OncLive is finishing up another of its excellent video series on Follicular Lymphoma. The whole series is called "Follicular Lymphoma: Evolving Treatment Landscape," and it features four FL experts. The whole series is worth watching (I always enjoy watching experts get excited about cancer research). The videos look at things like R-squared, immunotherapy, combination therapies, and other treatments that are in trials or have been approved recently.
There's lots to be excited about.
That's why I'm highlighting the final video in the series: "Cause for Optimism in Follicular Lymphoma Treatment." In this video, the panelists each take a minute to talk about what makes them optimistic about FL. They mention some important things:
Patients have more options now than they ever did.
Combinations might bring better responses with less toxicity.
Many FL patients will have lifespans that are equal to the general population.
It's good stuff.
The link will take you to the video, but just in case it doesn't work, or you need a translation, I am copying OncLive's very helpful transcription of the video. See below.
There's lots to be hopeful about.
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Ian W. Flinn, MD, PhD: This
has been extremely informative. Before we end this discussion, I’d like
to get final thoughts from each of our panelists. Dr Fowler?
Nathan H. Fowler, MD: The
good news is that patients have more and more options. Sometimes I guess
that makes our job a little more difficult. At least today,
unfortunately, most of the novel drugs that are available are not
changing the natural history of the disease for the patients for whom it
matters most. So I think in the future, the way we’re going to really
impact the most at-risk patients is to figure out how to use these drugs
in combination or develop drugs that have better CR [complete response]
rates, better progression-free survival. So, again, a lot of exciting
drugs that are working at least independently so far, but the next
generation is to figure out how do we boost that CR rate or how do we
use these drugs in combination without the toxicity that we’ve seen with
some of the early trials.
Ian W. Flinn, MD, PhD: Almost the parallels in chronic
lymphocytic leukemia: getting people multiple agents, getting people
into molecularly defined complete remissions, and hope that that
translates into an improvement in overall survival and maybe, let’s talk
about it, cure hopefully.
Nathan H. Fowler, MD: Yes.
Ian W. Flinn, MD, PhD: Ajay, what do you think?
Ajay K. Gopal, MD, FACP: I
would concur. It’s becoming increasingly complex, but I’m really very
excited about the options that we have. It’s nice for me to sit down
with someone who has newly diagnosed follicular lymphoma and be able to
confidently say that by far, your survival should match age-matched
controls. And really until recently, we didn’t have the data to know
that, and we even have an imperfect way to try to figure out who’s in
that category. Ideally, we’d know at the very beginning, but we usually
know after the first remission. But it makes it increasingly complex
about how we strategize. And I don’t think any of us really know the
answer how to strategize, but we think about the long game, particularly
in our young patients. And all these options keep giving us additional
cards to play as we try to get patients to a normal quality of life and
normal longevity.
Ian W. Flinn, MD, PhD: Scott, final thoughts?
Scott Huntington, MD, MPH, MSc: Complexity
is the key point. Every meeting impressed in me that the fields are
advancing, not only in lymphoma, hematology broadly, and medical
oncology. And so I think as a group we need to also work on translating
from these clinical trials to the real world. It’s an incredibly complex
healthcare delivery system, and basically delivering modern cancer care
these days, and so I think we also need to be mindful of developing
these algorithms to basically guide therapy that is individualized. It’s
easier for us to individualize therapy because we have lots of patient
panels. But out there in the community, where the majority of follicular
lymphoma patients are receiving care, the individualization may be more
challenging, and so I think we need to be mindful of that as well.
Ian W. Flinn, MD, PhD: I think those are really
important points that everyone’s had here. Thank you all for your
contributions to this discussion. On behalf of our panel, we thank you
for joining us, and we hope you found this OncLive® Peer Exchange discussion to be useful and informative.
Friday, February 22, 2019
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1 comment:
Thank you for all that you do for us! This and the last articles were very interesting. I keep the quote prominently displayed as a reminder that FL is something more people die with, not from....Keeps me focused on what's important!
Vivian from Louisiana
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