"Hope, like the gleaming taper’s light, Adorns and cheers our way;
And still, as darker grows the night, Emits a brighter ray."

— Oliver Goldsmith (1730?–1774)




Resources

  • What is CML
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  • ASH News 2001
  • The Ladies of Rylstone
  • Books About Cancer
  • Diversions
  • E-Greetings
  • Experts in CML & Gleevec
  • Glossary
  • My Marrow Drive
  • National Donor Day
  • Patients First
  • Philadelphia Chromosome
  • Team In Training
  • What About Me?
  • What the heck is CML?

    Chronic myelogenous leukemia (pronounced my-ah-lah-jeh-nes) is a cancer of the bone marrow. It's also known as chronic myeloid leukemia and chronic granulocytic leukemia.

    When you have CML, your body's marrow — the "stuff" inside your bones — sort of goes haywire and produces too many white blood cells, causing a variety of complications. Unlike other cancers, CML is not a solid tumor, and thus it cannot be surgically removed.

    While medications, including chemotherapy, can help stabilize you for several years, the only known potential cure is a bone marrow transplant, a grueling procedure that often invokes the old cliche' that the cure is worse than the disease.

    Only about 5,000 Americans are diagnosed with CML each year. About 2,300 die from it annually.

    But new treatments and potential cures are on the horizon. Most notable is imatinib mesylate, trade name Gleevec (pronounced glee-veck). It is known as Glivec outside of the United States, and was previously known as STI571. It's manufactured by Novartis.

    Gleevec, which was approved for the U.S. prescription drug market in May 2001, after just three years in clinical trials, is sometimes referred to in the media as a "magic bullet" because it is thought to target only the enzymes in your body that allow cancerous cells to grow, not your normal healthy cells.

    However, even the leading CML experts say it's too early to tell yet whether Gleevec will live up to the reputation it's rapidly acquiring. And unfortunately, results on Gleevec are not encouraging for people with advanced stages of CML, as relapse is a major threat. Other treatments are also being studied, including combining Gleevec with the traditional interferon treatment and arsenic trioxide, plus the latest — vaccines.

    Check out the Article Archives and the NewsBytes Archives for information about other CML and leukemia treatment advances and research.

    Bone Marrow Donation

    Pay a visit to marrowthon.com for more information about bone marrow donation and the Second Annual Jennifer Gangloff Leukemia Support Fund Marrowthon.

    Patients First

    Support the Patients' Bill of Rights.
    Click here to learn more.

    Relay For Life

    We walked, we cried, we celebrated.
    (Click on the photo to see even more photos)

    What About Me?

    Click here to find out who I am and see pictures of my backside.

    CMLSupport.com Reports About Gleevec

      CMLSupport.com Reports

  • FDA Grants Priority Review For Glivec (STI571)
    The U.S. agency must decide within six months whether it will approve or reject the new CML treatment.

  • A Letter From Glivec/STI's Inventor
    A "quiet listener" offers some background about his discovery and some personal insight.

  • Novartis To Lobby Health Plans To Cover Glivec
    Now that it has filed for federal approval of Glivec (STI571), Novartis Oncology is beginning to lobby insurance companies to actually cover the new drug treatment for chronic myelogenous leukemia.

  • Novartis To File For STI Approval By March; Closes Down Trials For Newly Diagnosed Patients
    Novartis expects to file for federal approval of its new cancer drug Glivec (STI-571) by March 2001 at the latest.

  • A Q&A With Dr. Brian Druker About STI571
    Dr. Brian Druker of the Department of Molecular and Medical Genetics at Oregon Health Sciences University, and the lead clinical investigator on STI571, answers questions for CMLSupport.com.

  • Patient Pressure Inspires Novartis To Create STI
    Patient activism on the Internet is helping motivate Novartis to expedite the development and U.S. government approval of STI 571, company officials concede.

  • Dr. Brian Druker's STI571 Report
    This is the brief report about STI571 written by Dr. Brian Druker and on which he based his recent presentation at the conference about chronic myelogenous leukemia in Bologna, Italy.













































































































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    This site was last updated on Feb. 17, 2002

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