Phase II Study of Low-Dose Decitabine in Patients With Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia Resistant to Imatinib Mesylate

Jean‐Pierre J. Issa(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Vazganush Gharibyan(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Jörge E. Cortes(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Jaroslav Jelı́nek(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Gail Morris(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Srđan Verstovšek(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Moshe Talpaz(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Guillermo Garcia‐Manero(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Hagop M. Kantarjian(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center)
Journal of Clinical Oncology
May 10, 2005
Cited by 287Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

PURPOSE: To determine the activity of decitabine, a DNA methylation inhibitor, in imatinib-refractory or intolerant chronic myelogenous leukemia. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Thirty-five patients were enrolled in this phase II study (12 in chronic phase, 17 in accelerated phase, and six in blastic phase). Decitabine was administered at 15 mg/m2 intravenously over 1 hour daily, 5 days a week for 2 weeks. DNA methylation was measured using a LINE1 bisulfite/pyrosequencing assay. RESULTS: Complete hematologic responses were seen in 12 patients (34%) and partial hematologic responses in seven patients (20%), for an overall hematologic response rate of 54% (83% in chronic phase, 41% in accelerated phase, and 34% in blastic phase). Major cytogenetic responses were observed in six patients (17%), and minor cytogenetic responses were seen in 10 patients (29%) for an overall cytogenetic response rate of 46%. Median response duration was 3.5 months (range, 2 to 13+ months). Myelosuppression was the major adverse effect, with neutropenic fever in 28 (23%) of 124 courses of therapy. LINE1 methylation decreased from 71.3% +/- 1.4% (mean +/- standard error of the mean) to 60.7% +/- 1.4% after 1 week, 50.9% +/- 2.4% after 2 weeks, and returned to 66.5% +/- 2.7% at recovery of counts (median, 46 days). LINE1 methylation at the end of week 1 did not correlate with subsequent responses. However, at day 12, the absolute decrease in methylation was 14.5% +/- 3.0% versus 26.8% +/- 2.7% in responders versus nonresponders (P = .007). CONCLUSION: Decitabine induces hypomethylation and has clinical activity in imatinib refractory chronic myelogenous leukemia. We hypothesize that the inverse correlation between hypomethylation 2 weeks after therapy and response is due to a cell death mechanism of response, whereby resistant cells can withstand more hypomethylation.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis