Video
Author(s):
Anthony S. Stein, MD, professor and staff physician, Hematologic Malignancies and Stem Cell Transplantation Institute, City of Hope, discusses a phase II study examining blinatumomab in relapsed/refractory patients with Philadelphia chromosome-positive B-precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia.
Anthony S. Stein, MD, professor and staff physician, Hematologic Malignancies and Stem Cell Transplantation Institute, City of Hope, discusses a phase II study examining blinatumomab in relapsed/refractory patients with Philadelphia chromosome-positive B-precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL).
To be eligible for enrollment, all patients had to have failed on a second-generation tyrosine kinase inhibitor. Several patients also harbored a T3151 mutation, as well as others, Stein adds. The majority of patients failed all effective conventional therapies that are currently available.
When treated with blinatumomab, the overall response rate was approximately 36%.