Article
Long-term outcomes of 107 patients with myelofibrosis receiving JAK1/JAK2 inhibitor ruxolitinib: survival advantage in comparison to matched historical controls.
Department of Leukemia, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
Blood (impact factor:
9.9).
06/2012;
120(6):1202-9.
DOI:10.1182/blood-2012-02-414631
pp.1202-9
Source: PubMed
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Citations (0)
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Dataset: Dysregulation of JAK-STAT pathway in hematological malignancies and JAK inhibitors for clinical application
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ABSTRACT: JAK-STAT (Janus associated kinase-signal transducer and activator of transcription) pathway plays a critical role in transduction of extracellular signals from cytokines and growth factors involved in hematopoiesis, immune regulation, fertility, lactation, growth and embryogenesis. JAK family contains four cytoplasmic tyrosine kinases, JAK1-3 and Tyk2. Seven STAT proteins have been identified in human cells, STAT1-6, including STAT5a and STAT5b. Negative regulators of JAK–STAT pathways include tyrosine phosphatases (SHP1 and 2, CD45), protein inhibitors of activated STATs (PIAS), suppressors of cytokine signaling (SOCS) proteins, and cytokine-inducible SH2-containing protein (CIS). Dysregulation of JAK-STAT pathway have been found to be key events in a variety of hematological malignancies. JAK inhibitors are among the first successful agents reaching clinical application. Ruxolitinib (Jakafi), a non-selective inhibitor of JAK1 & 2, has been approved by FDA for patients with intermediate to high risk primary or secondary myelofibrosis. This review will also summarize early data on selective JAK inhibitors, including SAR302503 (TG101348), lestaurtinib (CEP701), CYT387, SB1518 (pacritinib), LY2784544, XL019, BMS-911543, NS-018, and AZD1480.
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Keywords
107 MDACC patients
155 ruxolitinib-treated patients
3 years
32 months
51 patients
58 patients
clinical benefit
continued therapy
discontinuation rates
high-risk MF
high-risk subgroup
long-term therapy
MD Anderson Cancer Center
MDACC patients
optimal doses contributes
Patients
phase 1/2 trial
phase 3 COMFORT-I study
splenomegaly
symptom reductions