Novel Medication More Effective For Patients With Relapsed Blood Cancer

Key Points
The hematopoietic cell transplant team at Osaka Metropolitan University Graduate School of Medicine has developed a novel technique based on a new drug combination that has shown considerable anti-cancer activity with low toxicity for relapsed/refractory acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients.
New Delhi, July 18: The hematopoietic cell transplant team at Osaka Metropolitan University Graduate School of Medicine has developed a novel technique based on a new drug combination that has shown considerable anti-cancer activity with low toxicity for relapsed/refractory acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients.
Furthermore, the precise immunological study demonstrated how a novel medicine increased anti-cancer activity via altering immune cells.
Relapsed/refractory acute myeloid leukemia, also known as blood cancer, has an extremely poor prognosis due to resistance to anticancer medicines and the patient's organ function. Allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation is a method of anti-tumour immunotherapy that can have an anti-cancer impact but is associated with substantial toxicity.
It is frequently used for patients who are difficult to treat with chemotherapy but still relapse.
In research published in the Nature-affiliated Blood Cancer Journal, the researchers describe their clinical observational analysis of 12 patients with AML who relapsed following allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation and were treated with venetoclax and azacitidine.
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✨Venetoclax, an oral medication approved by the FDA in October 2020 for AML, shows promising results in older, untreated AML patients by inhibiting the BCL-2 protein to promote cancer cell death.
A study by OMU researchers demonstrated significantly better one-year survival rates for the venetoclax combination therapy group (66.7 per cent) compared to a control group (27.3 per cent). Immunological studies revealed that venetoclax-induced immune cell alterations enhanced anti-tumor activity.
Dr Mitsutaka Nishimoto highlighted the potential of this novel therapy to improve the prognosis of relapsed/refractory AML and reduce treatment burdens, aiming for safer and more effective treatments.
--IANS