Patients with poor-risk acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) had promising rates of response and survival following treatment with a statin added to standard chemotherapy, researchers reported.
Pravastatin in combination with idarubicin and cytarabine had a 30% response rate in poor-risk AML patients, according to Anjali S. Advani, MD, of the Taussig Cancer Institute at the Cleveland Clinic, and her coauthors.
Although that response rate did not meet a prespecified threshold for statistical significance, results of the phase 2 study were nevertheless “encouraging” for a group of patients with unfavorable cytogenetics and poor-risk molecular mutations, the researchers wrote. The study was published in Leukemia Research.
The estimated median overall survival was 4.1 months in the phase 2 trial, known as SWOG S0919. About one-quarter of the patients were able to proceed to allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant, and for that group, median overall survival was 27.1 months.
These findings appear to provide further support for the hypothesis that targeting the cholesterol pathway may be a promising approach in patients with AML.
Some previous investigations suggested that AML blasts overexpress genes for lipoprotein receptors and regulatory enzymes, while others showed that these cells import and synthesize cholesterol at levels higher than what is seen in normal progenitor cells. In addition, some AML patients have hypocholesterolemia that usually resolves when they achieve a complete remission.
“These observations suggest that AML cells may require high levels of cholesterol for their survival and that abnormalities in cholesterol homeostasis are necessary for AML cell survival,” the researchers wrote.