Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML)Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML) Accounts for 15-20% of adult leukemias Median age is 50-60 years Higher incidence noted in patients with heavy radiation
exposure In 1960, Nowell and Hungerford detected the
Philadelphia chromosome (22q-). In 1973, Rowley identified the reciprocal translocation
involving chromosome 9 : t(9;22)(q34;q11). In 1980s, the unique fusion gene termed BCR-ABL was
discovered.
Sawyers CL. N Engl J Med. 1999;340:1330-1340. Faderl S, et al. Ann Intern Med. 1999;131:207-219.
Median age range at presentation: 45 to 55 yearsIncidence increases with age
Up to 30% of patients are >60 years oldSlightly higher incidence in males
Male-to-female ratio—1.3:1At presentation
50% diagnosed by routine laboratory tests85% diagnosed during chronic phase
Epidemiology of CML
Courtesy of John K. Choi, MD, PhD, University of Pennsylvania.
Normal Chronic phase CML
CML: Peripheral Blood Smear
Pathogenesis of CMLPathogenesis of CML A single, pleuripotential, hematopoietic stem cell
acquires a Ph chromosome carrying the BCL-ABL fusion gene proliferative advantage
Constitutive expression by leukemic stem cell of growth factors ( Il-3, G-CSF)
CML cells survive longer due to defective apoptosis Close proximity of the BCR and ABL genes in
hematopoietic cells in interphase may favor translocations. Transformation from the chronic phase to blast phase is
associated with additional molecular changes ( activation of oncogenes or deletion of tumor-suppressor genes)
Pathogenesis of CMLPathogenesis of CML The classic BCR-ABL gene result from the fusion of
parts of two normal genes ABL on Ch9 and BCR on Ch22.
Both genes are ubiquitously expressed in normal tissue,but their precise functions are not well defined.
Break occurs in ABL upstream of exon a2 and the major breakpoint cluster region of the BCR gene
a 5’ portion of BCR and a 3’ portion of ABL are juxtaposed on a shortened Ch22.
The mRNA molecules transcribed from this hybrid gene contain one of two BCR-ABL junctions: e13a2 and e14a2 translated into p210BCR-ABL
Pathogenesis of CMLPathogenesis of CML What causes the leukemogenic potential of p210bcr-abl?
The constitutive activation of the ABL tyrosine kinase activity by BCR
deregulated cellular proliferation
decreased adherence of leukemic cell to the stroma
reduced apoptotic response to mutagenetic stimuli Most crucial domain : the tyrosine kinase encoded by
the SRC-homology 1 (SH1) domain on ABL Various substrates have been found to bind to BCR-
ABL and to be tyrosine –phosphorylated by it.
Molecular TargetsMolecular Targets Target for inhibition: Tyrosine kinase Aim: to design a small chemical compound that would
compete with ATP for its binding site in the kinase domain.
By blocking the ATP site, no phosphate groups would be transferred to tyrosine residues on the BCR-ABL substrate unphosphorylated substrate protein would not be able to undergo a conformational change to allow it to associate with downstream effectors the downstream reactions would then be impeded interrupting transmission of the oncogenic signal to the nucleus.
Molecular TargetsMolecular Targets Imatinib Mesylate (Gleevec, STI571): a small molecule
that inhibits the kinase activity of all proteins that contain ABL, ABL-related gene protein, PDGFR, as well as c-kit receptor.
It was first approved in 2001. It occupies the ATP binding site in the SH1 domain of
the BCR-ABL oncoprotein. It inhibits cellular growth and induces apoptosis. Other targeted therapies being investigated: The more specific Tyrosine Kinase inhibitors such as the dual SRC-ABL inhibitor : Dasatanib which was approved in June by the FDA.
Savage, D. G. et al. N Engl J Med 2002;346:683-693
Translocation Leading to the Philadelphia (Ph) Chromosome and the Role of BCR-ABL in the Pathogenesis of CML (Panel A) and the Effect of Normal (Panel B) and Abnormal (Panel C) c-kit
Function on Platelet-Derived Growth Factor and Gastrointestinal Stromal Tumors
Savage, D. G. et al. N Engl J Med 2002;346:683-693
Mechanism of Action of BCR-ABL and of Its Inhibition by Imatinib
Chronic phase
Median duration5–6 years
Accelerated phase
Median duration6–9 months
Blast crisis
Median survival3–6 months
Advanced phases
Faderl S, et al. Ann Intern Med. 1999;131:207-219.Pasternak G, et al. J Cancer Res Clin Oncol. 1998;124:643-660.
Clinical Course: Phases of Untreated CML
p53, Rb, p16, t(3;21), t(8;21), t(7;11)