Rush
University Medical Center participated in clinical
trial of Revlimid
Findings from two large, international clinical
trials show "unprecedented" survival for
patients with multiple myeloma, a blood cancer that
occurs in the blood-making cells of bone marrow.
The findings demonstrate that with Revlimid®,
an oral cancer drug, all measures of myeloma showed
significant improvement in patients where previous
treatments had failed. Rush University Medical Center
took part in the U.S. study. Results of the study
were published November 21 in the New England Journal
of Medicine.
In the study, a total of 353 patients were enrolled
at 44 centers. Of those patients, 177 were assigned
to receive Revlimid (lenalidomide) plus dexamethasone,
a steroid hormone, and 176 received a placebo plus
dexamethasone. According to the study results, patients
who received Revlimid had a median survival of 29.6
months, compared to 20.2 months for the placebo group.
In the Revlimid group, 61 percent of patients responded
to therapy as compared with 19.9 percent in the placebo
group.
According to the International Myeloma Foundation,
follow-up data from the U.S.study and a European
study report even better results. Patients treated
with Revlimid had a median survival of nearly three
years (35 months), the longest median survival in
this difficult to treat patient group.
"Myeloma, also called multiple myeloma, is
of growing interest and concern," said Dr. Stephanie
Gregory, the director of the section of Hematology
at Rush University Medical Center. "Statistics
show the number of diagnoses is increasing in the
United States where most cancers are decreasing,
and myeloma is being found in increasingly younger
patients. These trends give us some urgency in having
potent treatments to fight this disease."
Revlimid is an immunomodulatory agent, a drug that
can modify or regulate the functioning of the immune
system. It is the newest of what are called the novel
therapies that have changed the outlook for myeloma
patients. It is an oral drug that can be taken at
home, and because it targets the cancer cells directly
along with factors that support their growth, it
does not have the difficult side effects associated
with most chemotherapy.
"We are pleased that concerted efforts to find
effective treatments in what was considered a rare,
little-known cancer, have led to drugs like Revlimid," said
Susie Novis, president and co-founder of the International
Myeloma Foundation. "Myeloma has been a difficult
disease to cure, but with the novel therapies we
are developing effective, long-term treatments by
using multiple drugs in sequence and in various combinations.
The addition of a drug with the potency of Revlimid
to this equation is especially important."
In Europe and the U.S. Revlimid has been approved
for use in multiple myeloma, and in the U.S. it is
also approved for a pre-leukemia condition called
MDS. It is also being tested in other leukemias and
lymphomas and even solid tumors.
Myeloma is a bone marrow cancer that attacks and
destroys bone. It accounts for about 16,000 new cases
of cancer each year. An estimated 56 thousand people
in the United Statesare living with Myeloma and this
year approximately 11,300 deaths from Myeloma are
anticipated. While there is no known cure for myeloma,
doctors have many approaches to help myeloma patients
live better and longer.
The Coleman Foundation Comprehensive Multiple Myeloma
Clinic at RushUniversityMedicalCenteroffers a team
approach to diagnosing and treating this complicated
disease. The clinic addresses the multiple organ
systems that are affected in these patients. The
team includes specialists in Hematology, Stem Cell
Transplantation, Orthopedic Oncology, Neurosurgery,
Palliative Care, Integrative Medicine, and Clinical
Social Work. Many clinical trials are available for
both newly diagnosed and relapsed patients. For more
information call 1-800-352-RUSH.
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