Patients with mutant AML are routinely treated in the upfront setting with chemotherapy plus midostaurin, a multitargeted tyrosine kinase with FLT3 inhibitory activity.3 Patients with relapsed or refractory mutant AML can be treated with gilteritinib, a more specific and relatively well-tolerated FLT3 inhibitor, based on results of a clinical trial showing superior survival with gilteritinb compared to conventional chemotherapy.4 Unfortunately, despite the successes with midostaurin and gilteritinib in clinical trials, patients with mutant AML frequently relapse after such therapies and are thus in need of new agents. with an adverse prognosis); the remaining mutations are point mutations in the tyrosine kinase domain.2 Both mutations result in spontaneous dimerization and activation of the enzyme without the need for cognate ligand binding. Patients with mutant AML are routinely treated in the upfront setting with chemotherapy plus midostaurin, a multitargeted tyrosine kinase with FLT3 inhibitory activity.3 Patients with relapsed or refractory mutant AML can be treated with gilteritinib, a more specific and relatively well-tolerated FLT3 inhibitor, based on results of a clinical trial showing superior survival with gilteritinb compared to conventional chemotherapy.4 Unfortunately, despite the successes with midostaurin and gilteritinib in clinical trials, patients with mutant AML frequently relapse after such therapies and are thus in need of new agents. The study of the mechanisms of resistance to FLT3 inhibitory therapy in AML is an important strategy to derive additional therapies. Patients who fail to respond or relapse after responding to gilteritinib frequently have mutations in the RAF-MAP-ERK downstream pathway.5 While there are no inhibitors of this pathway in use for leukemia, this would be one strategy to employ in combination with FLT3 inhibitors to forestall or eliminate such resistance. Levis and E-4031 dihydrochloride colleagues have suggested that bromodomain inhibition in combination with FLT3 inhibition ERCC3 could potentially be a useful way to overcome resistance to single-agent FLT3 inhibitory therapy (show that a novel BET inhibitor, “type”:”entrez-protein”,”attrs”:”text”:”PLX51107″,”term_id”:”1321741095″,”term_text”:”PLX51107″PLX51107, achieved the goal of adequate MYC suppression in humans, thereby making it an attractive agent to combine with FLT3 inhibitors.8 Could MYC downregulation with its associated decrease in cell cycle progression be useful in combination with FLT3 inhibitors such as the FLT3 ITD specific and potent agent, quizartinib? Lee make the important point that, while previous work had demonstrated synergistic cytotoxic effect of the BET inhibitor JQ1 and a FLT3 inhibitor, these experiments were performed in cell suspension culture which fails to faithfully reproduce the clinical situation. Blasts preferentially survive in the bone marrow stroma bathed in cytokines released by endothelial and other support cells. The authors of the current work showed that “type”:”entrez-protein”,”attrs”:”text”:”PXL51107″,”term_id”:”1396550076″,”term_text”:”PXL51107″PXL51107 has single-agent activity against the FLT3 ITD containing human leukemia cell lines MV4-11 and MOLM14 E-4031 dihydrochloride in culture E-4031 dihydrochloride and in murine xenograft models but has no independent FLT3 inhibitory activity. This activity was synergistically increased when quizartinib was given in combination in the MV4-11 xenograft model or in primary AML cells co-cultured with bone marrow stroma. Further, plasma samples obtained from patients on a clinical trial of single-agent “type”:”entrez-protein”,”attrs”:”text”:”PLX51107″,”term_id”:”1321741095″,”term_text”:”PLX51107″PLX51107 display MYC inhibition activity, suggesting that this agent possesses the requisite properties to achieve the goal of downregulation of pro-survival cytokines, making it a good candidate to combine with FLT3 inhibitors. In summary, the preclinical work described by Lee supports an eventual trial of a BET inhibitor in combination with a FLT3 inhibitor in patients with mutant AML.8 The idea is to injure the malignant cells with a FLT3 inhibitor and deprive them of their comfort zone with the BET inhibitor. With an increase in potentially useful molecules in AML, the solid pre-clinical studies such as those described by Lee em et al. /em 8 are needed to choose the most potentially useful combinations for clinical use. Supplementary Material Disclosures and ContributionsClick here to view.(6.0K, pdf).About 30% of AML patients have malignant cells whose DNA harbors a mutation in the gene, encoding a transmembrane tyrosine kinase that transmits mitogenic signals from the extracellular space to the nucleus.2 Three-quarters of the mutations encode a duplication of from 3 to 100 amino acids in the juxtamembrane region (which is associated with an adverse prognosis); the remaining mutations are point mutations in the tyrosine kinase domain.2 Both mutations result in spontaneous dimerization and activation of the enzyme without the need for cognate ligand binding. with FLT3 inhibitory activity.3 Patients with relapsed or refractory mutant AML can be treated with gilteritinib, a more specific and relatively well-tolerated FLT3 inhibitor, based on results of a clinical trial showing superior survival with gilteritinb compared to conventional chemotherapy.4 Unfortunately, despite the successes with midostaurin and gilteritinib in clinical trials, patients with mutant AML frequently relapse after such therapies and are thus in need of new agents. The study of the mechanisms E-4031 dihydrochloride of resistance to FLT3 inhibitory therapy in AML is an important strategy to derive additional therapies. Patients who fail to respond or relapse after responding to gilteritinib frequently have mutations in the RAF-MAP-ERK downstream pathway.5 While there are no inhibitors of this pathway in use for leukemia, this would be one strategy to employ in combination with FLT3 inhibitors to forestall or eliminate such resistance. Levis and colleagues have suggested that bromodomain inhibition in combination with FLT3 inhibition could potentially be a useful way to overcome resistance to single-agent FLT3 inhibitory therapy (show that a novel BET inhibitor, “type”:”entrez-protein”,”attrs”:”text”:”PLX51107″,”term_id”:”1321741095″,”term_text”:”PLX51107″PLX51107, achieved the goal of adequate MYC suppression in humans, thereby making it an attractive agent to combine with FLT3 inhibitors.8 Could MYC downregulation with its associated decrease in cell cycle progression be useful in combination with FLT3 inhibitors such as the FLT3 ITD specific and potent agent, quizartinib? Lee make the important point that, while previous work had demonstrated synergistic cytotoxic effect of the BET inhibitor JQ1 and a FLT3 inhibitor, these experiments were performed in cell suspension culture which fails to faithfully reproduce the clinical situation. Blasts preferentially survive in the bone marrow stroma bathed in cytokines released by endothelial and other support cells. The authors of the current work showed that “type”:”entrez-protein”,”attrs”:”text”:”PXL51107″,”term_id”:”1396550076″,”term_text”:”PXL51107″PXL51107 has single-agent activity against the FLT3 ITD containing human leukemia cell lines MV4-11 and MOLM14 in culture and in murine xenograft models but has no independent FLT3 inhibitory activity. This activity was synergistically increased when quizartinib was given in combination in the MV4-11 xenograft model or in primary AML cells co-cultured with bone marrow stroma. Further, plasma samples obtained from patients on a clinical trial of single-agent “type”:”entrez-protein”,”attrs”:”text”:”PLX51107″,”term_id”:”1321741095″,”term_text”:”PLX51107″PLX51107 display MYC inhibition activity, suggesting that this agent possesses the requisite properties to achieve the goal E-4031 dihydrochloride of downregulation of pro-survival cytokines, making it a good candidate to combine with FLT3 inhibitors. In summary, the preclinical work described by Lee supports an eventual trial of a BET inhibitor in combination with a FLT3 inhibitor in patients with mutant AML.8 The idea is to injure the malignant cells with a FLT3 inhibitor and deprive them of their comfort zone with the BET inhibitor. With an increase in potentially useful molecules in AML, the solid pre-clinical studies such as those described by Lee em et al. /em 8 are needed to choose the most potentially useful combinations for clinical use. Supplementary Material Disclosures and ContributionsClick here to view.(6.0K, pdf).