BCR-ABL1 compound mutations combining key kinase domain positions confer clinical resistance to ponatinib in Ph chromosome-positive leukemia.

Journal: Cancer Cell
Published:
Abstract

Ponatinib is the only currently approved tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) that suppresses all BCR-ABL1 single mutants in Philadelphia chromosome-positive (Ph(+)) leukemia, including the recalcitrant BCR-ABL1(T315I) mutant. However, emergence of compound mutations in a BCR-ABL1 allele may confer ponatinib resistance. We found that clinically reported BCR-ABL1 compound mutants center on 12 key positions and confer varying resistance to imatinib, nilotinib, dasatinib, ponatinib, rebastinib, and bosutinib. T315I-inclusive compound mutants confer high-level resistance to TKIs, including ponatinib. In vitro resistance profiling was predictive of treatment outcomes in Ph(+) leukemia patients. Structural explanations for compound mutation-based resistance were obtained through molecular dynamics simulations. Our findings demonstrate that BCR-ABL1 compound mutants confer different levels of TKI resistance, necessitating rational treatment selection to optimize clinical outcome.

Authors
Matthew Zabriskie, Christopher Eide, Srinivas Tantravahi, Nadeem Vellore, Johanna Estrada, Franck Nicolini, Hanna Khoury, Richard Larson, Marina Konopleva, Jorge Cortes, Hagop Kantarjian, Elias Jabbour, Steven Kornblau, Jeffrey Lipton, Delphine Rea, Leif Stenke, Gisela Barbany, Thoralf Lange, Juan-carlos Hernández Boluda, Gert Ossenkoppele, Richard Press, Charles Chuah, Stuart Goldberg, Meir Wetzler, Francois-xavier Mahon, Gabriel Etienne, Michele Baccarani, Simona Soverini, Gianantonio Rosti, Philippe Rousselot, Ran Friedman, Marie Deininger, Kimberly Reynolds, William Heaton, Anna Eiring, Anthony Pomicter, Jamshid Khorashad, Todd Kelley, Riccardo Baron, Brian Druker, Michael Deininger, Thomas O'hare