Haematologica (Jul 2015)

Phase I/II study of the hypoxia-activated prodrug PR104 in refractory/relapsed acute myeloid leukemia and acute lymphoblastic leukemia

  • Marina Konopleva,
  • Peter F. Thall,
  • Cecilia Arana Yi,
  • Gautam Borthakur,
  • Andrew Coveler,
  • Carlos Bueso-Ramos,
  • Juliana Benito,
  • Sergej Konoplev,
  • Yongchuan Gu,
  • Farhad Ravandi,
  • Elias Jabbour,
  • Stefan Faderl,
  • Deborah Thomas,
  • Jorge Cortes,
  • Tapan Kadia,
  • Steven Kornblau,
  • Naval Daver,
  • Naveen Pemmaraju,
  • Hoang Q. Nguyen,
  • Jennie Feliu,
  • Hongbo Lu,
  • Caimiao Wei,
  • William R. Wilson,
  • Teresa J. Melink,
  • John C. Gutheil,
  • Michael Andreeff,
  • Elihu H. Estey,
  • Hagop Kantarjian

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2014.118455
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 100, no. 7

Abstract

Read online

We previously demonstrated vast expansion of hypoxic areas in the leukemic microenvironment and provided a rationale for using hypoxia-activated prodrugs. PR104 is a phosphate ester that is rapidly hydrolyzed in vivo to the corresponding alcohol PR-104A and further reduced to the amine and hydroxyl-amine nitrogen mustards that induce DNA cross-linking in hypoxic cells under low oxygen concentrations. In this phase I/II study, patients with relapsed/refractory acute myeloid leukemia (n=40) after 1 or 2 prior treatments or acute lymphoblastic leukemia (n=10) after any number of prior treatments received PR104; dose ranged from 1.1 to 4 g/m2. The most common treatment-related grade 3/4 adverse events were myelosuppression (anemia 62%, neutropenia 50%, thrombocytopenia 46%), febrile neutropenia (40%), infection (24%), and enterocolitis (14%). Ten of 31 patients with acute myeloid leukemia (32%) and 2 of 10 patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (20%) who received 3 g/m2 or 4 g/m2 had a response (complete response, n=1; complete response without platelet recovery, n=5; morphological leukemia-free state, n=6). The extent of hypoxia was evaluated by the hypoxia tracer pimonidazole administered prior to a bone marrow biopsy and by immunohistochemical assessments of hypoxia-inducible factor alpha and carbonic anhydrase IX. A high fraction of leukemic cells expressed these markers, and PR104 administration resulted in measurable decrease of the proportions of hypoxic cells. These findings indicate that hypoxia is a prevalent feature of the leukemic microenvironment and that targeting hypoxia with hypoxia-activated prodrugs warrants further evaluation in acute leukemia. The trial is registered at clinicaltrials.gov identifier: 01037556.