There’s potentially good news for people suffering from relapsed chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). A new study out from an Oregon hospital shows that combining an oral tablet called idelalisib (also known as Idela) with rituximab, which had traditionally been prescribed for use with chemotherapy, is both a safe and effective treatment for this chronic disease.
The randomized, double-blind phase III study, helmed by Dr. Jeff P. Sharman, MD, of Willamette Valley Cancer Institute and Research Center, was designed to be a five-year-long trial but was actually terminated early, "because of the superior efficacy of Idela plus rituximab (IDELA/R)." Which led to the drug's FDA approval, according to the Journal of Clinical Oncology.
Read MoreThis new option is a game changer, although it is only shown to work in patients who have relapsed; previously untreated patients are ineligible for the drug, because early studies showed increased death rates due to infection. Dr. Matthew Davids, of the Dana Farber Cancer Center told Survivornet that while the drug is very effective, there are side effects that patients should watch for. These include diarrhea, which can lead to colitis, liver irritation, which may cause elevated liver enzymes, and inflammation of the lungs.
Dr. Sharman's study showed that "adding idelalisib to rituximab raised overall response rates from about 15.5 percent to 83.6 percent and median progression-free survival from 6.5 months to 19.4 months, resulting in significantly better clinical outcomes compared with those seen with rituximab alone" according to the Journal of Clinical Oncology.
Father, husband and football fan Michael Heer was just 38 years old when he was first diagnosed with CLL. With two toddlers and a baby on the way, the diagnosis was devastating, according to the Willamette Valley Cancer Institute in Oregon which treated him. But for the first year and a half, Heer had zero in the way of symptoms, and his doctor told him that as long as they monitored his situation carefully, he might not need treatment for years. Unfortunately, Heer started developing signs the disease was progressing within a year and a half. When it became clear that he was going to need treatment, his doctor prescribed chemotherapy.
When chemotherapy didn't stop the progression of the disease, Heer enrolled in a clinical trial at Willamette Valley. The first trial was a flop, but lucky for him, Heer was then able to enroll in Dr. Sharman's idelalisib study. The results were a resounding success. Heer told the hospital "I was told I would probably have five years to live. Here I am, 10 years later. I've received five extra years of life out of this, and the treatment landscape has completely changed. It's no longer a death sentence, and I'm hopeful for what's to come next."
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