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New England Journal of Medicine

Publication date: 2003-03-01
Volume: 348 Pages: 1201 - 1214
Publisher: Massachusetts Medical Society

Author:

Cools, Jan
DeAngelo, Daniel J ; Gotlib, Jason ; Stover, Elizabeth H ; Legare, Robert D ; Cortes, Jorges ; Kutok, Jeffrey ; Clark, Jennifer ; Galinsky, Ilene ; Griffin, James D ; Cross, Nicholas CP ; Tefferi, Ayalew ; Malone, James ; Alam, Rafeul ; Schrier, Stanley L ; Schmid, Janet ; Rose, Michal ; Vandenberghe, Peter ; Verhoef, Gregor ; Boogaerts, Marc ; Wlodarska, Iwona ; Kantarjian, Hagop ; Marynen, Peter ; Coutre, Steven E ; Stone, Richard ; Gilliland, D Gary

Keywords:

Adult, Base Sequence, Chromosome Deletion, Chromosomes, Human, Pair 4, Enzyme Inhibitors, Female, Humans, Hypereosinophilic Syndrome, Male, Middle Aged, Molecular Sequence Data, Piperazines, Protein-Tyrosine Kinase, Pyrimidines, Recombination, Genetic, Remission Induction, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't, Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S., Science & Technology, Life Sciences & Biomedicine, Medicine, General & Internal, General & Internal Medicine, CHRONIC MYELOID-LEUKEMIA, CHRONIC MYELOMONOCYTIC LEUKEMIA, BCR-ABL, CLINICAL RESISTANCE, RECEPTOR-BETA, BLAST CRISIS, IN-VITRO, C-KIT, GROWTH, INHIBITOR, Benzamides, Imatinib Mesylate, Protein-Tyrosine Kinases, 11 Medical and Health Sciences, 32 Biomedical and clinical sciences, 42 Health sciences

Abstract:

BACKGROUND: Idiopathic hypereosinophilic syndrome involves a prolonged state of eosinophilia associated with organ dysfunction. It is of unknown cause. Recent reports of responses to imatinib in patients with the syndrome suggested that an activated kinase such as ABL, platelet-derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR), or KIT, all of which are inhibited by imatinib, might be the cause. METHODS: We treated 11 patients with the hypereosinophilic syndrome with imatinib and identified the molecular basis for the response. RESULTS: Nine of the 11 patients treated with imatinib had responses lasting more than three months in which the eosinophil count returned to normal. One such patient had a complex chromosomal abnormality, leading to the identification of a fusion of the Fip1-like 1 (FIP1L1) gene to the PDGFRalpha (PDGFRA) gene generated by an interstitial deletion on chromosome 4q12. FIP1L1-PDGFRalpha is a constitutively activated tyrosine kinase that transforms hematopoietic cells and is inhibited by imatinib (50 percent inhibitory concentration, 3.2 nM). The FIP1L1-PDGFRA fusion gene was subsequently detected in 9 of 16 patients with the syndrome and in 5 of the 9 patients with responses to imatinib that lasted more than three months. Relapse in one patient correlated with the appearance of a T674I mutation in PDGFRA that confers resistance to imatinib. CONCLUSIONS: The hypereosinophilic syndrome may result from a novel fusion tyrosine kinase - FIP1L1-PDGFRalpha - that is a consequence of an interstitial chromosomal deletion. The acquisition of a T674I resistance mutation at the time of relapse demonstrates that FIP1L1-PDGFRalpha is the target of imatinib. Our data indicate that the deletion of genetic material may result in gain-of-function fusion proteins.