Despite considerable advances, the emergence of treatment resistance to tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) therapy remains a significant challenge in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). Here, we report the first clinical case of resistance to combined ponatinib and asciminib therapy in a CML patient who relapsed with B lymphoblastic blast crisis. While at presentation the patient harbored the canonical e13a2 BCR::ABL1 fusion, at relapse his disease harbored the T315I mutation together with a novel e6a3 BCR::ABL1 fusion, arisen by internal deletion in the original translocated allele. Structural modeling and biochemical analyses demonstrated that deletion of exon 2–encoded residues of ABL1 destabilizes the autoinhibited conformation, resulting in a hyperactive kinase with increased propensity for B-cell differentiation. Functional studies revealed that both BCR::ABL1e6a3 and BCR::ABL1e6a3/T315I conferred resistance to ponatinib and asciminib, alone or in combination. BCR::ABL1e6a3 demonstrated enhanced sensitivity to active-state selective inhibitors dasatinib and bosutinib, whereas BCR::ABL1e6a3/T315I remained resistant. Combined drug sensitivity assays showed that axitinib restored inhibitory activity when combined with ponatinib or asciminib. Strikingly, a combination of axitinib and asciminib with low dose ponatinib fully suppressed enzymatic activity of BCR::ABL1e6a3/T315I and cellular proliferation. These data show that treatment with asciminib and ponatinib can select for mutations with notably elevated enzymatic activity, effectively targeted by an axitinib-based triple combination. These data highlight the remarkable mutability of the BCR::ABL1 kinase, including through novel isoforms and provides a strong rationale for the clinical assessment of a triple inhibitor combination as a strategy to overcome resistance to dual ponatinib and asciminib therapy.
Competing Interest StatementThe authors have declared no competing interest.
Funding StatementThis study was supported by grants to MA from the National Cancer Institutes at NIH (RO1CA211594) and (RO1CA250516).
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Massachusetts General Hospital Institutional Review Board waived ethical approval of research using decedent medical record information and discarded/excess decedent specimens from clinical use.
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