Chan Tze Wei, Hein Than, Feng-Ju Huang, Gauri Billa, Lai Heng Lee
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Myelofibrosis (MF) is characterized by anemia, constitutional symptoms, hepatosplenomegaly and bone marrow fibrosis, and is associated with poor survival. The janus kinase inhibitor (JAKi) ruxolitinib has been the mainstay of treatment for over a decade. Despite demonstrated symptomatic and quality of life improvement, unmet clinical needs persist. A literature review identified promising novel targeted treatment options in MF using pre-set selection criteria (available Phase 2 or 3 data, minimum enrollment of 50 patients, trial end date within the last 5 years). Available data for novel and approved therapies were extracted, tabulated, and analyzed for clinical relevancy. From an initial shortlist of 48, 16 retained molecules were selected for inclusion. Other JAKi (pacritinib, momelotinib, jaktinib) address treatment-related cytopenia, expanding the therapeutic utility of this class of agents to patients with baseline anemia or thrombocytopenia. Novel candidates exploit multiple molecular pathways, and offer the potential to improve the management of MF-associated cytopenia (imetelstat, pelabresib, navitoclax, selinexor, luspatercept, sotatercept, elritercept, LCL161, bomedemstat) and recover bone marrow fibrosis (imetelstat, pelabresib, navitoclax and bomedemstat). It remains to be seen if these newer agents can induce any remission in MF and enable patients to come off therapy, but the future is beginning to look much brighter.
期刊介绍:
Hematological Oncology considers for publication articles dealing with experimental and clinical aspects of neoplastic diseases of the hemopoietic and lymphoid systems and relevant related matters. Translational studies applying basic science to clinical issues are particularly welcomed. Manuscripts dealing with the following areas are encouraged:
-Clinical practice and management of hematological neoplasia, including: acute and chronic leukemias, malignant lymphomas, myeloproliferative disorders
-Diagnostic investigations, including imaging and laboratory assays
-Epidemiology, pathology and pathobiology of hematological neoplasia of hematological diseases
-Therapeutic issues including Phase 1, 2 or 3 trials as well as allogeneic and autologous stem cell transplantation studies
-Aspects of the cell biology, molecular biology, molecular genetics and cytogenetics of normal or diseased hematopoeisis and lymphopoiesis, including stem cells and cytokines and other regulatory systems.
Concise, topical review material is welcomed, especially if it makes new concepts and ideas accessible to a wider community. Proposals for review material may be discussed with the Editor-in-Chief. Collections of case material and case reports will be considered only if they have broader scientific or clinical relevance.