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Clonal evolution leading to ibrutinib resistance in chronic lymphocytic leukemia

Authors :
Maryalice Stetler-Stevenson
Laura M Wake
Adrian Wiestner
Liqiang Xi
Constance M. Yuan
Xin Tian
Maher Albitar
Inhye E. Ahn
Diane C. Arthur
Susan Soto
Janet Valdez
Chingiz Underbayev
Stefania Pittaluga
Adam Albitar
Irina Maric
Mark Raffeld
Pia Nierman
Mohammed Farooqui
Sarah E. M. Herman
Jennifer Lotter
Source :
Blood. 129(11)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Disease progression in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) treated with ibrutinib has been attributed to histologic transformation or acquired mutations in BTK and PLCG2. The rate of resistance and clonal composition of PD are incompletely characterized. We report on CLL patients treated with single-agent ibrutinib on an investigator-initiated phase 2 trial. With median follow-up of 34 months, 15 of 84 evaluable patients (17.9%) progressed. Relapsed/refractory disease at study entry, TP53 aberration, advanced Rai stage, and high β-2 microglobulin were independently associated with inferior progression-free survival (P < .05 for all tests). Histologic transformation occurred in 5 patients (6.0%) and was limited to the first 15 months on ibrutinib. In contrast, progression due to CLL in 10 patients (11.9%) occurred later, diagnosed at a median 38 months on study. At progression, mutations in BTK (Cys481) and/or PLCG2 (within the autoinhibitory domain) were found in 9 patients (10.7%), in 8 of 10 patients with progressive CLL, and in 1 patient with prolymphocytic transformation. Applying high-sensitivity testing (detection limit ∼1 in 1000 cells) to stored samples, we detected mutations up to 15 months before manifestation of clinical progression (range, 2.9-15.4 months). In 5 patients (6.0%), multiple subclones carrying different mutations arose independently, leading to subclonal heterogeneity of resistant disease. For a seamless transition to alternative targeted agents, patients progressing with CLL were continued on ibrutinib for up to 3 months, with 19.8 months median survival from the time of progression. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT01500733.

Details

ISSN :
15280020
Volume :
129
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4d8a0f2977d0758e48ca16ffeed36d65