I received my results back from my 6 month blood work today  and I'm 
Negative on BCR-ABL.
 
greenie
 
 
In a message dated 11/11/2014 2:14:49 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,  
[email protected] writes:

Happy Veterans Day to all
JeanieđŸŒČđŸ‡ș🇾đŸ‡ș🇾

Sent from my iPhone

On Nov 11, 2014, at 1:56 PM, Myvety2k via CMLHope 
<[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected]) >  wrote:



 
Thank you Elizabeth,  I served 6 years in the  Navy.
 
greenie
 
 
In a message dated 11/11/2014 1:43:34 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, 
[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  writes:

 
Thinking of you all.  Nick is critically anemic due to  Gleevec.  Hope 
Richard H., Shannon, Bobbie Doyle, and all keep   up your sharing of info.  
thanks so much Marty for the reports from  the clinical trials to reduce or 
stop 
Gleevec.  
Thank  you to all Veterans on this day.  Elizabeth Woods




 
 
On Tuesday, November 11, 2014 4:32  AM, "[email protected]_ 
(mailto:[email protected]) "  <[email protected]_ 
(mailto:[email protected]) >  wrote:




 
 
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 () _Glivec and studies of stopping the drug  _ 
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Richard H <[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected]) >: Nov  10 
09:05PM -0800 

Yes. This was the reason I stopped  Gleevec. I was also had Iron Deficient 
Anemia. I had to infuse  the iron to help try to recover my RBC count 
because was below  9. I was also still taking Gleevec while doing this. 
On Monday,  November 10, 2014 12:56:18 AM UTC-6, Shannon L  wrote:
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ium=email) 
"Sue" <[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected]) >: Nov  10 
07:13PM +0800 

Hi Shannon  



There is also the Destiny Trial in the  UK which is reduction down to 200mg 
for 12 months and then stop  (there has been no report until after Dec 
2014) 

The  next Trial is named Spirit3 to see if people are being over  medicated 



The Australian Survey will  have 600 participants 



Sue  Hurt

(Australian)



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Sent: Monday, 10 November 2014 6:22 PM
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*  Glivec and studies of stopping the drug - 5 Updates 

*  Glivec and studies of stopping the drug - 1 Update  

<http://groups.google.com/group/cmlhope/t/839da881a2e6e455?utm_source=digest
&utm_medium=email>  Glivec and studies of stopping the drug  


Shannon L <[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])   
<mailto:[email protected]>  >: Nov 09 03:58AM -0800 

Hi All My name is Shannon I  live in Sydney Australia
Its been awhile since I have  posted.
I was diagnosed 1998 and after a few years went onto  sti571 (glivec) and 
achieved remission within 2 months and I  have been it ever since about 14 
yrs.
They are inviting  participants (in Australia) to take a survey of stopping 
glivec  I image they will do a study of stopping the drug.
My question is  does everyone know of the study done in USA of the stats of 
 
stopping they have indicated in this survey info that the  percentage of 
success is 30-40% to me that SEEMS LOW what do you  think.
I do have some problems but I am stable on glivec.
I  hope this emil finds everyone  well
Shannon


Marty Gartenberg <[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  
<mailto:[email protected]> >:  Nov 09 07:46AM -0500 

Hi Shannon, there is a study  called the STIM that is going on in the UK and
it talks about  Imatinib being stopped. It is kind of lengthily however it
does  go into detail.
Good luck to you, and I have always said there  will be a cure for CML in
our lifetimes.
If you follow any of  my posts I always end them with two numbers. They are
18 which is  the symbol for life.
18's to you Shannon
Marty
PS Shannon I  encourage you to post any time that you like. There will
usually  be someone that may be able to answer your questions. Besides  that
we are all here to learn from and help each other
Can  Imatinib Be Stopped?

Goodwin, Peter
Article  Outline
[image: Collapse Box]Author Information

ASH  Abstracts 186 and 187

SAN FRANCISCO—The early promise of the  tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI)
imatinib for treating chronic  myeloid leukemia (CML) has continued to be
fulfilled following  the release of seven-year follow-up data at the ASH
Annual  Meeting here from the International Randomized Study of  Interferon
versus STI 571 (imatinib) (IRIS) with 553  patients.

With diminishing rates of progression each year  beyond year three, the case
for stopping imatinib altogether was  also discussed at the meeting
following release of results from  two studies in which the drug was
discontinued among patients who  had achieved enduring complete molecular
responses to it for more  than two years.

IRIS investigator Stephen G. O'Brien MD, PhD,  Senior Lecturer in
Experimental Hematology at Northern Institute  for Cancer Research of
University of Newcastle upon Tyne, UK,  gave the latest IRIS results to a
packed audience at the meeting,  showing an event-free survival rate of 81%,
freedom from  progression to accelerated phase/blast crisis of 93%, and  an
estimated overall survival rate of 86%, from the standard dose  of 400 mg
imatinib daily.

And in the presentation that  followed, François-Xavier Mahon, MD, Professor
at Victor Ségalen  University in Bordeaux, France, released early data from
the Stop  Imatinib (STIM) study, noting that remissions continued in  about
half of the patients after investigational discontinuation  of imatinib
therapy—with a non-significant trend showing that  patients previously
treated with interferon were more likely to  be among those whose remissions
persisted without  drugs.

Dr. O'Brien said that in IRIS the projected  cytogenetic response rate to
imatinib (by Kaplan Meyer analysis)  was 82%, and that after seven years of
follow-up 60% of patients  were still on imatinib, with 57% of all patients
still in  complete cytogenetic response (CCR).

The impression that CCR  holds the key to a “cure” of CML was strengthened
by comments he  made after his talk:

“It seems that if you maintain your CCR  for, say, three years, the chance
of regressing at that point is  essentially zero. So, achieving a CCR is, I
guess, what we call a  ‘safe haven’ for the majority of patients: If you've
achieved  that and sustained it for, say, three years, you're in pretty  
good
shape and the chance of progressing is virtually nil,” he  said.
Back to Top
<http://journals.lww.com/oncology-times/Fulltext/2009/02101/Can_Imatinib_Be_
Stopped_.1.aspx#  
<http://journals.lww.com/oncology-times/Fulltext/2009/02101/Can_Imatinib_Be_Stopped_.1.aspx>
  >
| Article Outline
Diminishing Rates of  Relapse

These words reflect the diminishing rates of relapse  observed in the IRIS
study in successive years. Rates of  progression to accelerate phase or
blast crisis each year were  low at all times—with rates rising in the first
two years (1.5%  in the first year; 2.8% in the second year) and then
diminishing  after that (1.6%, 0.9%, 0.5%, 0%, 0.4% in years 3, 4, 5, 6,  
and
7, respectively)—with only a single patient having disease  progression to
accelerate phase or blast crisis between years six  and seven.
[image: Figure. FRANOIS-XAVI...]
Figure.  FRANOIS-XAVI...
Image Tools

The total annual event rates,  including loss of molecular complete
remission and death, were  similarly low (3.3% and 7.5%) in years one and
two, and  diminished thereafter (4.8%, 1.7%, 0.8%, 0.3%, and 2.0% in  years
three through seven).

These data only apply, of  course, to the majority of patients who prove
sensitive to  imatinib, and Dr. O'Brien noted that many patients who  are
resistant or refractory to the TKI are now candidates for  other drugs and
in some cases, allogeneic  transplantation.

Dr. O'Brien summed up his feelings about the  current state of the art
concerning imatinib therapy for CML: “I  think it's encouraging on two
fronts. One is that there's nothing  new in years six and seven to cause
alarm in terms of safety  events. And the second is—particularly in patients
who achieved a  complete cytogenetic response—I think we can be very
reassured  that the vast majority—especially if you have that CCR for  three
years—are doing extremely well, with very few of those  progressing.”
Back to Top
<http://journals.lww.com/oncology-times/Fulltext/2009/02101/Can_Imatinib_Be_
Stopped_.1.aspx#  
<http://journals.lww.com/oncology-times/Fulltext/2009/02101/Can_Imatinib_Be_Stopped_.1.aspx>
  >
| Article Outline
STIM Study

Encouraging data on  long-term remission of CML among patients treated with
imatinib  gave rise to the French initiative to conduct a pilot study  with
15 patients looking at stopping imatinib, and following this  the
multicenter STIM study with 50 patients, which began in July  2007 but which
has already yielded early—but provocative—evidence  that remission from CML
can continue even after imatinib is  stopped.

Dr. Mahon said that patients were recruited into  these studies only if they
had received imatinib for at least  three years and achieved sustained
complete molecular remission  (CMR) for two years before experimentally
stopping the  drug.

The definition of sustained CMR was strict: BCR-ABL/ABL  had to be below a
detection threshold corresponding to a 5-log  reduction (undetectable signal
using RQ-PCR) for at least two  years. Molecular relapse was defined as
RQ-PCR positivity  detected in two successive assays, and patients who
relapsed were  then retreated with imatinib (successfully) at a dose of 400
mg  daily.

In the latest follow-up of the pilot study, Dr. Mahon  said that seven out
of 15 patients had relapse within six months  and all were restored to CMR
by re-treatment with imatinib. The  remaining eight patients were still in
CMR a median of 37 months  after stopping the drug.

All of the patients in the pilot  study had been treated with interferon
before receiving imatinib,  most of them responding to it. This raised the
suggestion—which  Dr. Mahon discussed in his talk at the ASH  meeting—that
interferon may have conferred a benefit among  patients who were
subsequently treated with imatinib.

Half  of the patients in the STIM study had been pretreated with  
interferon,
and some provocative—but as yet not statistically  significant—data have
emerged showing an advantage among those  who had previously received
interferon before going on to  imatinib therapy.

By July 2008, 10 of the 15 patients who  were still in CMR had received
prior interferon. The latest  assessment from a slide Dr. Mahon presented
showed that 27 out of  49 patients followed for more than six months had had
disease  relapse; 14 of these had received only imatinib and the  remaining
13 had been previously treated with interferon, while  only two of the seven
patients in STIM who have so far continued  in CMR for 14 months had been
treated with imatinib  alone.

Dr. Mahon summed up his interim conclusions by stating  that they have
confirmed that CMR can be sustained after stopping  imatinib, and that
although there seems to be an [as yet  statistically unconfirmed] advantage
among the patients who  received interferon, it is possible to stop the drug
in patients  with sustained CMR even among those treated with imatinib  
alone.

He reported that the probability of survival without  molecular relapse nine
months after discontinuing imatinib was  46%, with the curve looking flat,
so far, out to 15 months.  Importantly, the STIM study found that all
patients were  sensitive after imatinib re-challenge.
Back to Top
<http://journals.lww.com/oncology-times/Fulltext/2009/02101/Can_Imatinib_Be_
Stopped_.1.aspx#  
<http://journals.lww.com/oncology-times/Fulltext/2009/02101/Can_Imatinib_Be_Stopped_.1.aspx>
  >
| Article Outline
‘Recurring Question’

When Dr.  O'Brien was asked for a comment on Dr. Mahon's conclusion from  
the
initial pilot study and the early results from the STIM  study, he said,
“I'm fascinated by it. There's probably a bit of  a cultural difference, I
think, because most of my patients in  the UK—when I suggest
[stopping]—don't want to hand their pills  back, and want to carry on.
[image: Figure. STEPHEN G.  O...]
Figure. STEPHEN G. O...
Image Tools

“I think  that's driven by the fact that they are tolerating the drug  well.
There are no safety concerns emerging with the long-term  follow-up. And
it's obviously having good efficacy in them. But  this is a recurring
question that I think we'll see more and more  of—and the French study is
very important.”
Back to  Top
<http://journals.lww.com/oncology-times/Fulltext/2009/02101/Can_Imatinib_Be_
Stopped_.1.aspx#  
<http://journals.lww.com/oncology-times/Fulltext/2009/02101/Can_Imatinib_Be_Stopped_.1.aspx>
  >
| Article Outline
Low Toxicities

In the UK, he  noted, the preference for continuing imatinib could be
explained  by relatively low toxicities, which were not a  significant
barrier to its use, with neutropenia and  thrombocytopenia being minor
toxicities that are merely  irritating over time.

“GI toxicity like diarrhea, for  example, and a feeling of fatigue and
malaise, sometimes, and  muscle cramps can be troublesome in some patients
over the years.  But they're usually minor toxicities which, after many
years,  become rather wearing, rather than major toxicities,” he  said.

The bottom line for clinicians treating their patients  with CML, according
to Dr. O'Brien's interpretation of his IRIS  results, is that imatinib at
400 mg remains the current standard  for first-line drug therapy, even
though there are exciting data  among patient cohorts treated with nilotinib
and dasatinib  first-line, with cytogenetic response rates in excess of  
95%.

“I think—for the future—where we're going is to do  comparative Phase III
studies with the tyrosine kinase inhibitors  in newly diagnosed patients to
see if we can improve on imatinib.  Because although the imatinib data is
reassuring, it's clear that  at six or seven years, perhaps a third of
patients are not  continuing on imatinib,” he said.

*Supported by funding from  Genentech BioOncology and Biogen Idec.*

© 2009 Lippincott  Williams & Wilkins, Inc.



Shannon L  <[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  
 <mailto:[email protected]>  >: Nov 09 03:52PM -0800 

Hi Everyone
Thankyou  Marty for the research information it was very informative, so  
they are combining stopping with interferon unfortunately I  can't tolerate 
it I remember the first time before glivec.
I  hope everyone is having a wonderful day.

On Sunday, November  9, 2014 10:58:55 PM UTC+11, Shannon L  wrote:


Richard H <[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  
<mailto:[email protected]>  >: Nov 09 09:33PM -0800 

What a great record. You  didn't indicate how much Gleevec you are taking. 
I have read  that several CMLers are taking reduced amounts and reaming in  
remission. I have seen a post by a lady that said see was very  petite and 
she was only taking 100mg instead of 400mg. 
I  don't know the percentage or of a combined results From the  different 
studies I read sometime ago I believe the range you  have is consistent 
with 
what I have read. You can read my  results below. My ONC told be I needed 
to end my almost 6 year  vacation and I am trying to requalify for a lower 
copay for  Bosutinib. I have tested and they found no mutation. I have  
studied the side effects and I will be meeting with a Nurse to  go over the 
side effects. Due to my other problems I am  concerned about all the 
interactions with those Meds. 
I hope  this has helped you.

Richard H.

Dxd 2/2003  

400mg Gleevec 3/2003

Undetectable 11/03

RT-PCR  negative 11/04

QT-PCR .003 11/05

RBC 8.

Gleevec  Vacation 11/06-6/07 

Iron infusion 11/06

Transfusions  12/06-5/07

QT-PCR .007

Gleevec 1/08  -5/08

Procrit 8/08-11/08 

Gleevec Vacation  7/08-Present

QT-PCR .003 4/09

QT-PCR .0015  6/09

QT-PCR .0021 9/09

QT-PCR .0028 1/10

QT-PCR  .001 4/10

QT-PCR .00468 10/10

QT-PCR 1.049%  2/11

QT-PCR .0612% 8/11

QT-PCR 2.616 %  2/12

QT-PCR 2.410% 8/12

RT-PCR 9.183%  4/13

RT-PCR 4.57% 6/13

RT-PCR 10.183%  10/13

RT-PCR 10.577% 2/14

RT-PCR 16.050%  5/14

On Sunday, November 9, 2014 5:58:55 AM UTC-6,  Shannon L wrote:



Shannon L <[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])   
<mailto:[email protected]>  >: Nov 09 10:56PM -0800 

Hi Richard H

Yes  Glivec 400 mg has been good to me I have been very stable on the  
drug, 
Wow 6 years off glivec thank you so much for sharing your  results just a 
question in your first holiday off glivec you had  an iron injection is 
this 
because of cml? I am contemplating a  small break as my stomach problems 
seem to be increasing and are  at times very debilitating. I know I have 
been on many meds  prior to glivec (chemo twice, cytarabine, hydroxia, and  
interferon) and Im sure my body sometimes struggles with it  all.

On Sunday, November 9, 2014 10:58:55 PM UTC+11, Shannon  L wrote:

Back to top 

<http://groups.google.com/group/cmlhope/t/22ca310a00448c54?utm_source=digest
&utm_medium=email>  Glivec and studies of stopping the drug 


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