Dasatinib in Imatinib-Resistant Philadelphia ChromosomePositive Leukemias
Moshe Talpaz, M.D., Neil P. Shah, M.D., Ph.D., Hagop Kantarjian, M.D., Nicholas Donato, Ph.D., John Nicoll, B.A., Ron Paquette, M.D., Jorge Cortes, M.D., Susan O'Brien, M.D., Claude Nicaise, M.D., Eric Bleickardt, M.D., M. Anne Blackwood-Chirchir, M.D., Vishwanath Iyer, M.S., Tai-Tsang Chen, M.Phil., Fei Huang, Ph.D., Arthur P. Decillis, M.D., and Charles L. Sawyers, M.D.
Background The BCR-ABL tyrosine kinase inhibitor imatinib iseffective in Philadelphia chromosomepositive (Ph-positive)leukemias, but relapse occurs, mainly as a result of the outgrowthof leukemic subclones with imatinib-resistant BCR-ABL mutations.We evaluated dasatinib, a BCR-ABL inhibitor that targets mostimatinib-resistant BCR-ABL mutations, in patients with chronicmyelogenous leukemia (CML) or Ph-positive acute lymphoblasticleukemia (ALL).
Methods Patients with various phases of CML or with Ph-positiveALL who could not tolerate or were resistant to imatinib wereenrolled in a phase 1 dose-escalation study. Dasatinib (15 to240 mg per day) was administered orally in four-week treatmentcycles, once or twice daily.
Results A complete hematologic response was achieved in 37 of40 patients with chronic-phase CML, and major hematologic responseswere seen in 31 of 44 patients with accelerated-phase CML, CMLwith blast crisis, or Ph-positive ALL. In these two phases,the rates of major cytogenetic response were 45 percent and25 percent, respectively. Responses were maintained in 95 percentof patients with chronic-phase disease and in 82 percent ofpatients with accelerated-phase disease, with a median follow-upmore than 12 months and 5 months, respectively. Nearly all patientswith lymphoid blast crisis and Ph-positive ALL had a relapsewithin six months. Responses occurred among all BCR-ABL genotypes,with the exception of the T315I mutation, which confers resistanceto both dasatinib and imatinib in vitro. Myelosuppression wascommon but not dose-limiting.
Conclusions Dasatinib induces hematologic and cytogenetic responsesin patients with CML or Ph-positive ALL who cannot tolerateor are resistant to imatinib. (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00064233
[ClinicalTrials.gov]
.)
Chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) is associated with a chromosomaltranslocation that produces the Philadelphia chromosome (Ph).1This fusion gene encodes a chimeric protein, BCR-ABL, that isassociated with uncontrolled activity of the ABL tyrosine kinaseand can recapitulate features of CML in laboratory models.2Imatinib, an orally available ABL kinase inhibitor, can inducehematologic and cytogenetic remission in all stages of CML,as well as in Ph-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL),with minimal toxicity.3,4 Imatinib is now first-line therapyfor newly diagnosed CML.5
However, resistance to imatinib has become increasingly important.6,7Furthermore, nearly all patients with chronic phase CML havepersistent disease, measurable by polymerase chain reaction(PCR) and indicative of a reservoir of residual leukemia cellsthat may be a source of relapse.8,9,10 Relapse during imatinibtreatment is most often caused by mutations in the kinase domainof BCR-ABL that interfere with imatinib binding.11,12,13
Dasatinib (BMS-354825, Bristol-Myers Squibb) is an orally availableABL kinase inhibitor that differs from imatinib in that it canbind to both the active and inactive conformations of the ABLkinase domain.14,15,16 Dasatinib also inhibits a distinct spectrumof kinases that overlaps with the array of kinases that imatinibinhibits.17 Since it has less stringent binding requirementsthan does imatinib, dasatinib has activity against many imatinib-resistantkinase domain mutations of BCR-ABL. In cell-line models, dasatinibinhibited 18 of 19 imatinib-resistant BCR-ABL mutations withina narrow concentration range, similar to that required to blockwild-type BCR-ABL.14,18 The only exception is a single mutationdeep within the ATP-binding pocket of the ABL tyrosine kinase(T315I) that confers a high degree of resistance to imatiniband dasatinib and to the imatinib analogue AMN-107,19 presumablyas a result of steric hindrance caused by replacement of threoninewith the bulkier isoleucine residue.
We describe a clinical evaluation of dasatinib in a phase 1,open-label, dose-escalation study in patients with CML or Ph-positiveALL who could not tolerate or were resistant to imatinib. Theongoing study began in November 2003, and the last patient wasenrolled in April 2005. The study was approved by the institutionalreview boards at the University of California at Los Angeles(UCLA) and the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston.
Methods
Patients and Study Design
Patients who were at least 14 years of age were eligible ifthey had Ph-positive chronic-phase or accelerated-phase CMLor blast crisis or Ph-positive ALL and hematologic resistanceor intolerance to imatinib, and all patients provided writteninformed consent. Chronic-phase CML was defined by the presenceof less than 15 percent blasts, less than 20 percent basophils,and less than 30 percent blasts plus promyelocytes in peripheralblood or bone marrow and a platelet count of at least 100,000per cubic millimeter, with no extramedullary involvement. Blastcrisis was defined by the presence of at least 30 percent blastsin peripheral blood or bone marrow or extramedullary infiltratesof leukemic cells (other than the spleen or liver). Patientswere classified as having accelerated-phase disease if theydid not fulfill criteria for chronic-phase disease or blastcrisis but did meet any of the following criteria: the presenceof at least 15 percent but less than 30 percent blasts in peripheralblood or bone marrow, the presence of at least 20 percent basophilsin peripheral blood or bone marrow, the presence of at least30 percent blasts plus promyelocytes (but less than 30 percentblasts) in peripheral blood or bone marrow, or a platelet countof less than 100,000 per cubic millimeter unrelated to therapy.Patients with accelerated-phase disease or blast crisis whohad met the criteria for chronic-phase disease at the time ofentry were enrolled as having chronic-phase CML. Patients withPh-positive ALL had at least 30 percent lymphoblasts in peripheralblood or bone marrow without previous evidence of chronic-phaseCML.
Hematologic resistance to imatinib was classified as primary(a lack of adequate response) or acquired (a relapse after aninitial response), as detailed in Table 1 of the Supplementary Appendix(available with the full text of this article at www.nejm.org).Patients with cytogenetic or molecular resistance, but withouthematologic resistance, to imatinib were not eligible. Patientswere considered to be unable to tolerate imatinib if they haddiscontinued imatinib treatment as a result of nonhematologictoxic effects of any grade.
The primary objective of this study was to define the tolerabilityand safety of dasatinib. Secondary end points were the determinationof pharmacokinetic properties and antileukemic activity of dasatiniband the examination of potential correlates of clinical responseto the BCR-ABL genotype. Initially, dasatinib was administeredonly to patients with chronic-phase disease on a once-dailyschedule for five consecutive days, followed by two days withouttreatment (a regimen of five days "on" and two days "off") everyweek. The study protocol permitted progression to the administrationof continuous daily doses of dasatinib and dose escalation.After obtaining pharmacokinetic data on the initial chronic-phasecohorts, we amended the protocol to include twice-daily administrationof dasatinib for patients following the regimen of five dayson and two days off and the regimen of continuous daily doses.After clinical activity was observed in chronic-phase CML, theprotocol was amended to include patients with the other phasesof CML or with Ph-positive ALL, all of whom were treated twicedaily.
Assessment of Toxic Effects and Response
Patients were seen weekly for the first 12 weeks, monthly forthe next 12 weeks, and then every 3 months. Complete and differentialblood counts were obtained twice weekly for the first 12 weeks,every 2 weeks for 12 weeks, and every 6 weeks thereafter. Morphologicand cytogenetic analyses of bone marrow were performed everythree months or more frequently in patients with accelerated-phaseCML, CML with blast crisis, or Ph-positive ALL if such analysiswas clinically indicated. Adverse events were evaluated throughoutthe study and graded according to the National Cancer Institute'sCommon Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events, version 3.0.20
In patients with chronic-phase disease, hematologic responseswere scored as either a complete response or no response (Table2 of the Supplementary Appendix). A complete response was definedby a white-cell count of no more than the upper limit of normal;a platelet count of less than 450,000 per cubic millimeter;the absence of blasts or promyelocytes in peripheral blood;the presence of less than 5 percent myelocytes plus metamyelocytesin peripheral blood; and the absence of extramedullary involvement(including a normal-size liver and spleen on physical examination).Progressive disease was defined as a progression to accelerated-phasedisease or blast crisis or an inability to maintain a completeresponse even with dose escalation.
In patients with accelerated-phase disease, CML with blast crisis,or Ph-positive ALL, hematologic responses were scored as a majorresponse (<5 percent blasts), a minor response, or no response(Table 2 of the Supplementary Appendix). Two subgroups wereincluded in a major hematologic response: no evidence of leukemiaand complete hematologic response, on the basis of whether fullrecovery of blood counts was achieved. Confirmed responses werethose that persisted for four weeks. Any patient with a majoror minor response who subsequently did not meet these criteriaduring a two-week period was considered to have progressivedisease. The disease of patients with accelerated-phase CMLwas considered to have progressed if blast crisis developed.The disease of patients with blast crisis or Ph-positive ALLwas considered to have progressed if the number of blasts inperipheral blood or bone marrow increased despite at least fourweeks of treatment. Cytogenetic responses were defined as follows,on the basis of the percentage of Ph-positive cells in metaphasein bone marrow: complete response, 0; partial response, 1 to35 percent; minor response, 36 to 65 percent; minimal response,66 to 95 percent; and no response, 96 to 100 percent. The rateof major cytogenetic response included patients with completeor partial cytogenetic response.
Analysis of Mutational Status
Blood samples were collected from all patients for analysisof BCR-ABL mutations at baseline, and sequencing of the BCR-ABLkinase domain was conducted at a central laboratory, as describedpreviously.12 Approximately 1500 nucleotides spanning the BCR-ABLcatalytic domain were sequenced, with the use of BCR-ABL complementaryDNA (cDNA) amplified by reverse-transcriptase PCR (RT-PCR) fromperipheral blood as a template. At least 10 independent BCR-ABLclones were sequenced from each patient.
Study Responsibilities
The study was designed by academic investigators and a representativeof the sponsor, Bristol-Myers Squibb. Data were collected atUCLA and at the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center under the supervisionof academic investigators and then were analyzed at Bristol-MyersSquibb by company representatives and by Drs. Sawyers and Talpaz;the latter academic investigators vouch for the accuracy andcompleteness of the data analysis.
Results
Patients
A total of 84 patients were enrolled in the study: 40 with chronic-phaseCML, 11 with accelerated-phase CML, 23 with myeloid blast crisis,and 10 with lymphoid blast crisis or Ph-positive ALL (Table 1).Of these 84 patients, 50 (60 percent) had received previouschemotherapy (excluding hydroxyurea) and 12 (14 percent) hadundergone bone marrow or stem-cell transplantation. Seventy-twopatients (86 percent) were resistant to imatinib, and all but12 had received imatinib in daily doses of 600 mg or greater.Twelve patients (14 percent) could not tolerate imatinib becauseof abnormal liver-function tests, rash, bone pain, fatigue,or depression. Mutations in the BCR-ABL kinase domain were detectedin 60 patients (71 percent) (more detail is available in Tables3 and 4 of the Supplementary Appendix).
Table 1. Baseline Characteristics of the Patients.
Toxic Effects
Grade 3 or 4 neutropenia occurred in 45 percent of patientswith chronic-phase disease and in 89 percent of patients withaccelerated-phase disease, CML with blast crisis, or Ph-positiveALL (Table 2). Among the patients with accelerated-phase CML,CML with blast crisis, or Ph-positive ALL, 55 percent had grade3 or 4 myelosuppression at the start of the study, as is typicalin this population of patients (Table 5 of the Supplementary Appendix).Grade 3 or 4 thrombocytopenia occurred in 35 percent of patientswith chronic-phase disease and in 80 percent of patients withaccelerated-phase disease, CML with blast crisis, or Ph-positiveALL. Myelosuppression required the interruption of treatmentin about 60 percent of patients and generally resolved withinthree months, often in association with a cytogenetic response.Twenty-five percent of patients required a reduction in thedose of dasatinib (Table 6 of the Supplementary Appendix).
Table 2. Highest Grade of Adverse Hematologic and Nonhematologic Events during the Study.
Fifteen patients had pleural effusions that could not be attributedto known causes and were therefore deemed to be treatment-related.The effusions were managed with diuretics, thoracentesis, orpleurodesis. Other adverse events were grade 1 or 2 diarrhea(23 percent), peripheral edema (19 percent), and headache (10percent). In seven patients, grade 3 or 4 abnormalities in liver-functiontests developed, but these effects resolved within two to threeweeks without a modification in the dose. Grade 1 or 2 hypocalcemiawas noted in about 60 percent of patients but was asymptomaticand did not worsen with continued therapy (Table 7 of the Supplementary Appendix).A maximum tolerated dose was not determined, and no patientwithdrew from the study as a result of toxic effects. Patientswho entered the study as a result of imatinib intolerance didnot have similar complications with dasatinib.
Hematologic and Cytogenetic Responses
The rates of complete hematologic response and major cytogeneticresponse in the 40 patients with chronic-phase CML were 92 percentand 45 percent, respectively (Table 3). Most of the completehematologic responses occurred at doses of dasatinib of 50 mgper day or more, whereas most cytogenetic responses requiredhigher doses (Table 8 of the Supplementary Appendix). A cytogeneticresponse was more common in patients with chronic-phase diseasewho had had a previous cytogenetic response while receivingimatinib. Of 16 patients who had had a previous major cytogeneticresponse while receiving imatinib, 13 had a major cytogeneticresponse while receiving dasatinib. However, of 18 patientswho had had no cytogenetic response while receiving imatinib,5 had a cytogenetic response while receiving dasatinib, and9 patients who had had only minor or partial responses whilereceiving imatinib had a complete cytogenetic response whilereceiving dasatinib. The rates of hematologic and cytogeneticresponse among patients who were treated with the once-dailyregimen were similar to the rates among those treated twicedaily.
The rate of major hematologic response in patients with CMLin the accelerated or blast phase or those with Ph-positiveALL was 70 percent. These responses were confirmed after fourweeks in 6 of 9 patients with accelerated-phase disease, 7 of14 patients with myeloid blast crisis, and 5 of 8 patients witheither lymphoid blast crisis or Ph-positive ALL. Major cytogeneticresponses were observed in all three groups of patients withaccelerated-phase disease (Table 3).
In patients with chronic-phase or accelerated-phase CML, responseswere maintained after 2 to 19 months of follow-up (Figure 1).All patients with chronic-phase or accelerated-phase diseasewho had a complete or major hematologic response remain in thestudy, with the exception of one patient with chronic-phasedisease who chose to withdraw from the study to undergo allogeneicmarrow transplantation when a donor became available. In contrast,responses in patients with CML with myeloid or lymphoid blastcrisis or with Ph-positive ALL were generally short-lived. Despitethe high rate of major hematologic response, all but one ofthe patients with lymphoid blast crisis or Ph-positive ALL hada relapse after a median follow-up of four months (range, oneto eight). In a similar manner, only 6 of 14 patients (43 percent)with CML with myeloid blast crisis who had a major hematologicresponse are still participating in the study, with follow-upranging from 5 to 12 months. However, three of these patientshave sustained complete cytogenetic remission at 10, 11, and12 months each.
Figure 1. KaplanMeier Analysis of Progression-free Survival among Patients with CML or ALL Associated with Dasatinib.
The time to progression of disease is shown among patients with CML who had a complete hematologic response and among patients with accelerated-phase CML, myeloid blast crisis, lymphoid blast crisis, or Ph-positive ALL who met the criteria for a minor or major hematologic response. Circles represent patients who had a response and continued to be treated or who withdrew from the study to undergo stem-cell transplantation. One patient in the cohort with lymphoid blast crisis or Ph-positive ALL who had a complete cytogenetic response withdrew from the study on day 167 day to undergo allogeneic transplantation.
Clinical Response and BCR-ABL Genotype
Of 84 study patients, 60 (71 percent) had BCR-ABL mutationsdetected at baseline (Figure 2B). The BCR-ABL mutations in 56of these 60 patients had been reported previously in associationwith imatinib resistance, but 4 patients had new BCR-ABL mutationsidentified within the kinase domain (Tables 3 and 4 of the Supplementary Appendix).The contribution of these mutations to imatinib resistance willneed to be assessed in vitro and confirmed in other clinicalisolates.
Figure 2. Correlation of the BCR-ABL Genotype with Hematologic and Cytogenetic Responses.
Panel A shows the three-dimensional structure of the ABL kinase bound with dasatinib and imatinib. Dasatinib and imatinib appear with carbon atoms in aqua and magenta, respectively. The ATP phosphate-binding loop (P loop) of ABL is colored yellow, and the activation loop is colored red, and the diverging direction of the activation loop in the two structures is shown. Imatinib could not bind to the active conformation of ABL because of a clash with the activation loop when positioned in the dasatinib-bound ABL conformation. Dasatinib, on the other hand, could bind with the activation loop in either conformation. T315 is a contact residue for both dasatinib and imatinib and is shown with carbon atoms in pink and oxygen atoms in red. The hydrogen bond between the inhibitors and T315 is shown as a dashed line. T315I is modeled and shown in a blue surface representation highlighting the increased bulk of the residue and the loss of a hydrogen bond, as compared with T315. An animated video of the differential binding of dasatinib and imatinib is available with the full text of this article at www.nejm.org. In Panel B, amino acid substitutions in the kinase domain of BCR-ABL that were detected in patients in this study are shown in red for no response, blue for complete hematologic response, or green for complete cytogenetic response. Mutations depicted in gray have been previously reported in patients with imatinib-resistant CML but were not detected in patients in this study. New mutations detected in this study are not depicted here. P denotes P loop, C catalytic domain, and A activation loop. In Panel C, a region of BCR-ABL was amplified by RT-PCR from peripheral-blood samples obtained from Patient 27 before starting dasatinib and at three time points during therapy. The T315I mutation was detected by a loss of unique DdeI restriction digest site, which alters DNA fragment size. Wild-type and T315I BCR-ABL plasmid are included as controls.
Hematologic and cytogenetic responses were observed broadlyacross all BCR-ABL genotypes, with the exception of T315I, thesingle mutation predicted to confer cross-resistance to dasatiniband imatinib in preclinical studies.14,18 In two patients whodid not have a response to treatment, this mutation was thedominant pretreatment genotype and was one of four distinctimatinib-resistant subclones detected at baseline in a thirdpatient, who did not have a response. This case is of particularinterest because the three clones expressing BCR-ABL allelesF359V, M244V, and G250E, all of which were predicted to retainsensitivity to dasatinib on the basis of preclinical studies,were gradually extinguished during 60 days of treatment (Figure 2C).In contrast, the T315I clone, which initially represented aminor fraction of the imatinib-resistant population, expandedduring therapy and was the only clone detected at clinical relapse.A fourth patient also had disease progression with T315I, butthe mutation was not detected among the 10 clones sequencedbefore dasatinib treatment.
Discussion
Imatinib can produce durable cytogenetic remission with minimaltoxic effects in most cases of chronic-phase CML.5 Yet additionaltherapies are clearly needed to address the growing problemof relapse. A detailed understanding of the molecular basisof imatinib resistance, primarily as a result of mutations inthe BCR-ABL gene, led to the evaluation of dasatinib. Some imatinib-resistancemutations encode amino acid substitutions in the BCR-ABL kinasedomain at residues that directly contact imatinib. More commonare mutations that alter the flexibility of the BCR-ABL kinasedomain and destabilize the specific inactive conformation towhich imatinib binds.21 Dasatinib binds to the ABL kinase domainin a manner distinct from that of imatinib and thereby retainsactivity against nearly all imatinib-resistance mutations (Figure 2A).In addition to point mutations, amplification of the BCR-ABLgene is associated with imatinib-related relapse in advanced-phaseCML.11 BCR-ABLindependent pathways have also been implicatedin some cases.22,23
Our results demonstrate that dasatinib has clinical activityin all stages of imatinib-resistant CML and Ph-positive ALL,including resistance caused by BCR-ABL gene mutation. Furthermore,the correlation of the BCR-ABL genotype with a clinical responseto dasatinib mirrors predictions from preclinical findings,in that none of the three patients with a T315I mutation thatwas detected before treatment had a response to dasatinib.
In addition to the induction of remission in patients with abroad range of imatinib-resistant BCR-ABL mutations, dasatinibhad activity in patients who had received little or no cytogeneticbenefit from imatinib. The ability of dasatinib to induce cytogeneticresponses in patients with imatinib resistance raises the possibilityof clinical benefit in other patients with CML who have a suboptimalresponse to imatinib (i.e., residual Ph-positive cells in themarrow) but who have no evidence of frank hematologic resistanceto imatinib. Dasatinib may have this additional activity becauseit inhibits BCR-ABL kinase activity more effectively than doesimatinib. Another possibility relates to the differential susceptibilityof imatinib and dasatinib to drug efflux pumps, such as multidrugresistance protein 1 (P-glycoprotein), which are highly expressedin hematopoietic stem cells. Imatinib is a substrate of P-glycoprotein,whereas dasatinib is not. Dasatinib may therefore achieve ahigher intracellular concentration than imatinib. A third possibilityis that the many additional kinases that are targeted by dasatinibcontribute to a cytogenetic response.
The major adverse effect of dasatinib was reversible myelosuppression.We cannot tell whether the myelosuppression was solely the resultof the action of dasatinib against Ph-positive leukemia cellsor of a more general hematopoietic toxic effect. Myelosuppressiontypically resolved in patients who had a cytogenetic remissionand has not been a complication of dasatinib treatment in patientswith solid tumors,24 but further studies are needed to clarifythe nature of dasatinib-associated myelosuppression. Nonmalignantpleural effusions developed in 15 patients, often in the absenceof edema, whereas the common imatinib-related side effect ofperiorbital edema was less frequent. Other frequent imatinib-associatedside effects, such as muscle cramps and nausea, were rarelyobserved. An important finding is that patients who could nottolerate imatinib and were treated with dasatinib did not havea recurrence of nonhematologic toxic effects (e.g., liver-functionabnormalities and rash) that were associated with imatinib.
The rationale underlying the use of dasatinib for imatinib-resistantCML may have implications for other kinase-dependent cancers.Kinase-domain mutations, which were initially discovered asa resistance mechanism in CML, have been described in lung cancer,gastrointestinal stromal tumor, and the hypereosinophilic syndromewith resistance to kinase inhibitors.25,26,27,28,29 The activityof dasatinib in cases of CML with imatinib resistance is likelythe result of the drug's less stringent conformational bindingrequirements relative to imatinib and suggests a general approachin which kinase-dependent cancers are treated with a combinationof inhibitors that differ in their kinase-binding properties.
Although the clinical results reported here support the useof dasatinib as single-agent therapy for imatinib-resistantCML and Ph-positive ALL, acquired resistance to dasatinib maybe the eventual outcome, as already observed in many of thepatients with blast crisis and Ph-positive ALL who were treatedin this trial. Preclinical studies have identified several BCR-ABLmutations that confer resistance to dasatinib but not to imatinib,providing a rationale to explore combination therapy as initialtreatment for CML.30 For these reasons, successful long-termtreatment of CML may require a cocktail of kinase inhibitorswith activity against all drug-resistant BCR-ABL mutations (includingT315I), analogous to the success of highly active antiretroviraltherapy in the treatment of infection with the human immunodeficiencyvirus. Elsewhere in this issue of the Journal, Kantarjian etal.31 report that the kinase inhibitor nilotinib has a relativelyfavorable safety profile and is active in imatinib-resistantCML.
Supported by grants from the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society anda grant (MO1-RR-00865) from the General Clinical Research Centersof the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Shah is the recipientof a Career Development Award for Special Fellows from the Leukemiaand Lymphoma Society. Dr. Sawyers is an investigator at theHoward Hughes Medical Institute and is the recipient of a DorisDuke Distinguished Clinical Scientist Award.
Drs. Talpaz, Kantarjian, and Cortes report having received researchsupport from Bristol-Myers Squibb. Drs. Shah, Nicoll, and Sawyersreport being coinventors on a patent filed by UCLA on the useof mutations in the BCR-ABL kinase domain for diagnostic ortherapeutic purposes. Drs. Nicaise, Bleickardt, Blackwood-Chirchir,and Huang and Ms. Iyer and Ms. Chen are employees of Bristol-MyersSquibb. Dr. Decillis was formerly an employee of Bristol-MyersSquibb and is currently an employee of Novartis Pharmaceuticals.No other potential conflict of interest relevant to this articlewas reported.
We are indebted to Elisabeth Haddad, Bojidar (Bobby) Grozdev,Shela Broussard, Mary Carroll, Chris Lacke, Barbara van Leeuwen,Doreen Tuozzoli, and Maria Grasic for their assistance withclinical trial coordination; to John Tokarski and Francis Leefor their assistance in the preparation of the crystallographicfigure; and to Ingo Mellinghoff for comments on the manuscript.
Source Information
From the Departments of Leukemia (M.T., H.K., J.C., S.O.) and Experimental Therapeutics (M.T., N.D.), M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston; Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles (N.P.S., J.N., R.P., C.L.S.); Bristol-Myers Squibb, Wallingford, Conn. (C.N., E.B., V.I., T.-T.C., A.P.D.), and Lawrenceville, N.J. (M.A.B.-C., F.H.); and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Chevy Chase, Md. (C.L.S.). Drs. Talpaz and Sawyers contributed equally to this article.
Address reprint requests to Dr. Sawyers at Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of California at Los Angeles, 11-934 Factor Bldg., 10833 LeConte Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90095, or at csawyers{at}mednet.ucla.edu.
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(2008). Targeting of heat shock protein 32 (Hsp32)/heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) in leukemic cells in chronic myeloid leukemia: a novel approach to overcome resistance against imatinib. Blood
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(2008). Nilotinib (formerly AMN107), a highly selective BCR-ABL tyrosine kinase inhibitor, is active in patients with imatinib-resistant or -intolerant accelerated-phase chronic myelogenous leukemia. Blood
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Cortes, J., Jabbour, E., Kantarjian, H., Yin, C. C., Shan, J., O'Brien, S., Garcia-Manero, G., Giles, F., Breeden, M., Reeves, N., Wierda, W. G., Jones, D.
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