Novel treatments for myelofibrosis: beyond JAK inhibitors.
Douglas TremblayRuben A MesaPublished in: International journal of hematology (2022)
Myelofibrosis is a chronic hematologic malignancy characterized by constitutional symptoms, bone marrow fibrosis, extramedullary hematopoiesis resulting in splenomegaly and a propensity toward leukemic progression. Given the central role of the JAK-STAT pathway in the pathobiology of myelofibrosis, JAK inhibitors are the mainstay of current pharmacologic management. Although these therapies have produced meaningful improvements in splenomegaly and symptom burden, JAK inhibitors do not significantly impact disease progression. In addition, many patients are ineligible because of disease-related cytopenias, which are exacerbated by JAK inhibitors. Therefore, there is a continued effort to identify targets outside the JAK-STAT pathway. In this review, we discuss novel therapies in development for myelofibrosis. We focus on the preclinical rationale, efficacy and safety data for non-JAK inhibitor therapies that have published or presented clinical data. Specifically, we discuss agents that target epigenetic modification (pelabresib, bomedemstat), apoptosis (navitoclax, navtemdalin), signaling pathways (parsaclisib), bone marrow fibrosis (AVID200, PRM-151), in addition to other targets including telomerase (imetelstat), selective inhibitor of nuclear transport (selinexor), CD123 (tagraxofusp) and erythroid maturation (luspatercept). We end by providing commentary on the ongoing and future therapeutic development in myelofibrosis.
Keyphrases
- bone marrow
- mesenchymal stem cells
- end stage renal disease
- electronic health record
- signaling pathway
- gene expression
- chronic kidney disease
- dna methylation
- big data
- oxidative stress
- acute myeloid leukemia
- peritoneal dialysis
- prognostic factors
- newly diagnosed
- randomized controlled trial
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cell therapy
- cell proliferation
- machine learning
- pi k akt
- induced apoptosis
- patient reported outcomes