Significant new treatment added
JENKINTOWN, Pa., October 3, 2006 — The National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) is proud to announce several new updates to the NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology TM for Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia (CML). These changes highlight leading developments in the treatment of CML and represent the recognized standard for clinical policy in oncology in both the community and the academic practice settings.
A panel of world-renowned experts added Dasatinib (Sprycel, Bristol-Myers Squibb) to the guideline. Dasatinib, a new tyrosine kinase inhibitor, is approved by the FDA for the treatment of adults with chronic, accelerated, or myeloid or lymphoid blast phase chronic myeloid leukemia with resistance or intolerance to prior therapy, including imatinib. It is also approved for Philadelphia-chromosome positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia.
The NCCN guidelines include dasatinib as a treatment recommendation at specific follow-up evaluation periods for patients that relapse or did not respond to imatinib therapy, or who have disease progression on imatinib therapy.
The panel also added indications for cytogenetics and mutation analysis for patients receiving imatinib therapy and an 18-month follow-up evaluation with treatment recommendations based upon cytogenetic response.
NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in OncologyTM are developed and updated through a consensus-driven process with explicit review of the scientific evidence by multidisciplinary panels of expert physicians from NCCN member institutions. The most recent version of this and all the guidelines are available for free at www.nccn.org.
The National Comprehensive Cancer Network® (NCCN®), a not-for-profit alliance of 23 of the world's leading cancer centers, is dedicated to improving the quality and effectiveness of care provided to patients with cancer. Through the leadership and expertise of clinical professionals at NCCN Member Institutions, NCCN develops resources that present valuable information to the numerous stakeholders in the health care delivery system. As the arbiter of high-quality cancer care, NCCN promotes the importance of continuous quality improvement and recognizes the significance of creating clinical practice guidelines appropriate for use by patients, clinicians, and other health care decision-makers. The primary goal of all NCCN initiatives is to improve the quality, effectiveness, and efficiency of oncology practice so patients can live better lives. For more information, visit NCCN.org.
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