Hi Michelle,
the recommended dose of imatinib for chronic phase CML is 400mg. If this is well tolerated and the patient takes the drug consistantly there is every reason to be confident that they will see an optimal response...i.e HR within 3 months; CR at 6 months CCyr at 12 months. However some patients are slow responders and may take longer to achieve the desired goal of CCyR (complete cytogenetic response).
However, a small % of patients do show some form of suboptimal response and a further % do fail to show any response at all.
A sub-optimal response (note that this does not mean failure to respond)is apparent in a small number of patients and there can be several reasons for this.
a. Adherence... taking the drug every day and not taking 'holidays' now matter how good your pcr ratio is.
b. some form of drug to drug interaction (if other medication is being taken) and/or food interaction which cause incomplete absorption.
c. individual pharmacokinetic profile... which means that you might need a higher dose than standard for reasons peculiar to your individual metabolism.
Adjusting the dose can and often does solve sub-optimal responses.
resistance:
it is thought that if you take less than 400mg you may have a consistantly low plasma level of imatinib (less than 1000 ng.per mil) with the risk of assisting some sort of resistant mechanism.. whether it be a breakpoint mutation or futher clonal abberations, amongst other things, within the ph+ cell.
If resistance is identified there are other TKI's that are now available for such patients.
If you read some of the articles under the Newswire section or under News and/or essential reading you will find lots of information.
Do read the Leukaemia Insight Newsletter from MDACC... again under newswire and the excellent webcast by Jorge Cortez called Monitoring and Adherence in CML.
Sandy