Abstract

Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) is the first human malignancy to be successfully treated with a small molecule inhibitor, imatinib, targeting a mutant oncoprotein (BCR-ABL). Despite its successes, acquired resistance to imatinib leads to reduced drug efficacy and frequent progression of disease. Understanding the characteristics of pre-existing resistant cells is important for evaluating the benefits of first-line combination therapy with second generation inhibitors. However, due to limitations of assay sensitivity, determining the existence and characteristics of resistant cell clones at the start of therapy is difficult. Here we combined a mathematical modeling approach using branching processes with experimental data on the fitness changes (i.e., changes in net reproductive rate) conferred by BCR-ABL kinase domain mutations to investigate the likelihood, composition, and diversity of pre-existing resistance. Furthermore, we studied the impact of these factors on the response to tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Our approach predicts that in most patients, there is at most one resistant clone present at the time of diagnosis of their disease. Interestingly, patients are no more likely to harbor the most aggressive, pan-resistant T315I mutation than any other resistance mutation; however, T315I cells on average establish larger-sized clones at the time of diagnosis. We established that for patients diagnosed late, the relative benefit of combination therapy over monotherapy with imatinib is significant, while this benefit is modest for patients with a typically early diagnosis time. These findings, after pre-clinical validation, will have implications for the clinical management of CML: we recommend that patients with advanced-phase disease be treated with combination therapy with at least two tyrosine kinase inhibitors.

Highlights

  • Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) is caused by a reciprocal translocation between chromosomes 9 and 22 resulting in the Philadelphia chromosome which harbors the BCR-ABL oncoprotein [1,2]

  • We utilized a stochastic multi-type branching process model to describe the emergence of multiple imatinib-resistant clones in the CML cell population prior to treatment

  • We considered only CML stem cells since these are the only cells capable of persisting indefinitely in the population; mutations arising in more differentiated cell types, in the absence of dedifferentiation, would be lost from the cell population by differentiation

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Summary

Introduction

Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) is caused by a reciprocal translocation between chromosomes 9 and 22 resulting in the Philadelphia chromosome which harbors the BCR-ABL oncoprotein [1,2]. These results provide useful quantitative guidelines for the clinical management of CML: patients diagnosed with a disease burden of about 100,000 leukemic stem cells have an approximately 12% chance of harboring one imatinib-resistant cell type.

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