Guest guest Posted April 13, 2010 Report Share Posted April 13, 2010 Thanks Lottie I have been wondering if going back on Myleran would help in any way, I know right now its not possible due to my white count being under 2.8 (2.4 at this moment) While on Myleran my HGB was always good, my platelets were normal. Now as you know I receive infusions every week, which we think was caused by the new drugs. I read this whole web page you sent and its very interesting. If I can hang around long enough, maybe something old but new will come to pass. I may live to be 100 yet. SkipD 33years and counting.  [ ] Inteferon & Cytarabine (Ara-C) Several of our members have stated their experiences with Inteferon and Inteferon/Ara-C. Except for these rare articles, their efficafacy and responses are seldom seen. I found these survival rates and thought you might be interested in reading about their survival rates on this drug as compared to the TKI's which followed, and documentation of any cytogenetic responses, called " operational cures " . There is also a mention of Busulfan (Busulfex, Myleran) and hydroxyurea (Hydrea) because these were the chemotherapeutic agents used most frequently in CML until the development of imatinib. Busulfan is now rarely used, but it certainly served its purpose as Skip can well attest to. Drs. Kantajarian, Cortes & Silver collaborated on this article stated below, in March of 2010, making a late date of the printing a sort of rekindling and resurgence of these drugs, thereby restoring them to a new life. Some of our old timers can reach back into their pasts and dig up a few memories of their own of the difficulties they encountered. We thank them for being a part of these early trials, which paved the way for the strides that have been made today. The side effects that plagued them in the late 80's & early 90's continue to plague them in one way or the other, but of a lesser nature. We can only say that we have been given assurances that these will be of the short term. One treatment in the pipelines are vaccines, that while slow in getting to the forefront will surely surface one day soon. There will be more drugs that control the bcr-ABL as well as treatments for mutations. We have already seen some of these that came to pass. __________________________ " Interferon-a can induce a complete hematologic response (Table 2) in 70% to 80% of patients with CML, and with some degree of suppression of Ph chromosome-positive cells (ie, cytogenetic response) in 40% to 60% of patients, which is complete in up to 20% to 25% of patients. Randomized studies have documented a survival advantage for patients treated with interferon-a who achieved a major, and particularly a complete, cytogenetic response. " Patients who achieve a complete cytogenetic response have a 10-year survival rate of 75% or more, compared with less than 40% for those having a partial response and less than 30% for individuals having a lesser or no response. " The combination of interferon-a and low-dose Ara-C induced a higher (ie, 40%-50%) response rate, and possibly a survival advantage, when compared with interferon-a alone. " Approximately 30% of those achieving complete cytogenetic remission with interferon-a may achieve a sustained molecular remission and are probably cured. Among the others, 40% to 60% remain free of disease after more than 10 years despite the presence of minimal residual disease. This has been called “operational cure.†Formulations of interferon-a attached to polyethylene glycol (PEG) have a longer half-life that allows for weekly administration and may have decreased toxicity. " http://www.cancernetwork.com/cancer-management-12/chapter30/article/10165/153780\ 6?pageNumber=3 March 13, 2010 FYI, Lottie Duthu Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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