Moffitt Cancer Center researchers study use of dasatinib for patients with high-risk MDS
Drug safe but with limited efficacy; those with trisomy 8 chromosomal disorder may benefit
Myelodysplastic syndromes are disorders of the stem cell in bone marrow. The marrow does not produce enough normal blood cells for the body. As the number of quality blood-forming cells declines, blood production is impaired.
According to the researchers, stem cell transplantation is the only potentially curative option for MDS but also has risks of morbidity and mortality. A class of medication called azanucleosides is the only approved medication for patients with an advanced stage of this disease. The outcome after failure of azanucleosides is poor. Therefore, new therapies for MDS are needed, said the study authors.
Dasatinib, a multikinase inhibitor, has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration for patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia. The drug has promising potential because of its activity against a broad spectrum of tyrosine kinases, which are enzymes that function as an 'on' or 'off' switch for many cellular functions, such as increased activation of cell migration, proliferation, survival, invasion and angiogenesis (tumor blood vessel growth).
"This phase II trial was to assess whether dasatinib would be beneficial for patient with higher risk MDS whose previous treatments had failed," said study corresponding author Rami S. Komrokji, M.D., clinical director of Hematologic Malignancies and member of the Chemical Biology and Molecular Medicine Program at Moffitt. "We found that while dasatinib was well-tolerated with limited toxicities, it only had modest activity."
Among 18 patients treated, three patients responded, four had stable disease, and 10 experienced disease progression. They also noted that four of the five participants with trisomy 8, a disorder caused by having three copies of chromosome 8, had stable disease. An observation, they concluded, warrants further investigation.
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