Publications by authors named "Meira Yisraeli Salman"

Treatment of acute leukemia is gradually moving away from a "one-size-fits-all" approach, as scientific and clinical advances expand the arsenal of available targeted therapies. One of the recent additions is the group of menin inhibitors; oral, selective, small molecules that disrupt the interaction between the chromatin adapter menin, and an epigenetic regulator, the lysine methyltransferase 2A (KMT2A) complex. Two susceptible leukemia subtypes have been identified: (i) acute myeloid leukemia with a mutation in nucleophosmin 1 (NPM1), and (ii) any acute leukemia, myeloid or lymphoid, with a translocation resulting in the rearrangement of KMT2A.

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Although allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (allo-HCT) remains the backbone of curative treatment for the majority of fit adults diagnosed with AML, there is indeed a subset of patients for whom long-term remission may be achieved without transplantation. Remarkable changes in our knowledge of AML biology in recent years has transformed the landscape of diagnosis, management, and treatment of AML. Specifically, markedly increased understanding of molecular characteristics of AML, the expanded application of minimal/measurable residual diseases testing, and an increased armamentarium of leukemia-directed therapeutic agents have created a new paradigm for the medical care of patients with AML.

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Consolidation therapy forms the backbone of post-remission therapy for AML and is uniformly accepted as an integral part of therapy designed to achieve long-term survival. The need for post-remission therapy was initially described over four decades ago and has since undergone many variations in terms of dosage, number of cycles and intensity of therapy. There is much empiricism in the current understanding of consolidation therapy and much that has not been rigorously studied.

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