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Título de Acceso Abierto

Blood Cancer Journal

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial en inglés
Blood Cancer Journal seeks to publish articles of the highest quality related to hematologic malignancies and related disorders. The Journal will consider for publication original research, reviews, guidelines and letters that are considered to be of high impact in the field.
Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

hematologic malignancies; blood cancer; immunology

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Período Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No requiere desde nov. 2024 / hasta nov. 2024 Directory of Open Access Journals acceso abierto
No requiere desde ene. 2011 / hasta nov. 2024 Nature.com acceso abierto

Información

Tipo de recurso:

revistas

ISSN impreso

2044-5385

Idiomas de la publicación

  • inglés

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre licencias CC

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Cobertura temática

Tabla de contenidos

Real-world impact of bridging therapy on outcomes of ide-cel for myeloma in the U.S. Myeloma Immunotherapy Consortium

Aimaz AfroughORCID; Hamza Hashmi; Doris K. HansenORCID; Surbhi SidanaORCID; Chul Ahn; Lauren C. PeresORCID; Danai DimaORCID; Ciara L. Freeman; Omar Castaneda PuglianiniORCID; Mehmet H. Kocoglu; Shebli Atrash; Peter M. Voorhees; Leyla Shune; Joseph P. McGuirkORCID; Gary Simmons; Douglas W. SborovORCID; James A. DavisORCID; Gurbakhash KaurORCID; Aishwarya Sannareddy; Christopher J. FerreriORCID; Mahmoud R. Gaballa; Scott Goldsmith; Omar Nadeem; Shonali Midha; Charlotte B. WagnerORCID; Frederick L. Locke; Krina K. PatelORCID; Jack Khouri; Larry D. AndersonORCID; Yi LinORCID

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In multiple myeloma, monthly treatment with zoledronic acid beyond two years offers sustained protection against progressive bone disease

Thomas LundORCID; Michael Tveden Gundesen; Annette Juul VangstedORCID; Carsten Helleberg; Einar Haukås; Trine Silkjær; Jon Thor AsmussenORCID; Elena Manuela Teodorescu; Bo Amdi Jensen; Tobias Schmidt SlørdahlORCID; Hareth Nahi; Anders WaageORCID; Niels Abildgaard; Fredrik SchjesvoldORCID;

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Intention-to-treat outcomes utilising a stringent event definition in children and young people treated with tisagenlecleucel for r/r ALL through a national access scheme

Macarena Oporto EspuelasORCID; Saskia Burridge; Amy A. Kirkwood; Denise Bonney; Kelly Watts; Geoff Shenton; Katarzyna A. Jalowiec; Maeve A. O’Reilly; Claire Roddie; Anna Castleton; Katherine Clesham; Emma NicholsonORCID; Rajesh Alajangi; Shilpa Prabhu; Lindsay George; Ben Uttenthal; Maria Gabelli; Lorna Neill; Caroline Besley; Sridhar Chaganti; Robert F. Wynn; Jack Bartram; Robert Chiesa; Giovanna Lucchini; Vesna Pavasovic; Anupama Rao; Kanchan Rao; Juliana Silva; Sujith SamarasingheORCID; Ajay Vora; Peter Clark; Michelle Cummins; David I. Marks; Persis Amrolia; Rachael Hough; Sara Ghorashian

<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>CAR T-cell therapy has transformed relapsed/refractory (r/r) B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (B-ALL) management and outcomes, but following CAR T infusion, interventions are often needed. In a UK multicentre study, we retrospectively evaluated tisagenlecleucel outcomes in all eligible patients, analysing overall survival (OS) and event-free survival (EFS) with standard and stringent definitions, the latter including measurable residual disease (MRD) emergence and further anti-leukaemic therapy. Both intention-to-treat and infused cohorts were considered. We collected data on feasibility of delivery, manufacture, toxicity, cause of therapy failure and followed patients until death from any cause. Of 142 eligible patients, 125 received tisagenlecleucel, 115/125 (92%) achieved complete remission (CR/CRi). Severe cytokine release syndrome and neurotoxicity occurred in 16/123 (13%) and 10/123 (8.1%), procedural mortality was 3/126 (2.4%). The 2-year intent to treat OS and EFS were 65.2% (95%CI 57.2–74.2%) and 46.5% (95%CI 37.6–57.6%), 2-year intent to treat stringent EFS was 35.6% (95%CI 28.1–44.9%). Median OS was not reached. Sixty-two responding patients experienced CAR T failure by the stringent event definition. Post failure, 1-year OS and standard EFS were 61.2% (95%CI 49.3–75.8) and 55.3% (95%CI 43.6–70.2). Investigation of CAR T-cell therapy for B-ALL delivered on a country-wide basis, including following patients beyond therapy failure, provides clinicians with robust outcome measures. Previously, outcomes post CAR T-cell therapy failure were under-reported. Our data show that patients can be successfully salvaged in this context with good short-term survival.</jats:p>

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Induction of NK cell reactivity against acute myeloid leukemia by Fc-optimized CD276 (B7-H3) antibody

Sylwia A. StefańczykORCID; Ilona Hagelstein; Martina S. Lutz; Stefanie Müller; Samuel J. HolzmayerORCID; Grace Jarjour; Latifa Zekri; Jonas S. Heitmann; Helmut R. Salih; Melanie MärklinORCID

<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) remains a therapeutic challenge despite recent therapeutic advances. Although monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) engaging natural killer (NK) cells via antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) hold promise in cancer therapy, almost none have received clinical approval for AML, so far. Recently, CD276 (B7-H3) has emerged as a promising target for AML immunotherapy, due to its high expression on leukemic blasts of AML patients. Here, we present the preclinical development of the Fc-optimized CD276 mAb 8H8_SDIE with enhanced CD16 affinity. We demonstrate that 8H8_SDIE specifically binds to CD276 on AML cell lines and primary AML cells and induces pronounced NK cell activation and degranulation as measured by CD69, CD25, and CD107a. Secretion of IFNγ, TNF, granzyme B, granulysin, and perforin, which mediate NK cell effector functions, was induced by 8H8_SDIE. A pronounced target cell-restricted lysis of AML cell lines and primary AML cells was observed in cytotoxicity assays using 8H8_SDIE. Finally, xenograft models with 8H8_SDIE did not cause off-target immune activation and effectively inhibited leukemia growth in vivo. We here present a novel attractive immunotherapeutic compound that potently induces anti-leukemic NK cell reactivity in vitro and in vivo as treatment option for AML.</jats:p>

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Age-stratified analysis reveals arterial thrombosis as a predictor for gender-related second cancers in myeloproliferative neoplasms: a case-control study

Arianna Ghirardi; Alessandra CarobbioORCID; Paola GuglielmelliORCID; Alessandro Rambaldi; Valerio De StefanoORCID; Alessandro M. Vannucchi; Ayalew TefferiORCID; Tiziano BarbuiORCID

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Daratumumab-based quadruplet therapy for transplant-eligible newly diagnosed multiple myeloma with high cytogenetic risk

Natalie S. CallanderORCID; Rebecca Silbermann; Jonathan L. KaufmanORCID; Kelly N. Godby; Jacob LaubachORCID; Timothy M. SchmidtORCID; Douglas W. Sborov; Eva Medvedova; Brandi ReevesORCID; Binod DhakalORCID; Cesar Rodriguez; Saurabh ChhabraORCID; Ajai Chari; Susan Bal; Larry D. AndersonORCID; Bhagirathbhai R. DholariaORCID; Nitya Nathwani; Parameswaran HariORCID; Nina Shah; Naresh Bumma; Sarah A. HolsteinORCID; Caitlin Costello; Andrzej JakubowiakORCID; Tanya M. Wildes; Robert Z. Orlowski; Kenneth H. Shain; Andrew J. Cowan; Huiling Pei; Annelore Cortoos; Sharmila Patel; Thomas S. Lin; Smith Giri; Luciano J. CostaORCID; Saad Z. UsmaniORCID; Paul G. RichardsonORCID; Peter M. VoorheesORCID

<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>In the MASTER study (NCT03224507), daratumumab+carfilzomib/lenalidomide/dexamethasone (D-KRd) demonstrated promising efficacy in transplant-eligible newly diagnosed multiple myeloma (NDMM). In GRIFFIN (NCT02874742), daratumumab+lenalidomide/bortezomib/dexamethasone (D-RVd) improved outcomes for transplant-eligible NDMM. Here, we present a post hoc analysis of patients with high-risk cytogenetic abnormalities (HRCAs; del[17p], t[4;14], t[14;16], t[14;20], or gain/amp[1q21]). Among 123 D-KRd patients, 43.1%, 37.4%, and 19.5% had 0, 1, or ≥2 HRCAs. Among 120 D-RVd patients, 55.8%, 28.3%, and 10.8% had 0, 1, or ≥2 HRCAs. Rates of complete response or better (best on study) for 0, 1, or ≥2 HRCAs were 90.6%, 89.1%, and 70.8% for D-KRd, and 90.9%, 78.8%, and 61.5% for D-RVd. At median follow-up (MASTER, 31.1 months; GRIFFIN, 49.6 months for randomized patients/59.5 months for safety run-in patients), MRD-negativity rates as assessed by next-generation sequencing (10<jats:sup>–5</jats:sup>) were 80.0%, 86.4%, and 83.3% for 0, 1, or ≥2 HRCAs for D-KRd, and 76.1%, 55.9%, and 61.5% for D-RVd. PFS was similar between studies and superior for 0 or 1 versus ≥2 HRCAs: 36-month PFS rates for D-KRd were 89.9%, 86.2%, and 52.4%, and 96.7%, 90.5%, and 53.5% for D-RVd. These data support the use of daratumumab-containing regimens for transplant-eligible NDMM with HCRAs; however, additional strategies are needed for ultra-high–risk disease (≥2 HRCAs).</jats:p>

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Refined risk stratification helps guiding transplantation choice in adult BCR::ABL1-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Cheng Wang; Jianfeng LiORCID; Weiyang Liu; Lingling Zhao; Han Yan; Yuchen Yan; Jiayi Ren; Lijun Peng; Jiaojiao Zhang; Yuanfang Liu; Xiangqin Weng; Yongmei ZhuORCID; Duohui JingORCID; Jian-Qing MiORCID; Jin WangORCID

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RAS mutations in myeloid malignancies: revisiting old questions with novel insights and therapeutic perspectives

Dana Alawieh; Leila Cysique-FoinlanORCID; Christophe Willekens; Aline RennevilleORCID

<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p><jats:italic>NRAS</jats:italic> and <jats:italic>KRAS</jats:italic> activating point mutations are present in 10–30% of myeloid malignancies and are often associated with a proliferative phenotype. <jats:italic>RAS</jats:italic> mutations harbor allele-specific structural and biochemical properties depending on the hotspot mutation, contributing to variable biological consequences. Given their subclonal nature in most myeloid malignancies, their clonal architecture, and patterns of cooperativity with other driver genetic alterations may potentially have a direct, causal influence on the prognosis and treatment of myeloid malignancies. <jats:italic>RAS</jats:italic> mutations overall tend to be associated with poor clinical outcome in both chronic and acute myeloid malignancies. Several recent prognostic scoring systems have incorporated <jats:italic>RAS</jats:italic> mutational status. While <jats:italic>RAS</jats:italic> mutations do not always act as independent prognostic factors, they significantly influence disease progression and survival. However, their clinical significance depends on the type of mutation, disease context, and treatment administered. Recent evidence also indicates that <jats:italic>RAS</jats:italic> mutations drive resistance to targeted therapies, particularly FLT3, IDH1/2, or JAK2 inhibitors, as well as the venetoclax-azacitidine combination. The investigation of novel therapeutic strategies and combinations that target multiple axes within the RAS pathway, encompassing both upstream and downstream components, is an active field of research. The success of direct RAS inhibitors in patients with solid tumors has brought renewed optimism that this progress will be translated to patients with hematologic malignancies. In this review, we highlight key insights on <jats:italic>RAS</jats:italic> mutations across myeloid malignancies from the past decade, including their prevalence and distribution, cooperative genetic events, clonal architecture and dynamics, prognostic implications, and therapeutic targeting.</jats:p>

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Combined emapalumab and ruxolitinib in patients with haemophagocytic Lymphohistiocytosis

Yue SongORCID; Fei Zhou; Feng Du; Ziyan Wang; Liyun Bai; Yifang Yao; Limin Liu; Xiao Ma; Suning Chen; Depei WuORCID; Xuefeng HeORCID

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Rapid immune reconstitution following the infusion of autologous, Blinatumomab Expanded T-cells (BET) in patients with B-cell indolent NHL or CLL

Giuseppe GrittiORCID; Silvia Ferrari; Federico Lussana; Anna Maria Barbui; Francesco Landi; Monica Rondi; Alessandro Putelli; Francesco Ballardini; Giulia Quaresmini; Muriel Paganessi; Chiara Pavoni; Arianna Ghirardi; Elisa Gotti; Chiara Capelli; Josée Golay; Martino Introna; Alessandro Rambaldi

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