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Home NEWS Science News Cancer

Leukemia Stem Cells Drive Treatment Failure: New Discoveries Pave Way to Overcome Resistance

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
May 7, 2026
in Cancer
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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In a groundbreaking study spearheaded by researchers at the German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ) and the Heidelberg Institute for Stem Cell Technology and Experimental Medicine (HI-STEM), a pivotal mechanism underlying treatment failure in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) has been unraveled. This investigation reveals that AML does not arise from a single type of leukemia stem cell, but rather from at least four distinct subtypes. These subtypes exhibit unique developmental characteristics, which crucially impact their response to therapeutic interventions, particularly to venetoclax, a cornerstone targeted therapy used in AML treatment. This seminal discovery offers critical insights into the disease’s complexity and lays the groundwork for tailored therapies that can better circumvent drug resistance and disease relapse.

Acute myeloid leukemia is an aggressive blood malignancy predominantly affecting the elderly, notorious for its high relapse rates and dismal prognosis despite advancements in treatment. In recent years, venetoclax, a small molecule inhibitor targeting the anti-apoptotic protein BCL-2, has revolutionized AML therapy by selectively inducing programmed cell death in leukemia cells. While venetoclax-based regimens have improved patient outcomes and reduced reliance on conventional chemotherapy, the challenge remains as many patients eventually encounter treatment resistance, leading to devastating relapses. The quest to understand the cellular and molecular bases of such resistance phenomena has driven recent intensive research efforts.

Central to this investigation is the focus on leukemia stem cells (LSCs), a rare but crucial subset of malignant cells capable of indefinite self-renewal and perpetuation of the disease. These LSCs are increasingly recognized as the root cause of treatment failure, owing to their capacity to evade therapy and reignite leukemia growth post-treatment. By analyzing more than 150 patient samples, the research team identified four biologically distinct LSC subtypes, each reflecting different stages of differentiation mimicking normal hematopoiesis. This heterogeneity within the LSC compartment has profound implications for therapeutic targeting and understanding disease evolution.

The efficacy of venetoclax hinges on its inhibitory effect on BCL-2, a protein that confers survival advantage by suppressing apoptosis in leukemia cells. However, not all LSC subtypes exhibit the same dependency on BCL-2 for survival. Some rely heavily on this protein and are thus exquisitely sensitive to venetoclax, while others deploy alternative anti-apoptotic pathways, rendering them inherently less susceptible. This divergence in survival strategies among LSCs results in differential drug responses and poses a significant barrier to effective long-term disease control.

One particularly concerning adaptive mechanism unveiled by the study is the ability of AML stem cells to undergo dynamic reprogramming under therapeutic pressure. When confronted with venetoclax, susceptible LSCs can shift their reliance from BCL-2 to a closely related protein, BCL-xL, thereby circumventing the drug’s apoptotic induction. This phenotypic plasticity endows the leukemia cells with a formidable escape route, fostering survival and fueling relapse despite ongoing treatment.

Fortunately, these insights pave the way for innovative combination therapies aimed at overcoming resistance. The researchers demonstrated that pairing venetoclax with inhibitors targeting BCL-xL significantly enhanced treatment efficacy in preclinical mouse models transplanted with patient-derived leukemia cells. This combinatorial approach effectively dismantled the multiple survival mechanisms exploited by the diverse LSC subtypes, achieving superior eradication of malignant cells compared to conventional monotherapies.

An equally groundbreaking achievement of this study is the identification of distinctive biomarkers associated with each LSC subtype. These molecular markers enable precise classification of leukemia stem cells, potentially allowing clinicians to predict in advance which patients will respond favorably to specific treatments. Such stratification heralds a new era of personalized medicine in AML, where therapy selection is guided by the biological fingerprint of the patient’s leukemia, rather than a one-size-fits-all protocol.

This refined understanding advocates for a paradigm shift in AML management. Rather than applying uniform treatment strategies across the heterogeneous patient population, future therapeutic regimens can be meticulously tailored to target the unique susceptibility profiles of the dominating LSC subtypes in an individual. This approach could substantially improve remission durability and reduce the incidence of relapse by preemptively addressing drug resistance.

The study’s leader, Andreas Trumpp, emphasizes the translational potential of these findings, advocating for clinical trials to evaluate combination treatments informed by leukemia stem cell subtype profiling. Such trials would represent a crucial step toward integrating mechanistic insights into patient care, optimizing therapeutic regimens based on precise cellular vulnerabilities, and ultimately improving clinical outcomes for AML patients.

In summary, this comprehensive research illuminates the complex heterogeneity within leukemia stem cells in AML, revealing how distinct subtypes determine sensitivity and resistance to the widely used drug venetoclax. The observed plasticity and survival adaptations underscore the necessity for combination treatment strategies, which have shown promising efficacy in preclinical models. Furthermore, the identification of subtype-specific biomarkers heralds a transformative move toward personalized and more effective AML therapy, bringing renewed hope for long-lasting remission and improved survival rates.

As acute myeloid leukemia continues to pose a formidable challenge due to its aggressive nature and high relapse rates, these findings offer an exhilarating advance in decoding its biology and refining therapeutic approaches. Understanding and targeting the multifaceted nature of leukemia stem cells may finally tip the scale in favor of durable cures versus transient remissions, transforming the landscape of AML treatment in the years to come.

Subject of Research: Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) Stem Cell Heterogeneity and Venetoclax Resistance

Article Title: Leukemic Stem Cell Subtypes Determine Venetoclax Resistance and Therapeutic Vulnerabilities in AML

News Publication Date: June 2026

Web References:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.stem.2026.04.012

References:
Alexander Waclawiczek, Aino-Maija Leppä, Simon Renders*, et al. “Leukemic stem cell subtypes determine venetoclax resistance and therapeutic vulnerabilities in AML.” Cell Stem Cell, 2026.

Keywords:
Acute Myeloid Leukemia, AML, leukemia stem cells, venetoclax resistance, BCL-2, BCL-xL, apoptosis, targeted therapy, hematopoiesis, personalized medicine, drug resistance, cancer stem cell heterogeneity

Tags: acute myeloid leukemia stem cell subtypesBCL-2 inhibitor therapy challengesdrug resistance in acute myeloid leukemialeukemia stem cell developmental heterogeneitymolecular basis of AML therapy resistancenovel therapeutic targets in AMLovercoming treatment failure in AMLpersonalized treatment strategies for leukemiarelapse prevention in acute myeloid leukemiastem cell-driven leukemia progressiontargeted therapy for leukemia stem cellsvenetoclax resistance mechanisms in AML

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