From the Journals

MCL: Event-free survival at 2 years bodes well


 

FROM CLINICAL LYMPHOMA, MYELOMA AND LEUKEMIA

Favorable prognosis

These findings clearly showed that in one cohort of patients with MCL treated in the recent past, those patients going 2 years without evidence of disease progression or events “have a great prognosis,” said Matthew Matasar, MD, MS, chief of blood disorders, Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey and RWJBarnabas Health.

Dr. Matthew Matasar, MD, MS; Chief of Blood Disorders, Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey and RWJBarnabas Health, N.J.

Dr. Matthew Matasar. MD

However, there are limitations to describing the role of EFS24 in MCL based solely on this single-cohort study, Dr. Matasar said in an interview.

“There’s a lot of heterogeneity in how we treat mantle cell lymphoma,” he said, “so I would just caution generalizing out of a patient population treated one way to populations that may receive quite different therapeutic approaches.”

Dr. Wang said he and his coinvestigators have several confirmatory studies in the works that are focused on other groups of patients both inside and outside the United States, to validate of EFS24 as an endpoint.

“We have at least four cohorts to look into this and see whether we can see the same or similar results,” he said in the interview.

Dr. Wang disclosed ties with Incyte, InnoCare, LOXO Oncology, Novartis, Genentech, Eli Lilly, TG Therapeutics, MorphoSys, Genmab, and Kite.

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