Pennsylvania news: Personalized treatment for deadly blood and bone marrow cancer

WFMZ-TV in Allentown, Pennsylvania recently highlighted the University of Cincinnati's John Byrd and the Beat AML study testing personalized treatment for patients with acute myelogenous leukemia.

“Although it has one name there are probably 15, 20 different types of AML. Before, when people were diagnosed with AML, they would come in and everybody would be treated the same way,” said Byrd, MD, a University of Cincinnati Cancer Center researcher, chair of the Department of Internal Medicine at the UC College of Medicine and the chief medical officer of the Beat AML study.

Using genetic sequencing, researchers are identifying what drives each patient's disease and personalizing treatments accordingly.

“Once a medicine gets approved in one indication, it can potentially be applied to a lot of other types of cancers that have that same mutation, but might be in a different part of the body,” Byrd said.

The Beat AML trial is unique because it a master trial studying multiple drugs at the same time.

Watch the WFMZ-TV story.

Read more about Beat AML.

Featured photo at top of Erin Hertlein, PhD, left, and John Byrd, MD, working in the lab. Photo/UC Foundation.

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E-BRIEF: Let's Toast to a Healthier 2003

January 8, 2003

The New Year often means a new health kick: Vows to tone up and trim down, and maybe going to the doctor and getting ourselves as regularly "maintenanced" as we do our cars. So, this week's University of Cincinnati e-briefing examines the health concerns of the young and old, and what you should be doing to preserve your good health.