4.6 Review

Next Generation Therapeutics for the Treatment of Myelofibrosis

期刊

CELLS
卷 10, 期 5, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells10051034

关键词

myelofibrosis; BET; BCL-2; xL; LSD1; telomerase; TGFb; MDM2; CD123; PI3K; PRM-151; Aurora kinase

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Myelofibrosis is a myeloproliferative neoplasm characterized by symptoms such as splenomegaly and transformation to acute leukemia. Current treatment with JAK inhibitors has limitations in impacting disease progression, leading to exploration of non-JAK inhibitor-based therapies targeting various mechanisms. Further research is needed to improve therapeutic options for myelofibrosis.
Myelofibrosis is a myeloproliferative neoplasm characterized by splenomegaly, constitutional symptoms, bone marrow fibrosis, and a propensity towards transformation to acute leukemia. JAK inhibitors are the only approved therapy for myelofibrosis and have been successful in reducing spleen and symptom burden. However, they do not significantly impact disease progression and many patients are ineligible due to coexisting cytopenias. Patients who are refractory to JAK inhibition also have a dismal survival. Therefore, non-JAK inhibitor-based therapies are being explored in pre-clinical and clinical settings. In this review, we discuss novel treatments in development for myelofibrosis with targets outside of the JAK-STAT pathway. We focus on the mechanism, preclinical rationale, and available clinical efficacy and safety information of relevant agents including those that target apoptosis (navitoclax, KRT-232, LCL-161, imetelstat), epigenetic modulation (CPI-0610, bomedemstat), the bone marrow microenvironment (PRM-151, AVID-200, alisertib), signal transduction pathways (parsaclisib), and miscellaneous agents (tagraxofusp. luspatercept). We also provide commentary on the future of therapeutic development in myelofibrosis.

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