Blood Advances (Jan 2025)

Midostaurin shapes macroclonal and microclonal evolution of FLT3-mutated acute myeloid leukemia

  • Romane Joudinaud,
  • Augustin Boudry,
  • Laurène Fenwarth,
  • Sandrine Geffroy,
  • Mikaël Salson,
  • Hervé Dombret,
  • Céline Berthon,
  • Arnaud Pigneux,
  • Delphine Lebon,
  • Pierre Peterlin,
  • Simon Bouzy,
  • Pascale Flandrin-Gresta,
  • Emmanuelle Tavernier,
  • Martin Carre,
  • Sylvie Tondeur,
  • Lamya Haddaoui,
  • Raphael Itzykson,
  • Sarah Bertoli,
  • Audrey Bidet,
  • Eric Delabesse,
  • Mathilde Hunault,
  • Christian Récher,
  • Claude Preudhomme,
  • Nicolas Duployez,
  • Pierre-Yves Dumas

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 2
pp. 365 – 374

Abstract

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Abstract: Despite the use of midostaurin (MIDO) with intensive chemotherapy (ICT) as frontline treatment for Fms-like tyrosine kinase 3 (FLT3)-mutated acute myeloid leukemia (AML), complete remission rates are close to 60% to 70%, and relapses occur in >40% of cases. Here, we studied the molecular mechanisms underlying refractory/relapsed (R/R) disease in patients with FLT3-mutated AML. We conducted a retrospective and multicenter study involving 150 patients with R/R AML harboring FLT3–internal tandem duplication (ITD) (n = 130) and/or FLT3–tyrosine kinase domain mutation (n = 26) at diagnosis assessed by standard methods. Patients were treated with ICT + MIDO (n = 54) or ICT alone (n = 96) according to the diagnosis date and label of MIDO. The evolution of FLT3 clones and comutations was analyzed in paired diagnosis–R/R samples by targeted high-throughput sequencing. Using a dedicated algorithm for FLT3-ITD detection, 189 FLT3-ITD microclones (allelic ratio [AR] of <0.05) and 225 macroclones (AR ≥ 0.05) were detected at both time points. At R/R disease, the rate of FLT3-ITD persistence was lower in patients treated with ICT + MIDO than in patients not receiving MIDO (68% vs 87.5%; P = .011). In patients receiving ICT + MIDO, detection of multiple FLT3-ITD clones was associated with a higher FLT3-ITD persistence rate at R/R disease (multiple clones: 88% vs single clones: 57%; P = .049). If only 24% of FLT3-ITD microclones detected at diagnosis were retained at relapse, 43% became macroclones. Together, these results identify parameters influencing the fitness of FLT3-ITD clones.