학술논문

Impact of Cytarabine Pharmacogenomics on Survival of Adolescent and Young Adults with AML and Its Clinical Relevance in Black Patients
Document Type
Article
Source
Blood; November 2023, Vol. 142 Issue: 1, Number 1 Supplement 1 p2954-2954, 1p
Subject
Language
ISSN
00064971; 15280020
Abstract
Cytarabine (also known as ara-C) has been the mainstay of AML chemotherapy for both pediatric and adult patients (pts) since 1970s, and when given in combination with anthracycline it induces remission in ~60% of adult and 80% of pediatric pts. However, almost ~40% of pts relapse. Cytarabine is a prodrug requiring activation to ara-CTP for its antileukemic effect. Our group has been investigating the relevance of cytarabine pharmacogenomics and recently reported a pharmacogenomics-based polygenic score (ACS10) that includes 10 SNPs spanning 9 genes within metabolic pathway of cytarabine. ACS10 is predictive of intracellular levels of ara-CTP as well as outcome in pediatric AML pts enrolled in multiple clinical trials led by St Jude Children's Research Hospital and Children's Oncology Group (Elsayed et al, JCO2022;40:772-3). Overall, pediatric AML pts with ACS10 low(≤0), had inferior outcomes compared with ACS10 highpts. Thus far, the ACS10 score has not been tested for its performance in adult AML, especially adolescent and young adult (AYA) AML pts. We hypothesized that ACS10 might be predictive of chemotherapy resistance in this defined pt population that is commonly treated with intensive induction therapy. Moreover, as several SNPs included in ACS10 show ancestry-enrichments, we speculated whether this might help explain the high resistance to treatment recently observed in Black AYA AML pts.