Haematologica
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Haematologica, Vol 92, Issue 1, e9-e10 doi:10.3324/haematol.10935
Copyright © 2007 by Ferrata Storti Foundation
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Two successful pregnancies in a chronic myeloid leukemia patient treated with imatinib

L. Garderet1,, R. Santacruz1, V. Barbu2, J. van den Akker2, B. Carbonne3, N.C. Gorin1

1 Department of Hematology, Saint Antoine Hospital, Paris, France
2 Department of Molecular Biology, Saint Antoine Hospital, Paris, France
3 Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics, Saint Antoine Hospital, Paris, France

Correspondence: Garderet Laurent, Hôpital Saint Antoine, Service d’hématologie, 184, rue du Faubourg Saint Antoine, 75012 Paris Tel: + 33 (0)1 49 28 20 00, Fax: + 33 (0)1 49 28 32 00


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The number of CML patients in child-bearing age and treated with imatinib is increasing. These women may want to be pregnant or are actually pregnant while on imatinib. Physicians do not know when to stop the treatment and what the risks are for the foetus and the mother. We report a case of a CML patient treated with imatinib who has two children, now 3 years and 10 months of age, in good health. The mother was in complete molecular remission, relapsed during pregnancy and reverted to remission in both cases after delivery.

Key words: Chronic Myeloid Leukemia, imatinib mesylate, pregnancy.

Imatinib mesylate is now standard therapy for patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) 1. One area where there is limited information is the potential effect that imatinib may have on the developing fetus. Many young female patients are currently being treated with imatinib and they frequently face the dilemma of conception and pregnancy while receiving imatinib.

In a preclinical study, the drug was found to be teratogenic in mice but not in rabbits 2. Consequently, it was recommended that effective contraception be used during imatinib therapy to prevent pregnancy 3. In practice, patients who receive imatinib at the time of conception may have normal pregnancies, but this is not always the case, and the data are still limited. Here, we report the first case describing the outcome of a patient with CML who became pregnant twice successfully while receiving imatinib at the time of conception.

A 21-year-old woman was diagnosed with Philadelphia positive CML in chronic phase in June 2001. Clinical examination was normal, without splenomegaly. Hematological values were: hemoglobin 13.6 g/dL, white blood cells: 109x109/L (83% neutrophils), platelets: 335 x 109/L. Bone marrow examination was hypercellular without excess of blasts. Caryotype showed 46, XX, t(9;22) with no other abnormalities. She had no siblings. As initial treatment, hydroxyurea (800 mg/d) was begun. She entered a phase II trial testing cytosine arabinoside (20 mg/m2) subcutaneously 14 days per month, plus imatinib 400 mg/d for eight cycles (CSTI571AFR02 trial).

In February 2002, she was in complete hematological, cytogenetic and molecular remission. She was maintained on Imatinib 400 mg daily. 8 months later while still in remission and on imatinib therapy, she became pregnant (G1P1). Conception was estimated to have taken place 4 weeks earlier and imatinib was stopped immediately. She received no treatment at all throughout her pregnancy. Her WBC increased progressively, reaching a peak of 40x109/L in the last month of pregnancy (Figure 1). At 5 months, amniocentesis revealed no abnormalities. Fetal growth remained satisfactory as well as amniotic fluid volume estimation. She delivered vaginally a healthy baby girl at 38 weeks of pregnancy (Apgar 10/10), weighing 3,18 kg. The total blood count of the newborn was normal. The mother did not breast-feed her baby and she resumed imatinib on 400 mg/day. She began a new near-complete molecular remission within a year.


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Figure 1. White blood count evolution during the two consecutive pregnancies.

 
2 years later, she became pregnant again while still on the same dose of 400 mg per day of imatinib that she had taken without interruption for the last 2 years. She was still in complete remission and conception was thought to have occured 3 weeks earlier. Imatinib was stopped and she received no treatment during pregnancy except for interferon (3 millions IU x 3 per week) in the last month because her WBC count rose above 50x109/L. Interferon was stopped after 3 weeks due to gastrointestinal intolerance. Amniocentesis was normal and she delivered vaginally a healthy baby girl (Apgar 9/10, 2.95 kg) after 39 weeks of gestation. After 3 months of breast feeding, she resumed imatinib at 400 mg/day. She is currently in complete hematological, cytogenetic (normal caryotype in April 2006) and molecular remission and her two children, now 3 years and 10 months old, are perfectly healthy.

This case can be added to the few case reports and the only series currently published in the English literature analyzing the outcome of pregnancy while on imatinib at one point.47 Most of them have been uneventful but sometimes it is not the case. Spontaneous abortions, small weight for gestational baby age and one case of pyloric stenosis have been described. More recently, a case of meningocele with fatal outcome was reported while on imatinib alone during the first one and a half months of pregnancy 8.

The key period for embryogenesis occurs from week 3 to week 8 of post-conception life. Hence, many authors advise against the use of anti-neoplasic agents during the first trimester. In our patient, the fetus had been exposed to imatinib for approximatively 4 weeks after conception in the case of the first pregnancy and 3 weeks for the second one. As for the babies, pregnancy and delivery were uneventful. There was no birth defect and apparently no late side-effect, the older girl being now 3 years old and the younger 10 months old. It is difficult to say whether imatinib had been stopped on time right before a potential teratogenic effect occurs. There has been one series and isolated case reports with a similar favorable outcome.

Another concern is the mother’s hematological disease progression. Even though in both cases she began pregnancy in a state of complete molecular remission, she relapsed twice (Figure 1). This is now expected when imatinib is discontinued.9 WBC count went as high as 60 x 106/L and returned to normal as soon as imatinib was resumed. After both pregnancies, she returned to complete molecular remission within 6 months (Figure 2). Therefore, patients who interrupt their therapy before, or during pregnancy should be advised of the risk of suboptimal response or relapse, even if they have achieved a complete molecular remission. Leucostasis is a risk. Interferon alpha 10 or leukapheresis 11 treatment could be used but it is still a debatable issue as to when to initiate it. Finally, blast crisis is the most potentially fearful event.


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Figure 2. Kinetic of the ratio of Bcr-Abl transcripts (b2a2)/_2 microglobulin in blood.

 
Concerning breast feeding, in animals, imatinib or its metabolites are extensively excreted in milk. It is not known whether imatinib is excreted in human milk; therefore, it is suggested that women taking imatinib should not breast feed.

Taking into consideration the risk for the fetus and the mother, and in view of the lack of sufficient information, it is currently recommended that patients use contraception while receiving imatinib and that therapy be discontinued immediately if the patient becomes pregnant. If pregnancy is to be continued, it is still unknown if it adversely affects the developing fetus.


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  1. Baccarani M, Saglio G, Goldman J, Hochhaus A, Simonsson B, Appelbaum F, et al. Evolving concepts in the management of chronic myeloid leukemia : recommendations from an expert panel on behalf of the European Leukemia Net. Blood 2006;108:1809-20.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  2. Investigators Brochure, STI 571 (formerly CGP 57148B), and data on file, Basel, Switzerland: Novartis Pharma AG.
  3. Hensley M, Ford JM. Imatinib Treatment: Specific issues related to safety, fertility, and pregnancy. Semin Hematol 2003;40:21-2.[ISI][Medline]
  4. Ault P, Kantarjian H, O’Brien S, Faderl S, Beran M, Rios MB, et al. Pregnancy among patients with chronic myeloid leukemia treated with imatinib. J Clin Oncol 2006;24:1-5.[Free Full Text]
  5. Alkindi S, Dennison D, Pathare A. Imatinib in pregnancy. Eur J Hematol 2005;74:535-7.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
  6. Ridvan A, Fahir O, Tulay O, Vildan O, Ulku O, Yalcin K, et al. Pregnancy under treatment of imatinib and successful labor in a patient with chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML). Outcome of discontinuation of imatinib therapy after achieving a molecular remission. Leuk Research 2005;29:971-3.[CrossRef]
  7. Mauro MJ, Druker BJ, Maziarz RT. Divergent clinical outcome in two CML patients who discontinued imatinib therapy after achieving a molecular remission. Leuk Res 2004;28S1:S71-3.
  8. Choudhary D, Mishra P, Kumar R, Mahapatra M, Choudhry VP. Pregnancy on imatinib: fatal outcome with meningocele. Ann Oncol 2006;17:178-9.[Free Full Text]
  9. Cortes J, O’Brien S, Kantarjian H, et al. Discontinuation of imatinib therapy after achieving a molecular response. Blood 2004;104:2204-2205.[Free Full Text]
  10. Mubarak AA. Normal outcome of pregnancy in chronic myeloid leukemia treated with interferon-alpha in first trimester. Am J Hematol 2002;69:115-8.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
  11. Bazarbashi MS, Smith MR, Karanes C. Successful management of Ph chromosome chronic myeloid leukemia with leukapheresis during pregnancy. Am J Hematol 1991;38:235-7.[ISI][Medline]




This Article
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Right arrow Articles by Gorin, N.C.


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