The only curative treatment for CML is a bone marrow transplant or an allogeneic stem cell transplant. Other than this there are four major mainstays of treatment in CML: treatment with tyrosine kinase inhibitors, myelosuppressive or
leukapheresis therapy (to counteract the
leukocytosis during early treatment),
splenectomy and
interferon alfa-2b treatment.
Chronic phase In the past,
antimetabolites (e.g.,
cytarabine,
hydroxyurea),
alkylating agents,
interferon alfa 2b, and
steroids were used as treatments of CML in the chronic phase, but since the 2000s have been replaced by
Bcr-Abl tyrosine-kinase inhibitors drugs that specifically target BCR-ABL, the constitutively activated tyrosine kinase fusion protein caused by the
Philadelphia chromosome translocation. Despite the move to replace cytotoxic antineoplastics (standard anticancer drugs) with tyrosine kinase inhibitors, sometimes hydroxyurea is still used to counteract the high leukocyte counts encountered during treatment with tyrosine kinase inhibitors like imatinib; in these situations, it may be the preferred myelosuppressive agent due to its relative lack of leukemogenic effects and hence the relative lack of potential for secondary haematologic malignancies to result from treatment. IRIS, an international study that compared interferon/cytarabine combination and the first of these new drugs imatinib, with long-term follow up, demonstrated the clear superiority of tyrosine-kinase-targeted inhibition over existing treatments.
Imatinib The first of this new class of drugs was
imatinib mesylate (marketed as Gleevec or Glivec), approved by the US
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 2001. Imatinib was found to inhibit the progression of CML in the majority of patients (65–75%) sufficiently to achieve regrowth of their normal bone marrow stem cell population (a cytogenetic response) with stable proportions of maturing white blood cells. Because some leukemic cells (as evaluated by
RT-PCR) persist in nearly all patients, the treatment has to be continued indefinitely. Since the advent of imatinib, CML has become the first cancer in which a standard medical treatment may give the patient a normal life expectancy.
Dasatinib, nilotinib, radotinib, bosutinib, and asciminib To overcome imatinib resistance and to increase responsiveness to TK inhibitors, four novel agents were later developed. The first,
dasatinib, blocks several further oncogenic proteins, in addition to more potent inhibition of the BCR-ABL protein, and was approved in 2007 by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to treat CML in people who were either resistant to or intolerant of imatinib. A second TK inhibitor,
nilotinib, was approved by the FDA for the same indication. In 2010, nilotinib and dasatinib were also approved for first-line therapy, making three drugs in this class available for the treatment of newly diagnosed CML. In 2012,
radotinib joined the class of novel agents in the inhibition of the BCR-ABL protein and was approved in South Korea for people resistant to or intolerant of imatinib.
Bosutinib received US FDA and EU European Medicines Agency approval on 4 September 2012 and 27 March 2013, respectively, for the treatment of adults with Philadelphia chromosome-positive (Ph+) chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) with resistance or intolerance to prior therapy.
Asciminib (Scemblix) was approved for medical use in the United States in October 2021.
Treatment-resistant CML While capable of producing significantly improved responses compared with the action of imatinib, neither dasatinib nor nilotinib could overcome drug resistance caused by one particular mutation found to occur in the structure of BCR-ABL1 known as the T315I mutation (in other words, where the 315th amino acid is mutated from a
threonine residue to an
isoleucine residue). Two approaches were developed for the treatment of CML as a result: In 2007,
Chemgenex released results of an open-label Phase 2/3 study (CGX-635-CML-202) that investigated the use of a non BCR-ABL targeted agent
omacetaxine, administered subcutaneously (under the skin) in patients who had failed with imatinib and exhibited T315I kinase domain mutation. This is a study which is ongoing through 2014. In September 2012, the FDA approved omacetaxine for the treatment of CML in the case of resistance to other chemotherapeutic agents. Independently, ARIAD Pharmaceuticals, adapting the chemical structures from first and second-generation TK inhibitors, arrived at a new pan-BCR-ABL1 inhibitor which showed (for the first time) efficacy against T315I, as well as all other known mutations of the oncoprotein. The drug,
ponatinib, gained FDA approval in December 2012 for the treatment of patients with resistant or intolerant CML. Just as with second-generation TK inhibitors, early approval is being sought to also extend the use of ponatinib to newly diagnosed CML patients. In October 2021, the Food and Drug Administration approved
asciminib (Scemblix), the first TK inhibitor specifically targeting the ABL1 myristoyl pocket (STAMP) via allosteric binding, as a third-line option for patients with chronic-phase CML.
Vaccination In 2005, encouraging but mixed results of
vaccination were reported with the
BCR/ABL1 p210 fusion protein in patients with stable disease, with
GM-CSF as an adjuvant. ==Prognosis==