Back to Search Start Over

Clinical and pharmacodynamic activity of bortezomib and decitabine in acute myeloid leukemia

Authors :
Alison Walker
John Curfman
Ann-Kathrin Eisfeld
Samson T. Jacob
Ramasamy Santhanam
Cheryl Kefauver
Susan Geyer
Kenneth K. Chan
Sebastian Schwind
Hongyan Wang
Guido Marcucci
Susan P. Whitman
William Blum
Michael A. Caligiuri
Ramiro Garzon
Celia Garr
Clara D. Bloomfield
Steven M. Devine
Michael R. Grever
Somayeh S. Tarighat
Danilo Perrotti
John C. Byrd
Rebecca B. Klisovic
Source :
Blood. 119:6025-6031
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
American Society of Hematology, 2012.

Abstract

We recently reported promising clinical activity for a 10-day regimen of decitabine in older AML patients; high miR-29b expression associated with clinical response. Subsequent preclinical studies with bortezomib in AML cells have shown drug-induced miR-29b up-regulation, resulting in loss of transcriptional activation for several genes relevant to myeloid leukemogenesis, including DNA methyltransferases and receptor tyrosine kinases. Thus, a phase 1 trial of bortezomib and decitabine was developed. Nineteen poor-risk AML patients (median age 70 years; range, 32-84 years) enrolled. Induction with decitabine (20 mg/m2 intravenously on days 1-10) plus bortezomib (escalated up to the target 1.3 mg/m2 on days 5, 8, 12, and 15) was tolerable, but bortezomib-related neuropathy developed after repetitive cycles. Of previously untreated patients (age ≥ 65 years), 5 of 10 had CR (complete remission, n = 4) or incomplete CR (CRi, n = 1); 7 of 19 overall had CR/CRi. Pharmacodynamic analysis showed FLT3 down-regulation on day 26 of cycle 1 (P = .02). Additional mechanistic studies showed that FLT3 down-regulation was due to bortezomib-induced miR-29b up-regulation; this led to SP1 down-regulation and destruction of the SP1/NF-κB complex that transactivated FLT3. This study demonstrates the feasibility and preliminary clinical activity of decitabine plus bortezomib in AML and identifies FLT3 as a novel pharmacodynamic end point for future trials. This study is registered at http://www.clinicaltrials.gov as NCT00703300.

Details

ISSN :
15280020 and 00064971
Volume :
119
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d74310a3df3bcd1880cf99430a4e4e6e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2012-03-413898