In thin, the discussion here is one of the forest and the trees. There is obvious relapse with the DAS therapy and the culprit mutation, common with DAS therapy, has been identified. Note, however that during 8 months of DAS therapy, there was no cytopenia, suggesting that normal hemopoiesis had recovered when CML stem cell hemopoiesis was suppressed by DAS. With institution of the appropriate therapy, PON, cytopenias recurred even though the blood counts were controlled with the PON. This suggests that normal hemopoiesis is gone. There is no evidence of fibrosis or disease progression other than the mutation. So the disease is controlled by TKI, and I would presume likely would be with ASC as well, but for some reason, normal blood cell production is gone. TKI-based cytopenias are more common at diagnosis than at relapse and are not usually related to one specific drug. Is this case, even when CML is controlled with different TKIs, cytopenias recur, suggesting this is not TKI or disease related. That leaves the likelihood that something has hit normal stem cells, and there is now a second process in place. I agree with David that another event has come into play, resulting in something akin to aplastic anemia, but the CML stem cells seemed to have resisted this event. Aplastic anemia in this part of the world may be as common as acute leukemia and is usually caused by a virus such as hepatitis B.
This means there are now two things to control - CML and aplasia and the only treatment good for both would be a stem cell allograft. This poses another conundrum. With HSCT for CML, getting a patient off immunosuppression quickly is indicated to allow the graft-vs-leukemia effect to come into play, and preventing post-transplant relapse. There is a long history of studies in the literature proving more relapse with longer immunosuppression. On the other hand, with aplastic anemia, longer GVH prophylaxis is indicated as stopping immunosuppression too early, often less than 6 months, results in loss of graft. So what do you do as the immunosuppression approach for the two processes is contradictory? There is little evidence that routine post-SCT TKI makes much difference in the case of chronic phase CML allografts, and I do not see evidence here that even though there was resistant disease, there was no disease progression. This case is unique. However, since immunosuppression should probably be continued for at least 6 months for the aplasia, the GVL effect, which is the best CML therapy, will also be suppressed. I would think that reintroduction of TKI, and in this case PON because of the t315i, should be done starting around day 60 post SCT, and assuming engraftment has been good, and continue until after immunosuppression is stopped.