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Jatinder Lamba

Jatinder Lamba Jatinder Lamba
University of Minnesota, USA
 
TITLE: Pharmacogenomics of AML: A road towards personalized Medicine
 
Abstract

Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is the second most common form of childhood leukemia and has the worst prognosis of all major childhood cancers. Improving the treatment outcome for patients with AML remains a major clinical challenge. The nucleoside analog, cytarabine (ara-C), has been the mainstay of AML chemotherapy for more than 40 years. However, wide inter-patient variation in treatment response, development of resistance, and severe toxicity remain as major hurdles to effective ara-C chemotherapy. Ara-C is a prodrug that requires activation to ara-CTP by multiple phosphorylation steps. Incorporation of ara-CTP in place of dCTP results in chain termination, thereby blocking DNA and RNA synthesis and causing leukemic cell death. Thus, cellular pathways involved in ara-CTP formation and metabolism as well as in ara-CTP mediated cell death are likely to be significant determinants of ara-C treatment response. Inter-patient variation in relevant pharmacokinetic (PK) and pharmacodynamic (PD) genes may impact the clinical response and toxicity among patients receiving ara-C. We have evaluated genes of importance in ara-C chemotherapy and have found that genetic variation in the ara-C pathway genes had similar prognostic relevance as the well-established factors listed above. We will share our results on ara-C pharmcogenomics and its impact on clinical outcome in AM. Overall our results indicate that understanding of genetic variation in key ara-C metabolic pathway genes might be clinically relevant by providing additional explanation of the variability in clinical response beyond known prognostic factors and might have the potential of being additional prognostic markers of clinical outcome.