ASH News Daily - Sunday, December 11, 2011 - (Page A-1)
Celebrating 10 Years
ASH NEWS DAILY
53rd Annual Meeting of the American Society of Hematology
®
Issue 2, Section A
Sunday, December 11, 2011
San Diego, CA
Visit us at
www.nxtbook.com/nxtbooks/ashnewsdaily2011_Sunday/
Schedule
7:00 – 8:00 a.m.
Grassroots Network Breakfast
Hilton San Diego Bayfront
Aqua 308
7:00 – 9:00 a.m.
Hematology Course Directors’ Workshop
Manchester Grand Hyatt San Diego
Randle Ballroom AB
9:30 – 11:00 a.m.
ASH/ASCO Joint Symposium
San Diego Marriot Marquis & Marina
Marriot Hall
11:15 a.m. – 12:15 p.m.
Meet-the-Expert Sessions
(ticketed sessions)
12:30 – 1:30 p.m.
ASH/EHA Joint Symposium
San Diego Convention Center
Hall AB
1:30 – 2:00 p.m.
Announcement of Awards
San Diego Convention Center
Hall AB
2:00 – 4:00 p.m.
Plenary Scientific Session
San Diego Convention Center
Hall AB
6:00 – 8:00 p.m.
Poster Hall Reception
San Diego Convention Center
Hall GH
6:15 – 7:15 p.m.
Blood and Beyond: Searching
the Scientific Literature Online
San Diego Convention Center
Room 26A
6:30 – 8:00 p.m.
The HVO Volunteer Experience
Manchester Grand Hyatt San Diego
Randle Ballroom A
IN THIS SECTION
Raising Awareness for
Global Vaccines
A-5
Clinically Complex
Clotting Questions
A-6
Another Meth Lab That
Needs to Be Shut Down
A-12
What’s New in
Aggressive NonHodgkin
Lymphomas?
A-14
Insights From Sickle Cell Disease Clinical
Trials: More Questions Than Answers?
By aManda BRandow, do, MS,
and Julie PanePinto, Md, MSPh
S
ickle cell disease (SCD) was
first described 101 years ago. A
century later, the tremendous
challenge for scientists and clini-
cians is gaining a full understanding
of the extensive and phenotypically
variable organ pathology that
this single amino acid substitution
causes and how to diagnostically
and therapeutically manage the clinical
manifestations of SCD. Much
insight into these issues has been
gained through clinical research.
The Education Program session titled
“Recent High-Impact Clinical
Trials in Sickle Cell Disease: Where
Do They Leave the Field?” held yesterday
and again today at 7:30 a.m.
in San Diego Ballroom AB (San Diego
Marriott Marquis) reviewed the
findings of recent SCD clinical trials
and how these trials have impacted
patient management.
The lung is a target organ in
Dr. Peter Carmeliet delivers the Ham-Wasserman Lecture with ASH
President J. Evan Sadler looking on.
MULTIPLE MYELOMA
Chocolate, Vanilla, or Both? Making
Choices in Myeloma
By Michael RoSenzweig, Md, and
heatheR landau, Md
W
ith an explosion of new,
effective agents for treating
multiple myeloma, it
is now one of the most exciting and
dynamic fields in hematology. But
like a child who struggles in an ice
cream shop with too many choices
– chocolate or vanilla, rainbow
or chocolate sprinkles, hot fudge
sauce, whipped cream, or both –
too many choices can be unsettling;
choices in myeloma include doublet
versus triplet induction, stem
cell transplant or continued therapy,
consolidation, maintenance?
In the Education Program session
titled “Controversies and Updates
in Multiple Myeloma,” Dr. Donna
Reece from Princess Margaret Hos-
pital in Toronto, Canada, elegantly
presented an enormous body of
work and attempted to guide physicians
with her focus on the results
of phase III trials. She discussed the
difficulty discerning the benefit of
each component of therapy and each
individual agent when multi-agent
pre-transplant induction, high-dose
therapy, and post-transplant consolidation
and/or maintenance are
evaluated in the context of a single
trial. However, clearly with the incorporation
of proteosome inhibitors
and immune modulatory agents into
induction and maintenance therapy,
PFS and OS continue to increase and
are nearing three years and over six
years, respectively. The modest increase
in secondary malignancies
with maintenance therapy was addressed
by Dr. Reece who asserted
that the reported risks need to be
interpreted with caution as the EFS
analysis suggests that the risk of
progressive myeloma outweighs
the risk of secondary cancer. She
proposed that further investigation
to identify patients at highest risk
of developing malignancies and
the patients most likely to benefit is
essential.
In the second part of the session,
Dr. Sergio Giralt, Memorial Sloan-
»» CHOICES Page A-2
Please see page 6 for more information on today’s
presentation of the Wallace H. Coulter Award.
SCD. Thus, Dr. Kathryn Hassell
from University of Colorado Denver
Health Sciences Center recommends
the evaluation of any SCD
patient with cardiopulmonary
symptoms for pulmonary hypertension
by looking for an elevated
tricuspid regurgitation velocity
(TRV) via echocardiography and
confirmation by right heart catheterization.
However, Dr. Hassell
stated, “TRV is not yet validated
»» SICKLE CELL Page A-4
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ASH News Daily - Sunday, December 11, 2011
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