Conference Coverage

Practice-changing data at this year’s ASH meeting


 

Race and bloods cancers

ASH president Stephanie Lee, MD, MPH, highlighted several abstracts on disparities that will be presented at the meeting. One of these, which is to be presented during the plenary session, is an analysis of patient survival in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) (abstract 6).

It found that “self-reported race was the best indicator of survival,” noted Lee.

Overall survival at 3 years was 41% in White patients versus 32% in Black patients, a difference that was highly significant, she noted.

Part of the study also evaluated patients who were all on the same chemotherapy protocol, “so there was no effect of different treatment since they were on therapy determined by the trial,” said Lee.

Black patients were less likely to have normal cytogenetics compared with White patients (38% vs 51%; P = .01) and had a lower frequency of prognostically favorable NPM1 mutations (25% vs 38%; P = .04), but higher frequencies of spliceosome gene mutations (24% vs 12%; P = .009). Therefore, the results showed race was an independent prognosticator of poor survival in AML, aside from established molecular markers.

A special scientific session on race will be held on Dec. 5, Lee noted. While other abstracts consider race from the patient side, this session will focus on the scientist’s side, she explained, and address questions such as: “What are the implications of diversity and racism? And how does that impact scientists who are from underrepresented minorities?”

COVID-19 and blood disorders

Lee also highlighted a study (abstract 215) that analyzed emerging data from the ASH Research Collaborative COVID-19 Registry for Hematology, which was developed to look at outcomes of COVID-19 infection in patients with underlying blood disorders.

An analysis of data from 250 patients at 74 sites around the world found that overall mortality was 28%. “This supports the emerging consensus that patients with hematologic malignancies experience significant morbidity and mortality from COVID-19 infection,” say the authors.

“We do need real-world data to see how SARS-CoV-2 is affecting our patients with hematologic diseases or those who don’t have a hematologic disease but who are then infected with the coronavirus and develop a hematologic problem like blood clots,” said Lee.

“More data will be coming in, but this is a good example of trying to harness real-world information to learn things until we have more controlled trials.”

‘Fireside chat’ with Fauci

COVID-19 will be on the agenda for a special session billed as a “fireside chat” with Anthony Fauci, MD, of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health.

“This will be kicking off our meeting on Saturday morning,” said Lee.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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