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Browsing by Author "Miller, Jeffrey"
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Item Diagnosis, grading and management of toxicities from immunotherapies in children, adolescents and young adults with cancer(Springer Nature, 2021) Ragoonanan, Dristhi; Khazal, Sajad J.; Abdel-Azim, Hisham; McCall, David; Cuglievan, Branko; Tambaro, Francesco Paolo; Ahmad, Ali Haider; Rowan, Courtney M.; Gutierrez, Cristina; Schadler, Keri; Li, Shulin; Di Nardo, Matteo; Chi, Linda; Gulbis, Alison; Shoberu, Basirate; Mireles, Maria E.; McArthur, Jennifer; Kapoor, Neena; Miller, Jeffrey; Fitzgerald, Julie C.; Tewari, Priti; Petropoulos, Demetrios; Gill, Jonathan B.; Duncan, Christine N.; Lehmann, Leslie E.; Hingorani, Sangeeta; Angelo, Joseph R.; Swinford, Rita D.; Steiner, Marie E.; Hernandez Tejada, Fiorela N.; Martin, Paul L.; Auletta, Jeffery; Choi, Sung Won; Bajwa, Rajinder; Garnes, Natalie Dailey; Kebriaei, Partow; Rezvani, Katavoun; Wierda, Willian G.; Neelapu, Sattva S.; Shpall, Elizabeth J.; Corbacioglu, Selim; Mahadeo, Kris M.; Pediatrics, School of MedicineCancer immunotherapies are associated with remarkable therapeutic response rates but also with unique and severe toxicities, which potentially result in rapid deterioration in health. The number of clinical applications for novel immune effector-cell therapies, including chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-expressing cells, and other immunotherapies, such as immune-checkpoint inhibitors, is increasing. In this Consensus Statement, members of the Pediatric Acute Lung Injury and Sepsis Investigators (PALISI) Network Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation-Cancer Immunotherapy (HCT-CI) Subgroup, Paediatric Diseases Working Party (PDWP) of the European Society of Blood and Marrow Transplantation (EBMT), Supportive Care Committee of the Pediatric Transplantation and Cellular Therapy Consortium (PTCTC) and MD Anderson Cancer Center CAR T Cell Therapy-Associated Toxicity (CARTOX) Program collaborated to provide updated comprehensive recommendations for the care of children, adolescents and young adults receiving cancer immunotherapies. With these recommendations, we address emerging toxicity mitigation strategies, we advocate for the characterization of baseline organ function according to age and discipline-specific criteria, we recommend early critical care assessment when indicated, with consideration of reversibility of underlying pathology (instead of organ failure scores) to guide critical care interventions, and we call for researchers, regulatory agencies and sponsors to support and facilitate early inclusion of young patients with cancer in well-designed clinical trials.Item The Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer consensus statement on immunotherapy for the treatment of hematologic malignancies: multiple myeloma, lymphoma, and acute leukemia(BioMed Central, 2016-12-20) Boyiadzis, Michael; Bishop, Michael R.; Abonour, Rafat; Anderson, Kenneth C.; Ansell, Stephen M.; Avigan, David; Barbarotta, Lisa; Barrett, Austin John; Van Besien, Koen; Bergsagel, Leif; Borrello, Ivan; Brody, Joshua; Brufsky, Jill; Cairo, Mitchell; Chari, Ajai; Cohen, Adam; Cortes, Jorge; Forman, Stephen J.; Friedberg, Jonathan W.; Fuchs, Ephraim J.; Gore, Steven D.; Jagannath, Sundar; Kahl, Brad S; Kline, Justin; Kochenderfer, James N.; Kwak, Larry W.; Levy, Ronald; de Lima, Marcos; Litzow, Mark R.; Mahindra, Anuj; Miller, Jeffrey; Munshi, Nikhil C.; Orlowski, Robert Z.; Pagel, John M.; Porter, David L.; Russell, Stephen J.; Schwartz, Karl; Shipp, Margaret A.; Siegel, David; Stone, Richard M.; Tallman, Martin S.; Timmerman, John M.; Van Rhee, Frits; Waller, Edmund K.; Welsh, Ann; Werner, Michael; Wiernik, Peter H.; Dhodapkar, Madhav V.; Department of Medicine, IU School of MedicineIncreasing knowledge concerning the biology of hematologic malignancies as well as the role of the immune system in the control of these diseases has led to the development and approval of immunotherapies that are resulting in impressive clinical responses. Therefore, the Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer (SITC) convened a hematologic malignancy Cancer Immunotherapy Guidelines panel consisting of physicians, nurses, patient advocates, and patients to develop consensus recommendations for the clinical application of immunotherapy for patients with multiple myeloma, lymphoma, and acute leukemia. These recommendations were developed following the previously established process based on the Institute of Medicine’s clinical practice guidelines. In doing so, a systematic literature search was performed for high-impact studies from 2004 to 2014 and was supplemented with further literature as identified by the panel. The consensus panel met in December of 2014 with the goal to generate consensus recommendations for the clinical use of immunotherapy in patients with hematologic malignancies. During this meeting, consensus panel voting along with discussion were used to rate and review the strength of the supporting evidence from the literature search. These consensus recommendations focus on issues related to patient selection, toxicity management, clinical endpoints, and the sequencing or combination of therapies. Overall, immunotherapy is rapidly emerging as an effective therapeutic strategy for the management of hematologic malignances. Evidence-based consensus recommendations for its clinical application are provided and will be updated as the field evolves.