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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: multiple myeloma + lower dose + myeloma  Related to the article below (Last Update: 5/13/2008)

Lenalidomide raises clot risk in multiple myeloma patients
Curetoday.com (press release), TX - May 9, 2008
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Thromboembolic events are increased in patients undergoing lenalidomide-based therapy for multiple myeloma, US and Italian ...
Oncolytics Biotech Says Collaborators Present Reovirus Research ...
RTT News, NY - Apr 15, 2008
TO) revealed the presentation entitled "Targeting Multiple Myeloma with Oncolytic Viral Therapy" at the American Association for Cancer Research Annual ...ONCY - SGXP
Effect of Preemptive Epidural Analgesia on Cytokine Response and ...
RedOrbit, TX - May 9, 2008
Vacca A, Di Stefano R, Frassanito A, Iodice G, Dammacco F. A disturbance of the IL-2/IL-2 receptor system parallels the activity of multiple myeloma. ...
Oncolytics Biotech Inc. Announces 2008 First Quarter Results
Canada NewsWire (press release), Canada - Apr 30, 2008
The results demonstrated that up to 70% of multiple myeloma cell lines tested showed reovirus sensitivity and reovirus induced cancer cell death mediated ...ONCY

In order to show you the most relevant results, we have omitted some entries very similar to the 4 already displayed.
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Source: Google News

… AND PROGRESSION IN PATIENTS WITH MULTIPLE MYELOMA TREATED BY HIGH-DOSE THERAPY AND HAEMOPOIETIC … -
J BladE, D Samson, D Reece, J Apperley, B … - British Journal of Haematology, 1998 - Blackwell Synergy
... (2007) Bortezomib in combination with intermediate-dose dexamethasone and continuous
low-dose oral cyclophosphamide for relapsed multiple myeloma. ...

Low-dose thalidomide plus dexamethasone is an effective salvage therapy for advanced myeloma -
A Palumbo, L Giaccone, A Bertola, P Pregno, S … - Haematologica, 2001 - haematologica.org
... Thalidomide in patients with advanced multiple myeloma. Hematol J 2000; 1:186-9.
25. Pini M, Baraldi A, Pietrasanta D, et al. Low-dose of thalidomide in the ...

High-Dose Chemotherapy with Hematopoietic Stem-Cell Rescue for Multiple Myeloma -
JA Child, GJ Morgan, FE Davies, RG Owen, SE Bell, K … - New England Journal of Medicine, 2003 - content.nejm.org
... Standard Chemotherapy Compared With High-Dose Chemoradiotherapy for Multiple ... Autologous
Transplantation in t(4;14) Multiple Myeloma: Low Complete Remission ...

Donor Leukocyte Infusions Are Effective in Relapsed Multiple Myeloma After Allogeneic Bone Marrow … -
HM Lokhorst, A Schattenberg, JJ Cornelissen, LLM … - Blood, 1997 - bloodjournal.hematologylibrary.org
... has been widely used in multiple myeloma (MM) patients ... in a patient with relapsed
myeloma after allogeneic BMT ... repeated infusion with the lower dose would have ...

[PDF] Increased risk of deep-vein thrombosis in patients with multiple myeloma receiving thalidomide and … -
M Zangari, E Anaissie, B Barlogie, A Badros, R … - Blood, 2001 - uams.edu
... 5 who described occurrence of thrombotic events shortly after low-dose (50-100 mg ...
Total therapy with tandem transplants for newly diag- nosed multiple myeloma. ...
-

Thalidomide and dexamethasone combination for refractory multiple myeloma. -
MA Dimopoulos, K Zervas, G Kouvatseas, E Galani, V … - Annals of Oncology, 2001 - pt.wkhealth.com
... Common and rare side-effects of low-dose thalidomide in multiple myeloma: focus
on the dose-minimizing peripheral neuropathy. European Journal of Haematology. ...

… delta T cells by aminobisphosphonates and induction of antiplasma cell activity in multiple myeloma -
V Kunzmann, E Bauer, J Feurle, FW Tony? - Blood, 2000 - bloodjournal.hematologylibrary.org
... of 24 patients with multiple myeloma (MM), after ... Myeloma plasma cells were defined
as CD45 low ... All aminobisphosphonates exhibited a lower stimulating activity ...

Thalidomide Alone or With Dexamethasone for Previously Untreated Multiple Myeloma -
D Weber, K Rankin, M Gavino, K Delasalle, R … - Journal of Clinical Oncology, 2003 - jcojournal.org
... VIII International Myeloma Workshop, p112, 2001 (abstract S68); Durie BGM, Stepan
DE: Efficacy of low dose thalidomide in multiple myeloma. ...

… ANTIGENMATCHED DONOR BONE MARROW AND RENAL TRANSPLANTATION FOR MULTIPLE MYELOMA WITH END STAGE … -
TR Spitzer, F Delmonico, N Tolkoff-Rubin, S McAfee … - Transplantation, 1999 - transplantjournal.com
... matched donor allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for multiple myeloma using
myeloablative ... In animal models, low-dose total body irradiation or high-dose ...

… adoptive immunotherapy after allogeneic stem cell transplantation in patients with multiple myeloma -
N Kroger, A Shimoni, M Zagrivnaja, F Ayuk, M … - Blood, 2004 - bloodjournal.hematologylibrary.org
... infusion (DLI) after allogeneic stem cell transplantation in multiple myeloma, we
investigated in a phase 1/2 study the effect of low-dose thalidomide (100 mg ...

Source: Google Scholar

Multiple myeloma clinical trial shows distinct survival benefit with lower dose of steroids

ATLANTA -- Results of Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group Phase III clinical trial E4A03, for multiple myeloma, showing significantly better overall survival with lenalidomide plus low-dose dexamethasone therapy compared to lenalidomide plus high-dose dexamethasone, were reported today by S. Vincent Rajkumar, M.D. at the American Society of Hematology’s annual meeting.

Currently lenalidomide and high-dose dexamethasone, referred to as Rev/Dex, is used as second-line treatment for myeloma. This same treatment has been used off-label (not currently approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for this particular use) by physicians for their newly-diagnosed patients, with overall response rates and one-year survival rates in the 90 percent range.

“The standard treatment for myeloma usually includes high doses of steroids such as dexamethasone. In this study we were hoping to find that a lower dose of steroids would be just as effective,” says Dr. Rajkumar, Mayo Clinic Cancer Center hematologist and lead investigator of the study. “We were surprised to find that the regimen with high-dose steroids actually was decreasing survival, besides contributing to increased side effects.”

The study compared combination treatment of oral medications lenalidomide (a novel chemotherapeutic agent) and either high- or low-dose dexamethasone (a potent steroid effective against myeloma) in 445 patients with newly diagnosed myeloma. Lenalidomide plus high-dose dexamethasone had an 18-month survival rate of 80 percent. The comparative therapy using low-dose dexamethasone showed a significantly higher 91 percent overall survival rate at 18 months, with much less toxicity.

“The lower survival rates with the high-dose dexamethasone can be attributed to disease progression as well as treatment-related toxicities,” says Dr. Rajkumar. “This is a major advance in the treatment of this cancer, and also gives researchers a new direction to explore -- that more is not necessarily better.”

All patients on the high-dose dexamethasone arm of the clinical trial were moved to the low-dose arm in April 2007, following an early closure announcement.

###

Mayo Clinic’s Rafael Fonseca, M.D., and Philip Greipp, M.D., assisted in the research. Other researchers contributing to the study included Susanna Jacobus, Dana Farber Cancer Institute, Boston; Natalie Callander, M.D., University of Wisconsin, Madison; David Vesole, M.D., Ph.D., St. Vincent’s Hospital, New York; Michael Williams, M.D., University of Virginia, Charlottesville; Rafat Abonour, M.D., Indiana University, Indianapolis; and David Siegel, M.D., Ph.D.; Hackensack University Medical Center, New Jersey.

For more information on hematology research at Mayo Clinic Cancer Center, visit the Web site at http://mayoresearch.mayo.edu/mayo/research/hematologic_malignancies.

Multiple Myeloma

Multiple myeloma, also called myeloma, is an incurable plasma cell (white blood cells in bone marrow) cancer, for which the cause is unknown. The American Cancer Society reports that nearly 20,000 people will have been diagnosed with myeloma by the end of 2007. Myeloma interferes with bone marrow function and the immune system, and can cause bones to erode, anemia, infection and possibly kidney failure.

Off-Label Prescriptions

Off-label use of medication is not unusual in medical practice, and is allowed by FDA regulation. Clinical trials are conducted for drugs on a specific disease with very narrow criteria (for example newly-diagnosed or recurrent cancer, but not both). When experienced physicians understand the effects of different medications, they are able to administer them in similar situations that may not have been included in the original drug studies -- for effective results. Because clinical trials are required for each additional use of a drug, sometimes taking years to result in a label change, off-label use has become common.

New study reveals for first time how BRCA1 mutations cause breast cancer

Finding implicates tumor suppressor gene, PTEN Columbia University Medical Center among 2 institutions to identify this gene in 1997; discovery opens new pathway for treatment of highly aggressive form of breast cancer

NEW YORK – An international team of researchers led by Columbia University Medical Center’s Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center and Sweden’s Lund University has, for the first time, revealed how mutations in the BRCA1 gene lead to breast cancer. Findings show that one way BRCA1 mutations cause cancer is by knocking out a powerful tumor suppressor gene known as PTEN.

The new study will be published online on the Nature Genetics website on Dec. 9, 2007: http://www.nature.com/ng. It will appear in the January print issue of this journal. The study was led by Ramon Parsons, M.D., Ph.D., the Avon Foundation Professor of Medicine and Pathology at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons and Åke Borg, Ph.D., professor of oncology at Lund University. The paper’s first author was Lao Saal, Ph.D. (now finishing his medical degree at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons).

“These findings are exciting because ever since the link was established between BRCA1 and breast cancer more than 10 years ago, we have been frustrated by our lack of understanding about how mutations in this gene cause breast cancer. We have been stymied by our limited resources to treat these cancers, which are associated with very poor prognoses. Now that we know that PTEN is involved, we finally have a target for therapy for these cancers,” said Dr. Parsons, the study’s corresponding author. Dr. Parsons is director of the Avon Foundation Breast Cancer Research Laboratory and director of the Breast Cancer Program of the Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center at Columbia University Medical Center and NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital.

In 1997, Dr. Parsons led one of the two teams that independently discovered the PTEN, one of the most important tumor suppressor genes altered in breast cancer, as well as in brain and prostate cancers. PTEN is now recognized to be mutated in about 30 percent of all cancers, making it the second most mutated gene in cancer after p53. Knocking out PTEN sends a strong pro-growth signal on tumor cells. This is unlike the BRCA1 mutation, which only predisposes the cells to accumulate genetic damage and sends an indirect signal for cell growth. “Once a cell loses PTEN, it has a growth advantage over its neighbors and starts on the road to cancer,” said Dr. Parsons.

PTEN mutations promote runaway tumor cell growth by increasing the activity of a series of different proteins in the cell known as the PTEN/PI3K pathway. Shutting down any one of those proteins could potentially stop growth of the cancer. Investigational therapies to shut down proteins in the PTEN pathway are currently in Phase I clinical trials.

How the BRCA1 Mutation Mechanism Was Pinpointed

Dr. Parsons and his research team made the connection between BRCA1 and PTEN using techniques to search for physical chromosome breaks within the PTEN gene – a technique that had never before been used. Previous searches for PTEN mutations in BRCA1 tumors had looked for conventional mutations and failed to turn up any abnormalities.

The researchers scanned 34 biopsies taken from women with BRCA1 tumors. The PTEN gene had been split in two, but inadequately repaired in about one-third of the cancers. In some cases, entire sections of the gene were missing; in others, one-half of the gene was reattached to other regions on the chromosome.

These types of large chromosomal mistakes stem directly from the tumor’s lack of BRCA1, a gene that is normally involved in the repair of such damage. In breast cancers from women with normal BRCA1, such large mutations in PTEN were rarely detected.

Finding May Affect 50% of BRCA1 Breast Cancers & Lead to New Treatments

Dr. Parsons estimates that about 50 percent of BRCA1 breast cancers will be found to harbor mutated PTEN once a complete analysis of chromosomal mutations is done.

Breast cancer tumors caused by BRCA1 are known as basal-like or triple-negative because these tumors usually lack estrogen, progesterone, and HER2 receptors, which are needed for most breast cancer treatments to be effective. Basal-like breast tumors are found in 10 to 20 percent of women with non-hereditary breast cancer (meaning, not caused by a genetic mutation in BRCA1 or another gene), and the researchers found that PTEN is also lost in the majority of these breast tumors as well.

“Our results point to PTEN as a major player in both hereditary and non-hereditary basal-like breast cancer, a finding that may now be exploited to develop new therapeutic strategies to improve outcomes for women with these aggressive tumors,” said Dr. Saal, who at the time of the research, was a fellow in Dr. Parsons’ Avon Foundation Breast Cancer Research Laboratory.

The researchers also predict that other cancer genes besides PTEN are targeted by BRCA1. “By using the same techniques we used to find gross chromosomal rearrangements in PTEN, we hope to start identifying additional mutated genes involved in the development of breast cancer,” said Dr. Parsons.

“These kinds of mutations that break tumor suppressors in half may turn out to be common in many kinds of carcinomas, particularly those with deficiencies in DNA repair pathways similar to BRCA1, a question that only a systematic search can answer,” said Dr. Saal.

“Similar research is underway in tumors from carriers of germline mutations in BRCA2, the other known major breast cancer susceptibility gene,” said Dr. Borg. “BRCA2 has a role downstream in the same DNA double strand break repair pathway as BRCA1, but tumors from BRCA2 mutation carriers have a quite different phenotype compared to BRCA1 tumors, less often involving PTEN loss. However, like BRCA1, BRCA2 tumors have an instable genome with massive chromosomal aberrations, suggesting that other genes may be targeted.”

Breast Cancers Caused by BRCA1 Mutations are Especially Lethal & Difficult to Treat

Basal-like breast cancer tumors, whether caused by BRCA1 mutations or of the non-hereditary type, are among the most aggressive tumors – they grow fast and spread quickly, making them more likely than other types of cancer to be fatal. These tumors are more likely to be resistant to standard breast cancer treatments, such as Tamoxifen or Herceptin, making them especially difficult to treat. As a result, many young BRCA1 carriers opt to have their breasts prophylactically removed instead of waiting for cancer to appear.

Breast cancers caused by BRCA1 mutations tend to affect women much earlier – often before menopause and sometimes in their 20s and 30s – and between 60 and 80 percent of women who carry a BRCA1 mutation will develop breast cancer at some point during their lives. BRCA1 mutation carriers are most common among African-American women and women of Ashkenazi Jewish descent. Inherited BRCA1 (and BRCA2) mutations also predispose women to ovarian cancer, a disease that frequently escape early diagnosis and which has a fatal outcome in advanced stages.

International Collaborations & Research Support

Additional Columbia researchers involved in the study include Hanina Hibshoosh, M.D., associate professor of clinical pathology and Vundavalli Murty, M.D., associate professor of pathology, and others.

“Identifying these rearrangements would not have been possible without the support of the shared resources of the Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center and our collaboration with Drs. Borg, Saal, Hibshoosh and Murty,” said Dr. Parsons.

###

This research was supported, in part, by the Avon Foundation, the OctoberWoman Foundation, and the National Cancer Institute and the Swedish Cancer Society.

The Avon Foundation Breast Cancer Research Laboratory at Columbia University Medical Center is a state-of-the-art facility that aims to better understand genetic pathways involved in breast cancer, and how to control these to prevent or stop the progression of cancer. The laboratory is under the leadership of Ramon Parsons, M.D., Ph.D., director of the Breast Cancer Program of the Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center of Columbia University Medical Center and NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital.

The Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center at Columbia University Medical Center and NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital encompasses pre-clinical and clinical research, treatment, prevention and education efforts in cancer. The Cancer Center was initially funded by the NCI in 1972 and became an NCI-designated comprehensive cancer center in 1979. The designation recognizes the Center’s collaborative environment and expertise in harnessing translational research to bridge scientific discovery to clinical delivery, with the ultimate goal of successfully introducing novel diagnostic, therapeutic and preventive approaches to cancer. http://www.hiccc.columbia.edu/

Columbia University Medical Center provides international leadership in basic, pre-clinical and clinical research, in medical and health sciences education, and in patient care. The medical center trains future leaders and includes the dedicated work of many physicians, public health professionals, dentists, nurses, and scientists at the College of Physicians & Surgeons, the Mailman School of Public Health, the College of Dental Medicine, the School of Nursing, the biomedical departments of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, and allied research centers and institutions. http://www.cumc.columbia.edu

 
 
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