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Published on July 11, 2023
Roche announced today that the European Commission (EC) has granted conditional marketing approval for its bispecific antibody (bsAb) glofitamab, sold under the trade name Columvi, for the treatment of adult patients with relapsed or refractory diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) after two or more lines of systemic therapy. The EC…
Published on April 15, 2022
AbbVie and Genmab have announced topline results from the first cohort of the EPCORE phase 1/2 clinical trial of epcoritamab (DuoBody-CD3xCD20), an investigational subcutaneous bispecific antibody they are co-developing. The study cohort includes 157 patients with relapsed/refractory large B-cell lymphoma (LBCL) who received at least two prior lines of systemic…
Published on July 15, 2024
A phase I clinical trial at Stanford Medicine has found that a new CAR-T cell therapy that targets a different protein—CD22—from the original therapy significantly improved patients’ outcomes. Over half of 38 people enrolled in the trial—37 of whom had already relapsed from the original CAR-T therapy—experienced a complete response…
Published on January 19, 2024
In a crucial Phase I/II trial, researchers at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center have reported significant success in treating patients with relapsed or refractory B-cell malignancies using cord blood-derived chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) natural killer (NK) cell therapy targeting CD19. The findings, published in Nature Medicine, show…
Published on November 3, 2023
Researchers from Weill Cornell Medicine and New York-Presbyterian have identified a surprising mechanism that ultimately allows for DNA repair in cancer cells and in their both fundamental research and clinical studies have found a combination of chemotherapies that address these treatment-resistant lymphomas. Details of this approach, which is published in…
Published on February 15, 2023
Lymphoma patients in a small, remote-based pilot project of dietary intervention for chronic fatigue mostly stuck with the diet, and the study results were promising. Lingering fatigue is one of the most significant effects after cancer treatment. There is evidence that diet changes can lift energy levels, but such research…
Published on January 5, 2022
Data from three separate clinical studies, released at the American Society Hematology (ASH) conference in December by researchers from the MD Anderson Cancer Center, showed enhanced response in patients with high-risk lymphoma when treated with axicabtagene ciloleucel (axi-cel) chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy. Axi-cel is an autologous anti-CD19 CAR…
Published on December 8, 2020
Research shows that presence of a mutated protein means that patients with activated B-cell diffuse large B-cell lymphomas will almost certainly develop resistance to a drug called ibrutinib, a targeted treatment for the cancer. The team, a collaboration between researchers at the University of Pennsylvania, Weill Cornell Medical College and…
Published on January 8, 2020
A study from researchers at MD Anderson Cancer Center and Weill Cornell Medical School, published today in Cancer Discovery has demonstrated a new approach to treating two of the most common subtypes of lymphoma via manipulation of molecular programs controlled by the cAMP-response element binding protein (CREBBP). CREBBP mutations are…
Published on August 26, 2019
Freenome’s multiomics platform, designed to improve early cancer detection from a routine blood draw, will be used by ADC Therapeutics to develop biomarkers for ADC’s pivotal-phase lymphoma drug candidate ADCT-402 (loncastuximab tesirine), through a collaboration whose value was not disclosed. The Freenome platform is designed to identify tumor- and immune-derived…
Published on November 10, 2016
Scientists at Stanford University School of Medicine have just described in a new study how sequencing minute bits of DNA circulating in the blood of lymphoma patients can accurately identify the cancer subtype and pinpoint mutations that might cause drug resistance. The findings from this new study were published recently…
Published on June 20, 2024
Researchers from the U.S. National Cancer Institute (NCI) have developed a chemotherapy-free, targeted treatment regimen that leads to durable remissions in people with certain types of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL). The five-drug ViPOR regimen, named for its inclusion of venetoclax, ibrutinib, prednisone, obinutuzumab, and lenalidomide, synergistically targets multiple molecular…
Published on October 1, 2024
A recent study has demonstrated that chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T therapy can be safely and effectively administered on an outpatient basis in community hospitals to patients with relapsed or refractory large B-cell lymphoma (LBCL). The findings, published in Blood Advances, herald a significant step toward improving access to this…
Published on August 12, 2024
Minimal residual disease (MRD) testing is not new. Pioneered by scattered research groups more than 30 years ago, it spread rapidly from the early 2000s to the mid-2010s, when it was adopted as standard practice for the clinical monitoring of virtually all childhood and many adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL)…
Published on February 14, 2024
Researchers led by Didier Trono’s group at EPFL have uncovered a crucial survival tactic employed by cancer cells. The scientists identified a group of proteins, known as KRAB zinc finger proteins (KZFPs), that help cancer cells maintain genetic stability and avoid immune system detection. The team’s findings are published in…