Upfront menin-inhibitor resistance in multiply pretreated leukemias
- PMID: 41027490
- DOI: 10.1016/j.exphem.2025.105268
Upfront menin-inhibitor resistance in multiply pretreated leukemias
Abstract
Inhibitors of the menin-KMT2A interaction are promising agents for the treatment of KMT2A-rearranged leukemias. We evaluated menin inhibition in patient-derived xenografts of KMT2A-rearranged leukemias with high-risk features. Three acute myeloid leukemias with high-risk fusion partners (mixed-lineage leukemia-10 [MLLT10] and mixed-lineage leukemia-4 [MLLT4]) and two infant acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) samples were sensitive to menin inhibition. We also evaluated serial samples from two patients with multiply relapsed ALL. We found that highly pretreated KMT2A::AFF1 ALL samples were much less sensitive compared with cells obtained earlier in the same patients' disease course. Because none of the patients had been treated with a menin inhibitor, resistance in these highly pretreated samples was acquired in the absence of menin-inhibitor exposure. Transcriptomic analysis documented sustained on-target efficacy toward the canonical targets of the menin inhibitor in resistant cells. Targeted genomic analysis documented the emergence of multiple comutations, including RAS pathway and TP53 mutations, although neither was sufficient to induce menin-inhibitor resistance in vitro. Downregulation of KMT3D may account for resistance in one patient; inactivation of KMT2C/D has been reported to result in menin-inhibitor resistance, and KMT2C-edited cells from this patient were selected for in menin-inhibitor-containing growth conditions. Future studies will need to clarify more broadly which genomic/epigenomic alterations drive upfront resistance. Regardless of mechanism, our data support using menin inhibitors upfront or in early lines of therapy before substantial genomic or epigenomic evolution has occurred.
Copyright © 2025 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of competing interest GMM is an employee and shareholder of Syndax Pharmaceuticals Inc. KMB has previously consulted for Agios and Novartis, and has received research funding from Syndax Pharmaceuticals Inc. CL received a research training grant from Institut Servier. SKT has served on scientific advisory boards for Kura Oncology and Syndax Pharmaceuticals for pediatric clinical development of menin inhibitors and receives research funding from Kura Oncology. She also serves on the scientific advisory board for Aleta Biotherapeutics, receives research funding from Beam Therapeutics and Incyte Corporation, receives travel support from Amgen, and has consulted for bluebird bio for unrelated studies. MPC has been involved as a consultant for Janssen Pharmaceuticals and on the advisory committee for Cartography Biosciences.
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