Upcoming Cancer Care Workshop: Update on Diffuse Large B-cell Lymphoma

Cancer Care will present a Connect Education Workshop titled, “Update on Diffuse Large B-cell Lymphoma” via telephone on Wednesday, October 5, 2011 from 1:30 to 2:30 pm, Eastern Time. Weill Cornell’s Dr. John Leonard will be on the panel of experts.

The workshop is free of charge; no phone charges apply. However, pre-registration is required to secure a place on the call. Click here for more information and to register for the workshop.

Weill Cornell’s Dr. Ari Melnick on BCL6 Inhibitor Research: Implications for Lymphoma Research

Ari Melnick, MD, director of the Melnick Lab at Weill Cornell Medical College, was interviewed by the Lymphoma Research Foundation about his breakthrough research on a BCL6 inhibitor. Dr. Melnick discusses why this study is important for patients and what it could mean for the future of lymphoma research.

Click on the image below to read the Q&A.

Weill Cornell Research: Epigenetic Priming to Improve Chemotherapy Response Can Be Safely Administered in AML Patients

By Rebecca Elstrom, MD

Researchers at Weill Cornell Medical Center have demonstrated that epigenetic priming of standard induction chemotherapy can be safely administered in an attempt to improve the response rate of patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML).

Epigenetics refers to reversible alterations to DNA or DNA-associated proteins which affect gene expression, and epigenetic processes have been shown by researchers at WCMC and others to be disrupted in many types of cancer.  Drugs currently available and approved by the FDA can target these abnormal epigenetic changes, and pretreatment with these drugs (epigenetic priming) might make cancer cells more vulnerable to chemotherapy.

In the research study recently published in Blood, the Journal of the of the American Society of Hematology, patients were treated with the drug decitabine prior to a standard induction of chemotherapy. The toxicity, or side effects, of chemotherapy plus decitabine was similar to that of chemotherapy alone. Although the primary purpose of the study was to evaluate the safety of adding decitabine, the epigenetic primer, to standard chemotherapy, the overall complete response rate was 83%, suggesting that decitabine-primed induction should be explored as a complementary approach to standard chemotherapy. Click here to read the published research paper.

There is the possibility that the approach of epigenetic priming could translate into therapeutic advantages in other forms of cancers.  Many types of cancers have been shown to develop with abnormal epigenetic changes, including lymphoma.  The lymphoma research group at Weill Cornell Medical Center is  also exploring the strategy of epigenetic priming in patients with newly diagnosed aggressive B cell  non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, in hopes of improving on results of standard chemotherapy. Click here to read more about this study. Click here to read the clinical and research profile of Rebecca Elstrom, MD, the physician leading the lymphoma trial.