Dr. John Leonard Comments on Fox 5 News Regarding the Importance of Clinical Trials

Via the Meyer Cancer Center.

Recently Fox 5 News interviewed Lymphoma Program director, Dr. John Leonard about patient participation in clinical trials. As the director of the Joint Clinical Trials Office at Weill Cornell Medical College and NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, Dr. Leonard is an expert in all questions relating to clinical trials. In the video Dr. Leonard cautioned that,

“…finding patients for clinical trials is often about numbers not money. Dr. Leonard says his office is trying to get the word out and let more patients know that clinical studies are out there that than can potentially help them.

Dr. Leonard’s office focuses on finding more effective treatments for serious illnesses like cancer and neurological disorders. He says it is a great opportunity for patients to gain access to the newest treatments before they’re available to anyone else.

Dr. Leonard has personally treated patients on clinical trials who have been among the first people to ever get a drug, and also among the first people to be effectively treated, cured, or had a better outcome because they participated in a clinical trial.

Remember, there is a big difference between answering an online ad for a medical study and going to a reputable institution like Weill Cornell Medical College or New York Presbyterian Hospital.

You can see plenty of cautionary tales online from people who signed up for studies online and gave their personal information only to find out that study was a scam designed to get and sell that personal information to marketers.

If you think a clinical trial might work for you, Dr. Leonard suggests contacting your physician.”

If you are interested in participating in a clinical trial for patients with lymphoma at Weill Cornell Medical College please click on the link.

Dr. John Leonard can be followed on Twitter @JohnPLeonardMD.

The Lymphoma Program can be followed on Twitter @lymphomaprogram.

Palbociclib and One Researcher’s Resolve

Palbociclib is a selective CDK4/6 inhibitor approved by the FDA for the treatment of patients with breast cancer. Currently it’s being tested in phase I trials for the treatment of patients with mantle cell lymphoma. The use of palbociclib as a cancer treatment was championed by Selina Chen-Kiang, PhD., professor of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine and Microbiology & Immunology, and a key collaborator with the Lymphoma Program. Palbociclib is currently considered one of the next big things in cancer treatment. But:

“..it’s old news for Selina Chen-Kiang, Ph.D…who has been a cheerleader for palbociclib for the past decade. In fact, her relentless effort helped resurrect the drug after it was shelved by an uninterested pharmaceutical company, and her initial findings inspired the clinical trials that paved the path for its accelerated approval.”    

“Chen-Kiang is renowned for her research in immunology and hematological malignancies. A molecular biologist by training, she first got swept into myeloma and lymphoma research while studying how antibody-secreting plasma cells were generated from B cells. Unlike solid tissue, normal immune cells can be isolated at different stages from mice and humans, making them the perfect model to study her primary passion: cell cycle control of immunity.”

Today Dr. Chen-Kiang’s dogged inquiry into the potential of palbociclib has the potential to help cancer patients. Her resolve exemplifies the bench portion of our bench to bedside approach at the Meyer Cancer Center. Palbociclib is currently undergoing phase I investigator-initiated trials, sponsored by the Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program at the National Cancer Institute at Weill Cornell Medical College. The principle investigator is Dr. Peter Martin. You can listen to him explain explain the benefits of this recently initiated trial:

Researchers Sequence Anaplastic Large Cell Lymphoma Genome Identifying Potential New Therapy Targets

Anaplastic lymphoma kinase-negative large cell lymphoma (ALCL) is a common form of T-cell cancer, accounting for 15% of all non-Hodgkin lymphoma cases in the United States. In a study published yesterday in Cancer Cell, senior author Dr. Giorigio Inghirami and an international team of researchers discovered the genetic mutations that drive tumor growth, potentially leading to new targeted therapies for T-cell lymphoma. They found,

“Massive sequencing data revealed that more than 38 percent of the tumors contained mutations in two genes, called JAK1 and STAT3. The researchers then examined the results when the genes were left intact and when they were blocked in cell cultures and in animals. They found that there was significantly less tumor growth when JAK1 and STAT3 were inhibited. JAK1 and STAT3 happen to reside along the same pathway, making them increasingly powerful to perpetuate harmful phenotypes once they are created. Dr. Inghirami likens this concept to a car (the cancerous cell) being propelled by gasoline (the mutations along a pathway that enable communication to continue).”

Said Dr. Inghirami,

“Now we have a class of drugs that will potentially work in this population…The interesting part is that pathway is now being found in different diseases – it looks like a recurring motif. So maybe we have the capacity to expand the therapeutic efficacy of this drug to others with similar phenotypes.”

Look to this space for more information about developments regarding treatments for ALCL and other T-cell lymphomas. Currently open clinical trials for T-cell lymphoma can be found here and here.