Thank you Irene, very helpful. Are you on 300 a day total and are you PCR??? 
Two years later, are those your only symptoms? Any mood issues? Thanks for 
responding. Beth
Anybody else?!?!



-----Original Message-----
From: zippimom <[email protected]>
To: cmlhope <[email protected]>
Sent: Thu, Mar 14, 2013 4:01 pm
Subject: [CMLHope] Re: Update on CML Treatments


Beth, I'm on SKI606 now called Bosutinib I'm number 21 in Dr Cortes study. i've 
been on it for a couple years now. i have 300mg at lunch time. i always take it 
with protein if I don't I will throw it up. I still have skin problem but i 
have that under control now. i did lose my leg hair and underarm hair. my hair 
has thined and my euelashes have thin.  Irene McAloon
 
 
 
 
On Wednesday, March 13, 2013 3:56:25 PM UTC-5, Pat wrote:
Hi all - Dr. Jorge Cortes, one of the world's foremost CML experts, 
discusses new treatment options for CML and his thoughts about future 
directions in a new article for a physician publication from MD 
Anderson Cancer Center which is focused on current research and 
patient care advances. 

Regards, 
Pat Elliott 
CML patient and advocate 

OncoLog, March 2013, Vol. 58, No. 3 

New Drugs Increase Treatment Options for Patients with Imatinib- 
Resistant Chronic Myeloid Leukemia 

By Zach Bohannan 

In the past year, several new targeted drugs have been approved as 
second-line treatments for imatinib-resistant chronic myeloid leukemia 
(CML). These drugs include the second-generation tyrosine kinase 
inhibitor bosutinib and the third-generation tyrosine kinase inhibitor 
ponatinib, which may change the standard of care for CML. 

CML treatment 

CML is caused by the BCR-ABL fusion protein, a result of the 
Philadelphia chromosomal translocation. The prevalence of this protein 
makes CML ideal for treatment using targeted therapies. For many years 
now, imatinib, one of the first and most successful targeted 
antineoplastic agents, has been the first-line treatment for CML. 
“Most CML patients are diagnosed in what we call the chronic phase, 
which does not carry any recognizable drug-resistant mutations in BCR- 
ABL, so imatinib usually works very well at first,” said Jorge Cortes, 
M.D., a professor in the Department of Leukemia at The University of 
Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center. 

The main goal of CML treatment is a complete cytogenetic response, 
meaning an absence of detectable Philadelphia translocations in the 
bone marrow. Many patients treated with imatinib have complete 
responses, but the subset of patients who do not are then moved to a 
second-line treatment. Thus, there is interest in developing second- 
line therapies for imatinib-resistant CML, and several drugs are 
currently under investigation or have recently been approved by the 
U.S. Food and Drug Administration for this purpose. 

Bosutinib 

Because ABL is a tyrosine kinase, most candidates for second-line CML 
treatment are tyrosine kinase inhibitors, which include dasatinib, 
bosutinib, and ponatinib. Bosutinib is among the most promising of 
these drugs. It is generally considered more potent than imatinib, and 
it can overcome several of the mutations that render CML resistant to 
imatinib. 

The side effects of bosutinib are less severe—and most are less common— 
than those of some other tyrosine kinase inhibitors because bosutinib 
has less effect on the development of normal blood cells. For example, 
nilotinib, dasatinib, and several other tyrosine kinase inhibitors 
also inhibit growth factor receptors such as c-KIT and platelet- 
derived growth factor receptor. These receptors are important for the 
normal development of certain myeloid cell types. Bosutinib, however, 
does not affect these receptors as strongly as many other tyrosine 
kinase inhibitors and thus causes lower rates of neutropenia and 
thrombocytopenia than do nilotinib and dasatinib. Similarly, bosutinib 
causes lower rates of cardiotoxicity and pancreatitis than other 
second-generation tyrosine kinase inhibitors that are approved for 
treating imatinib-resistant CML. Conversely, some side effects might 
be more common with bosutinib. 

This lack of significant side effects is one reason bosutinib is so 
attractive. However, Dr. Cortes said, “Although all tyrosine kinase 
inhibitors are very safe compared with most other chemotherapies, 
there can still be adverse events, and doctors should explain and 
discuss possible side effects with patients.” The primary side effect 
associated with bosutinib is diarrhea, which can occur in up to 80% of 
patients. However, this is usually minor and manageable. 

Although bosutinib is superior to many other possible treatments for 
CML, it is not effective for all patients. For example, the T315I 
point mutation that can occur in the BCR-ABL gene renders CML 
resistant to imatinib, bosutinib, and most other tyrosine kinase 
inhibitors. 

Ponatinib 

Ponatinib is a very potent tyrosine kinase inhibitor that was 
specifically designed to treat the T315I point mutation while 
maintaining efficacy against all other known BCR-ABL permutations. 
Although ponatinib has many of the same side effects as other tyrosine 
kinase inhibitors, its ability to treat a previously intractable 
mutation makes it very promising. Because it is very effective against 
T315I-mutated BCR-ABL and in patients who have not responded to 
multiple other tyrosine kinase inhibitors, ponatinib was recently 
approved as a second-line treatment for CML patients. 

New first-line therapy? 

Stem cell transplant: offers curative potential but with greater risks 
compared to therapy with tyrosine kinase inhibitors; seldom used as 
initial therapy but considered for patients who have not responded 
well to other therapies. 

Because bosutinib shows so many benefits over other tyrosine kinase 
inhibitors, Dr. Cortes conducted some preliminary research into its 
use as a first-line therapy for CML. The initial research set out to 
determine whether bosutinib would offer a better cytogenetic and 
molecular response rate than imatinib. Dr. Cortes said, “We found that 
bosutinib and imatinib have similar cytogenetic response rates, so the 
primary endpoint of the study was inconclusive. However, in many of 
the other measures examined, such as the number of adverse events, 
bosutinib was superior.” 

Another notable finding of that study was that bosutinib caused a 
complete cytogenetic response faster than imatinib did. Many studies 
have shown that speed of response has a major effect on long-term 
survival for CML patients. However, much more research, some of which 
is ongoing, will be needed before bosutinib can be recommended or 
officially adopted as the gold standard for CML treatment. 

Ponatinib also is being studied as a first-line treatment. In an 
ongoing phase II clinical trial, Dr. Cortes and his colleagues are 
evaluating the drug’s effectiveness in patients with previously 
untreated chronic-phase CML. Laboratory data suggesting that it is 
difficult to induce ponatinib resistance makes ponatinib an attractive 
treatment option that could reduce the probability of acquiring 
resistance and thus improve the long-term outcome. 

Future directions and challenges 

CML patients require frequent monitoring to ensure their disease does 
not recur, and many patients remain in fear that their CML will return 
with a mutation that renders it resistant to currently available 
treatments. However, the recent approval of ponatinib and omacetaxine 
(a translation inhibitor also found to be active against CML) means 
that these mutations may prove to be less of a threat in the future. 

One problem inherent in any CML treatment is that there is no way to 
determine whether a patient has been cured. Patients who achieve a 
complete cytogenetic response may undergo more sensitive molecular 
testing. A complete molecular response, defined as the absence of 
detectable BCR-ABL transcripts, is the best possible outcome a 
physician can assess for a CML patient, but there is still no way of 
knowing if the CML has been completely eliminated because even 
molecular tests have a limit of detection. “To completely cure CML, we 
need to develop other therapeutic options and better testing for 
residual disease,” Dr. Cortes said. “Right now, the best I can tell 
patients is, ‘I don’t see it (the leukemia),’ which is different from, 
‘It’s gone.’” He believes that once a more powerful test is developed, 
tyrosine kinase inhibitors will probably need to be combined with 
another therapy to cure CML patients. The most likely therapy to 
combine with tyrosine kinase inhibition is stem cell transplantation. 

However, until more powerful tests are developed, doctors will 
continue to treat CML as a chronic disease, which means that many 
patients will receive life-long targeted therapy, whether it is 
imatinib or sequential treatment with multiple tyrosine kinase 
inhibitors as the disease mutates. 

Current Treatments for Chronic Myeloid Leukemia 

Imatinib: tyrosine kinase inhibitor approved by the U.S. Food and Drug 
Administration as a first-line treatment for chronic myeloid leukemia 
(CML); often successful 

Dasatinib: second-line tyrosine kinase inhibitor for some imatinib- 
resistant mutants 

Bosutinib: second-line tyrosine kinase inhibitor for some imatinib- 
resistant mutants 

Nilotinib: second-line tyrosine kinase inhibitor; slightly modified 
version of imatinib 

Omacetaxine: alkaloid translation inhibitor for treating T315I-mutant 
CML 

Ponatinib: second- or third-line tyrosine kinase inhibitor for 
treating T315I-mutant CML 

Stem cell transplant: offers curative potential but with greater risks 
compared to therapy with tyrosine kinase inhibitors; seldom used as 
initial therapy but considered for patients who have not responded 
well to other therapies. 

Article link: 
http://www2.mdanderson.org/depts/oncolog/articles/13/3-mar/3-13-2.html 


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