The Journal of the Arkansas Medical Society Med Journal Feb 2020_Final | Page 13

Table 1 Classification Detectable BCR-ABL1 transcript disease to ABL1 transcript ratio MR2 ≤ 1% ≤ 1:100 Log reduction Optimal duration of therapy to reach classification 2 6 months MR3 ≤ .1% ≤ 1:1000 3 12 months MR 4 ≤ .01% ≤ 1:10000 4 Anytime MR 4.5 ≤ .0032% ≤ 1:32000 4.5 Anytime lecular testing with standardized real quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RQ-PCR); sensitivity is high for low-level residual disease (10-4 to 10- 5). Molecular response is assessed in accordance with international scale (IS) as ratio of BCR-ABL1 transcripts to ABL1 transcripts or other inter- nationally recognized control transcripts and reported as BCR-ABL1% on a log scale 3 (Table 1). Long-term follow-up has been published for imatinib cohort (median – 10.9 years), which confirms excellent outcome. Ten-year overall sur- vival was 83.3%; more importantly, CML specif- ic survival was better in patients attaining major molecular response at 12 and 18 months (MR3). Despite these impressive results, about one-third of patients need improved outcomes. 18 percent of patients did not achieve complete cytogenetic response; Table 10 percent of patients who attain com- plete cytogenetic response lose their response, and 4 to 8% of patients are intolerant to imatinib therapy. Niltoinib, when compared with imatinib, resulted in earlier and higher rates of major mo- lecular response and lower risk of progression to accelerated phase or blast. Long-term follow-up confirmed improved response (MR4.5) 54% and 52% in two nilotinib arms compared to 31% with imatinib. Long-term toxicities were not signifi- cantly different, making this a valuable option.5-7 Our patient achieved and maintained complete molecular response (MR4.5). Our patient tolerated nilotinib therapy without significant toxicities. Asymptomatic and transient elevations of pancreatic enzymes that were noted resolved without dose reduction or discontinua- tion of nilotinib. Asymptomatic elevations in pan- We provide peace of mind so you can, too. creatic enzymes have been observed in approxi- mately one-third of patients, including grade 3-4 in 18% of patients, which is usually not associated with acute pancreatitis. Median time from start of nilotinib to elevation of pancreatic enzymes was three months. Pancreatic enzyme elevation was isolated or transient in most patients. Occasion- al drug interruption was necessary. 8 The under- lying reason is unclear; suggested mechanisms include inhibition of non-receptor tyrosine kinase C-abl, calcium release from intracellular stores, and accumulation of fatty acids in the acinar cell. 9 Acute pancreatitis is much less common, around 1%, and occurs relatively early after start of ni- lotinib. Acute pancreatitis has been observed after initiation of other tyrosine kinase inhibitors in therapy of CML and other malignancies. De- layed occurrence of pancreatitis has not been reported thus far. 8-11 Acute abdominal symptoms, magnitude of pancreatic enzyme elevation, and CT imaging was consistent with the diagnosis of acute pancreatitis on Atlanta criteria and graded as mild, based on revised Atlanta criteria. 12 The patient was diagnosed with acute drug-induced pancreatitis by exclusion of other causes. Drugs account for 2% of cases, usually mild to moder- ate, and resolve with the discontinuation of drugs. Your Northwest Arkansas Health Law Team We’ve been addressing the legal needs of the Arkansas healthcare industry for almost 120 years. • Medicare/Medicaid Reimbursement • Licensure Matters & Board Hearings • Contracts & Business Transactions • Privileging & Peer Review • Stark I and II & Anti-Kickback Compliance • Government Regulations • Operations & Management • Medical Device & Pharmaceutical Products Defense Volume 116 • Number 8 • Employment Issues • HIPAA Compliance & Training • Medical Malpractice Defense Rogers Little Rock wlj.com • Drug Diversion Prevention february 2020 • 161