Login / Signup

Extended experience with a non-cytotoxic DNMT1-targeting regimen of decitabine to treat myeloid malignancies.

Hassan AwadaReda Z MahfouzAshwin KishtagariTeodora KuzmanovicJibran DurraniCassandra M KerrBhumika J PatelValeria VisconteTomas RadivoyevitchAlan LichtinHetty E CarrawayJaroslaw P MaciejewskiYogen Saunthararajah
Published in: British journal of haematology (2019)
The nucleoside analogue decitabine can deplete the epigenetic regulator DNA methyltransferase 1 (DNMT1), an effect that occurs, and is saturated at, low concentrations/doses. A reason to pursue this molecular-targeted effect instead of the DNA damage/cytotoxicity produced with high concentrations/doses, is that non-cytotoxic DNMT1-depletion can cytoreduce even p53-null myeloid malignancies while sparing normal haematopoiesis. We thus identified minimum doses of decitabine (0·1-0·2 mg/kg) that deplete DNMT1 without off-target anti-metabolite effects/cytotoxicity, and then administered these well-tolerated doses frequently 1-2X/week to increase S-phase dependent DNMT1-depletion, and used a Myeloid Malignancy Registry to evaluate long-term outcomes in 69 patients treated this way. Consistent with the scientific rationale, treatment was well-tolerated and durable responses were produced (~40%) in genetically heterogeneous disease and the very elderly.
Keyphrases