Compassionate use of sorafenib in FLT3-ITD–positive acute myeloid leukemia: sustained regression before and after allogeneic stem cell transplantation

Stephan Metzelder(Philipps University of Marburg), Ying Wang(Philipps University of Marburg), Ellen Wollmer(Philipps University of Marburg), Michael Wanzel, Sabine Teichler(Philipps University of Marburg), Anuhar Chaturvedi(Philipps University of Marburg), Martin Eilers(University of Würzburg), Erich Enghofer(Bayer (Germany)), Andreas Neubauer(Philipps University of Marburg), Andreas Burchert(Philipps University of Marburg)
Blood
April 24, 2009
Cited by 249

Abstract

Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients with internal tandem duplication (ITD) mutations in the Fms-like tyrosine-3 (FLT3) gene have a dismal prognosis. Here we report compassionate-use results with the multikinase and FLT3-ITD inhibitor sorafenib for the treatment of relapsed or refractory FLT3-ITD-positive AML. Sorafenib induced clinically meaningful and very rapid responses in all 6 patients treated either before (n = 2), after (n = 3), or both before and after (n = 1) allogeneic stem cell transplantation (allo-SCT). Sorafenib-induced remissions facilitated allo-SCT in 2 of the 3 refractory patients. Two of the 4 patients who were treated after allo-SCT survived 216 and 221 days, respectively, whereas the other 2 remain in ongoing complete molecular remission. Sorafenib response was associated with an inhibition of the antiapoptotic FLT3-ITD target Stat-5 in vivo. Together, sorafenib monotherapy before or after allo-SCT has remarkable clinical activity in poor risk FLT3-ITD-positive AML and deserves further evaluation in prospective clinical trials.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis