Abstract KMT2A-rearranged (KMT2Ar) acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a high-risk subtype of AML associated with poor prognosis and frequent relapse. Standard therapies often fail to achieve durable remission, underscoring the urgent need for novel treatments. Menin inhibitors have emerged as promising therapeutics in relapsed/refractory (R/R) KMT2Ar AML with revumenib approval in November 2024, marking it the first-in-class menin inhibitor approved to date. However, the response duration in the AUGMENT-101 trial averaged just over 6 months. Here, we hypothesized that combining menin inhibitors with other epigenetic-modifying drugs could lead to synergistic combinations that would spark a more durable response by promoting stable differentiation and disrupting leukemic transcriptional networks, thereby improving therapeutic outcomes in KMT2Ar AML.To test our hypothesis, we conducted a high-throughput screen (HTS) consisting of 932 epigenetic modulators to identify compounds that synergize with menin inhibitors in KMT2Ar AML cell lines. Our epigenetic screen validated previously published menin inhibitor synergy with known targets such as BRD4 and KAT6A. Notably, all seven lysine specific demethylase (LSD1) inhibitors tested, including iadademstat (ORY-1001), enhanced cell death when combined with menin inhibition. In MV4-11 (MLL-AF4) and MOLM-13 (MLL-AF9) cells, combination therapy reduced viability with a synergistic IC50 compared to single-agent IC50s for revumenib and iadademstat alone.RNA-seq and ATAC-seq were conducted to assess transcriptomic alterations and changes in chromatin accessibility in MOLM-13 and MV4-11 cells following treatment with each drug individually and in combination. Chromatin profiling by CUT20% except in animals that succumbed to disease. Preliminary survival analysis indicates a survival benefit with the combination therapy. Five out of 6 animals treated with the combination remain alive at 4 weeks, while only 2/6 iadamestat treated mice and no revumenib or vehicle mice remain alive.In conclusion, these findings provide strong preclinical evidence that dual inhibition of LSD1 and menin is a rational and potent strategy to provide more durable treatment responses in KMT2Ar AML. The demonstrated synergy disrupts core leukemic transcriptional programs, potentially driving irreversible differentiation, and significantly reduces leukemic burden both in vitro and in vivo. Mechanistically, LSD1 shares genomic binding sites with KMT2A, suggesting a cooperation with KMT2A fusions to maintain leukemia stemness and suppress differentiation. Combining LSD1 inhibition shows promise for a dual-targeted epigenetic strategy for translation into early-phase clinical trials, particularly for patients with R/R KMT2A-rearranged AML. Given the depth of response and low toxicity observed in vivo in our PDX, this combination and dosing strategy may be important for limiting the toxicities of menin inhibition, such as differentiation syndrome or the thrombocytopenia associated with LSD1 inhibition, when planning future clinical trials.
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Mina M. Tayari
Felipe Beckedorff
Daniel Bilbao
Blood
University of Miami
Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center
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Tayari et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69362f444fa91c937236d606 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2025-3292