New developments in the treatment of acute myeloid leukemia.

Abstract

Item does not contain fulltextRemission induction therapy fails in 20-30% of the patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) despite dose intensification and the use of new and more effective drugs. Primary and acquired drug resistance, metabolic or kinetic are a fundamental problem. Expression of the P-glycoprotein in AML is correlated with therapeutic outcome. Randomized clinical studies with Pgp modulators are currently on-going. Ara-C and anthracyclines, are preferentially cytotoxic to proliferating cells. Proliferation induction of leukemia blasts with growth factors in vitro resulted in an increased toxicity of Ara-C and anthracyclines. Normal hematopoietic blast cells with a high Pgp expression are noncycling and less sensitive to anthracyclines, in contrast to the more proliferating cells with a low Pgp expression. Proliferation induction by growth factors results in a down regulation of Pgp expression. Priming of leukemic cells with growth factors in vivo might be promising and randomized clinical studies are warranted

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    Last time updated on 29/05/2021