Volume 108, Issue 4 pp. 703-709

P-glycoprotein (PGP), lung resistance-related protein (LRP) and multidrug resistance-associated protein (MRP) expression in acute promyelocytic leukaemia

Mariagrazia Michieli

Mariagrazia Michieli

Division of Haematology, Department of Medical and Morphological Research, University Hospital, Udine, Italy

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Daniela Damiani

Daniela Damiani

Division of Haematology, Department of Medical and Morphological Research, University Hospital, Udine, Italy

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Anna Ermacora

Anna Ermacora

Division of Haematology, Department of Medical and Morphological Research, University Hospital, Udine, Italy

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Antonella Geromin

Antonella Geromin

Division of Haematology, Department of Medical and Morphological Research, University Hospital, Udine, Italy

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Angela Michelutti

Angela Michelutti

Division of Haematology, Department of Medical and Morphological Research, University Hospital, Udine, Italy

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Paola Masolini

Paola Masolini

Division of Haematology, Department of Medical and Morphological Research, University Hospital, Udine, Italy

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Michele Baccarani

Michele Baccarani

Division of Haematology, Department of Medical and Morphological Research, University Hospital, Udine, Italy

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First published: 24 December 2001
Citations: 37
Dr Mariagrazia Michieli, Division of Haematology, University Hospital, P. le S. Maria della Misericordia, 33100 Udine, Italy. E-mail: [email protected].

Abstract

We analysed the expression of three drug transporter proteins [p-glycoprotein (PGP), lung resistance-related protein (LRP) and multidrug resistance-associated protein (MRP1)] involved in anthracycline resistance that are frequently overexpressed in poor-risk adult acute non-lymphocytic leukaemia (ANLL), in 23 acute promyelocytic leukaemia (APL) patients at onset managed at a single institution. Cellular daunorubicin accumulation was also evaluated. At onset, no case had PGP or MRP1 expression that exceeded that of non-multidrug-resistant (MDR) cell lines. Only one case showed LRP overexpression. No peculiar MDR features distinguished the seven patients who relapsed from those who maintained complete remission. In the onset vs. first relapse, only one patient showed an increased (threefold) PGP expression at relapse. At second relapse, three out of four patients showed a PGP expression two- to threefold higher than baseline values. These results are consistent with the view that low PGP, LRP and MRP1 expression and the absence of defects in intracellular drug accumulation may account for the peculiarly high sensitivity of APLs to anthracycline. It does not support the screening of MDR markers in APL patients at onset as predicting factors of early relapse. The results suggest that no significant changes in PGP, LRP or MRP1 expression are likely to occur at first relapse. In contrast, PGP expression is likely to increase later in the patient history as a result of additional chemotherapy courses.

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