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Hematology Advisor
According to the results of a study published in Annals of Hematology, two novel analytical approaches for detecting malignant plasma cell clones appear to accurately indicate the course of multiple myeloma (MM) and may be valuable for monitoring patients with serologically nontrackable disease.
Hematology/Oncology March 29th 2022
ASH Clinical News
According to the researchers, “The findings from this study suggest that survivors of [HL] require life-long regular screening for early detection of chronic health conditions and that healthy lifestyle behaviors need to be strongly encouraged as these survivors appear more vulnerable to neurocognitive and psychosocial sequelae from these events.”
JAMA Network
Researchers reported the finding—the longest known CLL remission after CAR T-cell therapy—in Nature. The patients received an infusion of genetically engineered autologous T cells as part of a phase 1 clinical trial in 2010.
Journal of Clinical Oncology
A special tribute to Dr. John Cox, a Professor at The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center and a practicing medical oncologist for more than 25 years in Dallas, Texas. He remains committed to transforming cancer care and enhancing the quality of patient care.
Oncology, Medical March 29th 2022
The BILCAP study established capecitabine as the adjuvant standard of care for patients after curatively resected biliary tract cancer (BTC). This publication presents the long-term data of that study. In the intention-to-treat analysis, the median OS was 49.6 months in the capecitabine group compared with 36.1 months in the observation group.
Short-term radiotherapy with preoperative chemotherapy followed by surgery (total neoadjuvant therapy, TNT) was compared to standard long-term chemoradiotherapy in patients with locally advanced rectal cancer. At a median follow-up of 35.0 months, 3-year DFS was 64.5% and 62.3% in the TNT and CRT groups, respectively. There was no significant difference in metastasis-free survival or locoregional recurrence, but the TNT group had better 3-year overall survival than the CRT group (86.5% v 75.1%; P = .033). Treatment effects on DFS and overall survival were similar regardless of prognostic factors. The prevalence of acute grade III-V toxicities during preoperative treatment was 26.5% in the TNT group versus 12.6% in the CRT group (P < .001).