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One of
nation's largest portfolios of new Lymphoma
therapies targets diverse, difficult Cancer
Newswise — The fifth leading cause of cancer
in the United States, lymphoma is made up of
more than 40 rare and highly diverse
diseases that target the body's lymphatic
system. Lymphomas include both one of the
fastest growing cancers -- Burkitt's
lymphoma, which can double in size in as
little as a day -- and one of the slowest,
chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL).
While all lymphoma types can be cured or
managed as a chronic disease, its complexity
and variation do not allow for a
one-size-fits-all treatment approach.
Instead, it necessitates highly specialized
and individualized approaches.
With a dozen new therapies in development --
one of the largest portfolios of lymphoma
drugs under development anywhere -- the
Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center
of NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital and
Columbia University Medical Center is
meeting this challenge with highly effective
new treatments for the disease, giving hope
to the more than one million lymphoma
patients worldwide.
In 2006, NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia
recruited Dr. Owen A. O'Connor, one of the
world's top lymphoma researchers, to lead
its Lymphoid Development and Malignancy
Program, and direct more than 25 full-time
scientists and physician scientists.
"By increasing the number and quality of
treatment options for lymphoma patients, we
are improving their chances for survival.
"This
is especially critical for patients who
haven't responded to standard therapies,"
says Dr. O'Connor, who is also chief of the
Lymphoma Service at NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia
and associate professor of medicine at
Columbia University College of Physicians
and Surgeons.
One of the most promising new therapies
developed at NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia
is PDX (pralatrexate) for T-cell lymphoma --
among the most fatal forms of the disease.
The drug is uniquely designed to camouflage
itself as a folic acid, which allows it to
be absorbed by the tumor, where it attacks
the cancer.
The therapy has been shown effective in 54
percent of patients who did not respond to
other treatments. The drug is now being
evaluated around the world, and if its
activity is confirmed, it may get regulatory
approval some time next year.
"Our hope is that the national multi-center
clinical trial that is currently underway to
evaluate this drug will result in an
improved treatment option for patients,"
says Dr. O'Connor, who has played a leading
role in developing the drug.
Researchers are also exploring novel
lymphoma treatments that are not
chemotherapies. These include drugs
targeting Bcl-6, a gene cloned by Dr.
Riccardo Dalla-Favera in 1993, and an enzyme
known as histone deacetylase.
Work by Dr. Dalla-Favera has shown that
drugs affecting these two targets will
markedly synergize with conventional
chemotherapy, and may lower the amount of
chemotherapy necessary to achieve remission.
"We are very excited about the promise of
these new therapies. Our lymphoma program
includes some of the nation's brightest
scientists working together to translate
laboratory discoveries into improved
treatment options for patients," says Dr.
Dalla-Favera, who is director of the Herbert
Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center at
NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia, director of
the Institute of Cancer Genetics at Columbia
University Medical Center and Uris Professor
of Pathology and Genetics & Development at
Columbia University College of Physicians
and Surgeons.
Investigators at NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia
also collaborate with colleagues at NewYork-Presbyterian
Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center,
including Dr. John Leonard.
For more information about lymphoma
treatments, contact the Herbert Irving
Comprehensive Cancer Center at 212-305-3653.
Lymphoma
Lymphoma is a type of cancer that originates
in lymphocytes, a type of white blood cell
in the vertebrate immune system. The most
common type of lymphoma, non-Hodgkin's
lymphoma (NHL) includes B-cell lymphoma and
T-cell lymphomas.
Since the early 1970s, incidence rates of
NHL have nearly doubled. The overall
five-year survival rate is only 59 percent.
Hodgkin's lymphoma (HL), also known as
Hodgkin's disease, is a less common form of
lymphoma that arises from an abnormal
lymphocyte.
The overall five-year survival rate is 85
percent. HL occurs mainly in young adults,
with a peak occurrence between ages 16 and
34.
Older patients, especially those over age
55, may also develop the disease. Treatments
for lymphoma may include radiation therapy,
chemotherapy, immunotherapy and bone-marrow
or peripheral blood transplants.
Herbert Irving
Comprehensive Cancer Center
The Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer
Center at Columbia University Medical Center
and NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital
encompasses pre-clinical and clinical
research, treatment, prevention and
education efforts in cancer.
The Cancer Center was initially funded by
the NCI in 1972 and became a National Cancer
Institute (NCI)–designated comprehensive
cancer center in 1979. The designation
recognizes the Center's collaborative
environment and expertise in harnessing
translational research to bridge scientific
discovery to clinical delivery, with the
ultimate goal of successfully introducing
novel diagnostic, therapeutic and preventive
approaches to cancer. For more information,
visit
http://www.hiccc.columbia.edu.
NewYork-Presbyterian
Hospital
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, based in New
York City, is the nation's largest
not-for-profit, non-sectarian hospital, with
2,242 beds.
The Hospital has nearly a million patient
visits in a year, including more than
230,000 visits to its emergency departments
-- more than any other area hospital.
NewYork-Presbyterian provides
state-of-the-art inpatient, ambulatory and
preventive care in all areas of medicine at
five major centers: NewYork-Presbyterian
Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center,
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia
University Medical Center, Morgan Stanley
Children's Hospital of NewYork-Presbyterian,
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Allen Pavilion
and NewYork-Presbyterian
Hospital/Westchester Division.
One of the largest and most comprehensive
health-care institutions in the world, the
Hospital is committed to excellence in
patient care, research, education and
community service.
It ranks sixth in U.S.News & World Report's
guide to "America's Best Hospitals," ranks
first on New York magazine's "Best
Hospitals" survey, has the greatest number
of physicians listed in New York magazine's
"Best Doctors" issue, and is included among
Solucient's top 15 major teaching hospitals.
The Hospital's mortality rates are among the
lowest for heart attack and heart failure in
the country, according to a 2007 U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
report card. The Hospital has academic
affiliations with two of the nation's
leading medical colleges: Weill Cornell
Medical College and Columbia University
College of Physicians and Surgeons. For more
information, visit
http://www.nyp.org.
Columbia University
Medical Center
Columbia University Medical Center provides
international leadership in basic,
pre-clinical and clinical research, in
medical and health sciences education, and
in patient care.
The medical center trains future leaders and
includes the dedicated work of many
physicians, scientists, public health
professionals, dentists, and nurses at the
College of Physicians & Surgeons, the
Mailman School of Public Health, the College
of Dental Medicine, the School of Nursing,
the biomedical departments of the Graduate
School of Arts and Sciences, and allied
research centers and institutions.
Established in 1767, Columbia’s College of
Physicians & Surgeons was the first
institution in the country to grant the M.D.
degree.
Among the most selective medical schools in
the country, the school is home to the
largest medical research enterprise in New
York State and one of the largest in the
country. For more information, please visit
http://www.cumc.columbia.edu
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