Abstract

AbstractThiopurines (eg, 6-mercaptopurine [MP]) are highly efficacious antileukemic agents, but they are also associated with dose-limiting toxicities. Recent studies by us and others have identified inherited NUDT15 deficiency as a novel genetic cause of thiopurine toxicity, and there is a strong rationale for NUDT15-guided dose individualization to preemptively mitigate adverse effects of these drugs. Using CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing, we established a Nudt15−/− mouse model to evaluate the effectiveness of this strategy in vivo. Across MP dosages, Nudt15−/− mice experienced severe leukopenia, rapid weight loss, earlier death resulting from toxicity, and more bone marrow hypocellularity compared with wild-type mice. Nudt15−/− mice also showed excessive accumulation of a thiopurine active metabolite (ie, DNA-incorporated thioguanine nucleotides [DNA-TG]) in an MP dose–dependent fashion, as a plausible cause of increased toxicity. MP dose reduction effectively normalized systemic exposure to DNA-TG in Nudt15−/− mice and largely eliminated Nudt15 deficiency–mediated toxicity. In 95 children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia, MP dose adjustment also directly led to alteration in DNA-TG levels, the effects of which were proportional to the degree of NUDT15 deficiency. Using leukemia-bearing mice with concordant Nudt15 genotype in leukemia and host, we also confirmed that therapeutic efficacy was preserved in Nudt15−/− mice receiving a reduced MP dose compared with Nudt15+/+ counterparts exposed to a standard dose. In conclusion, we demonstrated that NUDT15 genotype–guided MP dose individualization can preemptively mitigate toxicity without compromising therapeutic efficacy.

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