely, sporadic leukemias account for the main proportion of leukemias and here DNA damaging reactive oxygen species (ROS) play a central role. Although the exact mechanisms of increased ROS production remain largely unknown and no single pathway has been detected thus far, some oncogenic proteins (e.g., the activated tyrosine kinases
BCR-ABL1
and FLT3-ITD) seem to play a key role in driving genetic instability by increased ROS generation which influences the disease course (e.g., blast crisis in
chronic myeloid leukemia
or relapse in FLT3-ITD positive acute myeloid leukemia). Of course other mechanisms, which promote genetic instability in leukemia also exist. A newly emerging mechanism is the genome-wide alteration of epigenetic marks (e.g., hypomethylation of histone H3K79), which promotes chromosomal instability. Taken together genetic instability plays a critical role both in inherited and sporadic leukemias and emerges as a common theme in both inherited and sporadic leukemias. Beyond its theoretical impact, the analysis of genetic instability may lead the way to the development of innovative therapy strategies.
...
PMID:Genetic instability in inherited and sporadic leukemias. 2084 30
In
chronic myeloid leukemia
(
CML
) treatment response is determined by measurements of BCR-AB1L transcripts in peripheral blood by quantitative real-time PCR (qRT-PCR) and a 2-5 fold increase is considered a warning sign. The
BCR-ABL1
gene is mainly expressed in myeloid cells whereas quantification of
BCR-ABL1
is performed on the nucleated cell fraction of peripheral blood. Hence, leukocyte composition of the nucleated cell fraction may affect the result of
BCR-ABL1
quantification. The aim of this study was to investigate if changes in leukocyte composition of peripheral blood had any effect on
BCR-ABL1
transcript levels in
CML
patients. Six
CML
patients in complete cytogenetic remission (CCgR) performed a maximal physical exercise test. Blood samples were collected before exercise, at maximal exhaustion and after exercise. A biphasic increase in leukocyte count was observed and the relative proportion of granulocytes in peripheral blood changed significantly after exercise compared with baseline (p < 0.001). The
BCR-ABL1
transcript level increased significantly following exercise, in nucleated cell fraction of peripheral blood (p < 0.05) but not in isolated granulocytes. In the nucleated cell fraction, the mean
BCR-ABL1
transcript level was 3.3-fold (range 0.7-6.8) higher 180 min after exercise compared with baseline (p < 0.01). In conclusion, physical exercise induced significant increases in
BCR-ABL1
transcript levels concomitant with changes in leukocyte content of peripheral blood. We therefore suggest that variations in leukocyte composition of peripheral blood, causing pre-analytic variations that affect
BCR-ABL1
quantification, have to be accounted for. Consequently, small variations in
BCR-ABL1
transcript levels should be interpreted cautiously in
CML
patients in CCgR.
...
PMID:BCR-ABL1 transcript levels increase in peripheral blood but not in granulocytes after physical exercise in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia. 2086 69
Current routine monitoring strategies for
chronic myeloid leukemia
(
CML
) incorporate hematologic, cytogenetic, and molecular analysis.
BCR-ABL1
kinase domain mutation analysis is an important assessment in specific circumstances. The recommendations for when and how frequently to undertake these assessments have recently been updated. However, response assessment is not always straightforward and access to some analytical tools may not be available. Pharmacokinetic assessment of imatinib levels may correlate with clinical response and could help in assessing issues of suboptimal response, excessive toxicity, or noncompliance. Here we provide practical considerations for monitoring response, offer suggestions for alternative assessments in case of failure or limited access of analyses, and consider future monitoring tools.
...
PMID:Practical considerations for monitoring patients with chronic myeloid leukemia. 2087 49
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