Weill Cornell’s Dr. John Leonard, the clinical director of the Center for Lymphoma and Myeloma, is featured in this news item on blood cancer diagnosis and treatment.
Click here to watch the video.
Weill Cornell’s Dr. John Leonard, the clinical director of the Center for Lymphoma and Myeloma, is featured in this news item on blood cancer diagnosis and treatment.
Click here to watch the video.
Update: this study is closed to enrollment.
With increasing knowledge of cancer biology and availability of new drugs, it is expected that therapy will be increasingly tailored to individual patients’ tumor subtypes. Examples of this in breast cancer, colon cancer and CML have emerged over the past ten years. Often referred to as “personalized medicine” or “precision medicine”, this targeted approach to cancer therapy relies on translational research that defines a drug’s clinical activity in the context of the tumor’s cellular and genomic pathology.
Translational research has characterized the molecular basis of the clinical heterogeneity in various lymphomas, and many new agents are in development for lymphoma. Although the targeted development of these drugs in specific lymphoma patient subgroups could potentially speed their availability to the right patients, there are two major challenges to targeted trials in lymphoma. First, the empiric clinical research has led to highly active drug combinations that improve outcomes for many patients with lymphoma and in some specific types current therapy does in fact successfully treat a portion of the patients; leaving fewer patients with an unmet medical need to enter clinical trials. Second, it is a practical challenge to test and quickly identify specific lymphoma patient subgroups that can be enrolled in clinical trials of targeted drugs. Therefore a personalized study should ideally use a practical, rapid test to identify a lymphoma group that is not responsive to known treatment and test a therapy that targets an important pathway in those tumors.
The PYRAMID trial addresses both of these issues in order to test an investigational combination of R-CHOP with or without VELCADE, a known NFKB inhibitor, specifically in non-GCB lymphoma. Continue reading “PYRAMID: A Personalized Medicine Study in Lymphoma”
Lymphoma & Myeloma 2011: An International Congress on Hematologic Malignancies will be held October 20 to 22 at the Waldorf-Astoria in New York City. Weill Cornell’s Dr. John Leonard, Dr. Richard Furman, and Dr. Ruben Niesvizky are faculty chairs of the conference. The conference is a comprehensive forum presenting the most recent developments in lymphocytic and plasma cell neoplasms.
There is complimentary registration for Weill Cornell, NewYork-Presbyterian and Memorial Sloan-Kettering staff.