Penn Medicine Researchers Help Isolate Pathways of Resistance to Ibrutinib for Lymphoid Malignancies

Published by daniel, on December 07, 2020

Penn Medicine Researchers Help Isolate Pathways of Resistance to Ibrutinib for Lymphoid Malignancies

December 07, 2020

A new biomarker discovered by a team that includes researchers from Penn Medicine identifies patients with an aggressive form of lymphoma unlikely to respond to the targeted treatment ibrutinib. It’s a clinically actionable finding that will help guide physicians toward the right treatment for patients with activated B-cell diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (ABC-DLBCL) who harbor these newly exposed mutations in the BCL10 gene. The findings were presented during the plenary scientific session at the 62nd American Society of Hematology Annual Meeting & Exposition on Dec. 6 (abstract #3). Kojo S. J. Elenitoba-Johnson, MD, the Peter C. Nowell, MD, Professor in the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and Director of the Center for Personalized Diagnostics, serves as a co-author.
Read the Penn Medicine press release