“Improving the Odds”: Clinical Care & Research for Lymphoma Patients

The latest issue of Weill Cornell Medicine, the magazine of Weill Cornell Medical College and Weill Cornell Graduate School of Medical Science, profiled the lymphoma program and the improvements in treatment and better outcomes being developed by our physicians and researchers on behalf of our lymphoma patients. If you turn to page 30 of the reader you can find the full article.

A full list our our open clinical trials is available.

Dr. John Leonard to Speak at ASH Meeting on Hematological Malignancies

This weekend at the ASH Meeting on Hematological Malignancies (ASHMHM15), Lymphoma Program Director, Dr. John Leonard will discuss how he treats patients with mantle cell lymphoma, and specifically on how to overcome mantle cell lymphoma resistance to ibrutinib.

Research on End of Life Care and the Implication for Lymphoma Patients

Picture1By Peter Martin, MD

Most people with incurable cancer eventually face decisions about whether to continue with chemotherapy. In a recent JAMA Oncology publication, Dr. Holly Prigerson, director of the Center for Research on End of Life Care at Weill Cornell Medical College, evaluated the association between chemotherapy use and quality of life in people with progressive, metastatic solid tumors. Contrary to guidelines, which suggest that palliative chemotherapy should be considered in solid tumor patients with good performance status, Dr. Prigerson’s group found no association between chemotherapy use and survival. Moreover, chemotherapy use was associated with reduced quality of life in people that started out with a good performance status.

Although Dr. Prigerson’s study focused primarily on solid tumors like lung cancer, colon cancer, and breast cancer, some important parallels exist in the lymphoma world. While most aggressive lymphomas are initially treated with curative intent, multiple studies have demonstrated that people with aggressive lymphomas that have not responded to two prior lines of chemotherapy may not benefit from further chemotherapy. To some degree, this is intuitive. If chemotherapy has already failed twice, why would it be successful on the third attempt? Similar to Dr. Prigerson’s findings, chemotherapy in the setting of chemo-refractory lymphoma may serve only to negatively impact quality of life.

Fortunately, our understanding of lymphoma biology has expanded rapidly in the recent past, and non-chemotherapy treatments are already in the clinic with others on the way. Investigators around the world, including at Weill Cornell Medical College, are leading the development of exciting, rational approaches that might circumvent chemotherapy resistance and offer new hope, often with lesser side effects than chemotherapy. Please talk with your doctor about clinical trials, or call us at 212-746-2919  to discuss new approaches available at WCMC.