Prolonged lymphocytosis during ibrutinib therapy is associated with distinct molecular characteristics and does not indicate a suboptimal response to therapy

Jennifer A. Woyach, Kelly A. Smucker, Lisa L. Smith, Arletta Lozanski, Yiming Zhong, Amy S. Ruppert, David Lucas, Katie Williams, Weiqiang Zhao(The Ohio State University), Laura Z. Rassenti, Emanuela M. Ghia, Thomas J. Kipps(University of California San Diego), Rose Mantel, Jeffrey A. Jones, Joseph M. Flynn, Kami J. Maddocks, Susan O’Brien(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Richard R. Furman(Cornell University), Danelle F. James(Pharmacyclics (United States)), Fong Clow(Pharmacyclics (United States)), Gerard Lozanski(The Ohio State University), Amy J. Johnson, John C. Byrd
Blood
January 11, 2014
Cited by 273Open Access
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Abstract

The Bruton's tyrosine kinase (BTK) inhibitor ibrutinib has outstanding activity in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia. Most patients experience lymphocytosis, representing lymphocyte egress from nodal compartments. This resolves within 8 months in the majority of patients, but a subgroup has lymphocytosis lasting >12 months. Here we report a detailed characterization of patients with persistent lymphocytosis during ibrutinib therapy. Signaling evaluation showed that while BTK is inhibited, downstream mediators of B-cell receptor (BCR) signaling are activated in persistent lymphocytes. These cells cannot be stimulated through the BCR and do not show evidence of target gene activation. Flow cytometry for κ and λ expression, IGHV sequencing, Zap-70 methylation, and targeted gene sequencing in these patients are identical at baseline and later time points, suggesting that persistent lymphocytes do not represent clonal evolution. In vitro treatment with targeted kinase inhibitors shows that they are not addicted to a single survival pathway. Finally, progression-free survival is not inferior for patients with prolonged lymphocytosis vs those with traditional responses. Thus, prolonged lymphocytosis is common following ibrutinib treatment, likely represents the persistence of a quiescent clone, and does not predict a subgroup of patients likely to relapse early.


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