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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: aggressive therapy + aml patients + patients  Related to the article below (Last Update: 7/1/2008)

Key Presentations of Celgene Products to Be Highlighted at the ...
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Source: Google News

Effect of aggressive daunomycin therapy on survival in acute promyelocytic leukemia. -
D Head, KJ Kopecky, J Weick, JC Files, D Ryan, K … - Blood, 1995 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Click here to read Effect of aggressive daunomycin therapy on survival in acute ... for
previously untreated acute myeloblastic leukemia (AML) from 1982 ...

patients with hematologic malignancies: replacing high-dose cytotoxic therapy with graft-versus- … -
PA McSweeney, D Niederwieser, JA Shizuru, BM … - Blood, 2001 - bloodjournal.hematologylibrary.org
... and lymphoma patients had failed at least frontline therapy. ... Three additional
poor-risk patients had chemotherapy ... after induction chemotherapy for AML (FH14241 ...

… of Diagnostic Cytogenetics on Outcome in AML: Analysis of 1,612 Patients Entered Into the MRC AML -
D Grimwade, H Walker, F Oliver, K Wheatley, C … - Blood, 1998 - bloodjournal.hematologylibrary.org
... diagnosis among 1,612 patients with AML and their associated clinical features are
presented in Table 1. On the basis of response to induction therapy, RR, and ...

Timed-sequential induction therapy improves postremission outcome in acute myeloid leukemia: a … -
WG Woods, N Kobrinsky, JD Buckley, JW Lee, J … - Blood, 1996 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... in which 589 patients with AML were randomized at ... a total of four cycles of induction
therapy. ... was present or randomized to aggressive nonmyeloablative therapy ...

… transplantation, autologous bone marrow transplantation, and aggressive chemotherapy in children … -
WG WOODS, S NEUDORF, S GOLD, J SANDERS, JD BUCKLEY … - Blood, 2001 - cat.inist.fr
... myelosuppressive therapy is necessary to maximize outcomes for patients with acute
myeloid leukemia(AML). A comparison was made of 3 aggressive postremission ...

Karyotypic analysis predicts outcome of preremission and postremission therapy in adult acute … -
ML Slovak, KJ Kopecky, PA Cassileth, DH Harrington … - Blood, 2000 - bloodjournal.hematologylibrary.org
... been reported as a poor risk indicator requiring more aggressive treatment ... are
associated not only with response to induction therapy for adult AML but also ...

therapy predicts relapse: results from a prospective Children's Cancer Group study of 252 patients -
EL Sievers, BJ Lange, TA Alonzo, RB Gerbing, ID … - Blood, 2003 - bloodjournal.hematologylibrary.org
... Despite aggressive induction chemotherapy for AML, recurrent leukemia ... and adolescents
treated for AML in 2 ... patients responding to induction therapy appeared to ...

… in the Elderly: A Critical Review of Therapeutic Approaches and Appraisal of Results of Therapy -
F Ferrara, S Mirto, V Zagonel, A Pinto - Leukemia and Lymphoma, 1998 - informaworld.com
... On the basis of the above analysis, it clearly appears that group 1 (elderly AML
patients clinically eligible for aggressive therapy) comprises two ...

… Trial of Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor in Elderly Patients With Previously Untreated Acute … -
JE Godwin, KJ Kopecky, DR Head, CL Willman, CP … - Blood, 1998 - bloodjournal.hematologylibrary.org
... 1 Although progress has been made in the treatment of AML in the younger patient
using aggressive therapy such as marrow transplantation 2 or high-dose ...

Aggressive chemotherapy combined with G-CSF and maintenance therapy with interleukin-2 for patients -
A Ganser, G Heil, K Kolbe, G Maschmeyer, JT … - Annals of Hematology, 1993 - Springer
... related deaths during induction therapy can be ... 9]. In addition, treatment of AML
patients with interleukin ... a phase-III trial of aggressive chemotherapy followed ...

Source: Google Scholar

AGGRESSIVE THERAPY BEST FOR CERTAIN AML PATIENTS

COLUMBUS , Ohio – A new study suggests that acute leukemia patients whose cancer cells show a genetic change that usually predicts a swift return of the disease following remission may remain disease-free longer when given aggressive therapy.

The findings apply to people with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) whose cancer cells have normal-looking chromosomes and a gene mutation called MLL-PTD.

Typically, these AML patients responded poorly following treatment with older standard therapies, often relapsing within a year. Of AML patients with normal chromosomes who lack the mutation, on the other hand, four in 10 are cured.

The new study suggests that treating patients who have the mutation with an aggressive therapy such as an autologous stem cell transplant while they are in remission might significantly extend their disease-free survival.

An autologous transplant uses stem cells taken from the patient's own blood.

The research was led by investigators at the Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center. It is part of a larger study sponsored by the Cancer and Leukemia Group B (CALGB), a clinical cooperative group composed of oncologists from academic medical centers and community hospitals across the nation.

The findings were published in a recent issue of the journal Blood.

“Our data is the first to show that AML patients with normal-looking chromosomes and this mutation do as well when treated aggressively as patients who don't have the mutation,” says principal investigator Clara D. Bloomfield, professor of internal medicine and an internationally known AML specialist.

About 13,400 new cases of AML are expected this year, and about half will have cancer cells with chromosomes that show distinctive damage. The nature of that damage helps doctors determine a patient's therapy and estimate the patient's prognosis.

The remaining AML cases have cancer cells with normal-looking chromosomes. These cells lack the microscopic chromosome damage that guide therapy.


“Our data is the first to show that AML patients with normal-looking chromosomes and this mutation do as well when treated aggressively as patients who don't have the mutation.”


In 1994, however, a team of researchers that included Bloomfield discovered the MLL-PTD mutation in these patients. It was the first clinically useful marker to be identified in cases of AML with normal-looking chromosomes, and it was found to predict a short remission and poor response to therapy. About 8 percent of AML patients with normal-looking chromosomes have the mutation.

“Studies done eight to 10 years ago showed that nearly 100 percent of these patients relapsed and died within two years,” says first author Susan P. Whitman, a research scientist at Ohio State's Comprehensive Cancer Center.

This retrospective study set out to learn whether aggressive therapy provided through two CALGB clinical trials benefits patients with the mutation. It evaluated 238 people aged 18 to 59 with AML and normal-looking chromosomes. Of these, 24 (10 percent) had the MLL-PTD mutation.

All patients received an initial aggressive chemotherapy regimen (i.e., induction therapy) to induce remission. Those who achieved remission then received further aggressive therapy (i.e., consolidation therapy), usually an autologous stem cell transplant, with a few receiving intensive chemotherapy.

Of the 24 patients with the mutation, 22 had a complete remission. Of those, 13 relapsed within 1.4 years, but nine (41 percent) remained in remission when the study ended, with disease-free periods ranging from two to almost eight years.

“We believe that the use of aggressive consolidation therapy may have contributed to the reduced number of early relapses in these patients,” Bloomfield says.

“We still must do larger studies to confirm these findings, to better understand this disease and to develop curative targeted therapies.”

Funding from the National Cancer Institute and the Coleman Leukemia Research Foundation supported this research.

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Contact: Eileen Scahill, Medical Center Communications, 614-293-2092, or Eileen.Scahill@osumc.edu

 
 
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