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Clinical Advances in Hematology & Oncology
Double-hit lymphoma presents as both aggressive, systematic disease with extra-nodal involvement and, apparently, as low-stage, less clinically aggressive disease. Since R-CHOP is much less effective in double-hit lymphoma, options such as CAR-T as well as novel drugs targeting cell-surface markers are being investigated. This interview with Dr. Ann S. LaCasce of Dana Farber summarizes current understanding and approaches to double-hit lymphoma.
Hematology/Oncology March 1st 2022
Blood Advances
This update of the GO29365 study shows significant survival benefit with pola + BR vs BR alone in R/R, transplant ineligible DLBCL. In the randomization arms, median progression-free survival was 9.2 vs 3.7 months and median overall survival was 12.4 vs 4.7 months for the pola + BR arm vs the BR arm. In the extension cohort, the OR rate was 41.5%, and the CR rate was 38.7%; PFS and OS were 6.6 months and 12.5 months, respectively.
Hematology/Oncology February 1st 2022
Journal of Clinical Oncology
The authors of this JCO study used a PET-adaptive approach to reduce the need for radiotherapy (RT) in early PET (-) disease and escalate therapy in patients with PET (+) disease. The study reports excellent outcomes for the approach, which allowed omission of radiotherapy in more than three-quarters of patients.
Hematology January 19th 2022
Second-line therapy with pembrolizumab plus gemcitabine, vinorelbine, and liposomal doxorubicin (pembro-GVD) is a highly effective and well-tolerated regimen that can efficiently bridge patients with rel/ref cHL to high-dose therapy and autologous hematopoietic cell transplantation (HDT/AHCT).
Hematology December 21st 2021
ASH Clinical News
Adults with confirmed R/R aNHL within 12 months after first-line (1L) chemo-immunotherapy were eligible for the randomized Phase III study, which demonstrated that tisagenlecleucel (tisa-cel) as second-line (2L) treatment in R/R aNHL patients did not have a higher event-free survival (EFS) vs. the standard-of-care (SOC). Read this late-breaking abstract from the ASH Annual Meeting & Exhibition to discover the contributing factors leading to the results, as well as how insights from this study will inform use of cellular treatment in the 2L R/R aNHL setting and the design of future CAR-T trials.
Hematology December 7th 2021
A late-breaking abstract from the ASH Annual Meeting & Exhibition. In this double-blind, placebo-controlled, international study of 879 patients (median age: 65 (range 19–80) years; IPI 3–5 (62%)), the pola-R-CHP combination demonstrated a 27% reduction in the relative risk of disease progression, relapse, or death compared with R-CHOP, with a similar safety profile in the first-line treatment of patients with DLBCL.