Managing cytopenia induced by TKIs is one of the most difficult issues we come across in CP-CML. Fortunately in this case you have evidence of ongoing disease sensitivity to kinase inhibition which I presume is the explanation for the sustained response to a brief exposure to nilotinib. I doubt this is due to persistence of nilotinib in the blood over a 3 month period, although it would be interesting to exclude this. Unfortunately we no longer provide drug level testing because Novartis no longer support it.
I presume you have repeated the bone marrow studies to see if there are other causes such as MDS or marrow fibrosis.
In these situations we usually don’t stop unless the cytopenia is grade 4. Our preferred approach is to find the TKI dose that provides tolerable cytopenia while maintaining MMR. We will add growth factors +/- transfusions as needed. Dasatinib is easier to titrate for this purpose – we have had some patients on dasatinib 20 mg alternate day and eventually achieved good control. You could do something similar with nilotinib. Whether using more standard doses and stopping every time the cytopenias get too severe is a better approach, we still don’t know. Intermittent therapy has been effective for some patients who have achieved good molecular responses, but I doubt it is the best approach here.