Abstract

Low curability of patients diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) must be seen as a call for better understanding the disease's mechanisms and improving the treatment strategy. Therapeutic outcome of the crucial anthracycline-based induction therapy often can be compromised by a resistant phenotype associated with overexpression of ABCB1 transporters. Here, we evaluated clinical relevance of ABCB1 in a context of the FMS-like tyrosine kinase 3 (FLT3) inhibitor midostaurin in a set of 28 primary AML samples. ABCB1 gene expression was absolutely quantified, confirming its association with CD34 positivity, adverse cytogenetic risk, and unachieved complete remission (CR). Midostaurin, identified as an ABCB1 inhibitor, increased anthracycline accumulation in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of CD34+ AML patients and those not achieving CR. This effect was independent of FLT3 mutation, indicating even FLT3- AML patients might benefit from midostaurin therapy. In line with these data, midostaurin potentiated proapoptotic processes in ABCB1-overexpressing leukemic cells when combined with anthracyclines. Furthermore, we report a direct linkage of miR-9 to ABCB1 efflux activity in the PBMC and propose miR-9 as a useful prognostic marker in AML. Overall, we highlight the therapeutic value of midostaurin as more than just a FLT3 inhibitor, suggesting its maximal therapeutic outcomes might be very sensitive to proper timing and well-optimized dosage schemes based upon patient's characteristics, such as CD34 positivity and ABCB1 activity. Moreover, we suggest miR-9 as a predictive ABCB1-related biomarker that could be immensely helpful in identifying ABCB1-resistant AML phenotype to enable optimized therapeutic regimen and improved treatment outcome.

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