In recent years, advances in our understanding of the pathological mechanisms underlying haematological malignancies have led to improved outcomes. Several novel drug classes are now emerging, including chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy, molecular targeted therapies, bispecific T-cell engaging antibodies, CD47 blockade therapy and antibody-drug conjugates. Many challenges remain, however, including how best to combine agents and determining where new therapies fit into the treatment paradigm.
Expert video highlights, insights from the conference hub and comprehensive peer-reviewed articles from our journal portfolio provide updates on the changing treatment landscape. To learn more about how the latest developments impact on patient outcomes view our expert-led learning activities.”
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Several important lymphoma studies presented at ASCO 2026 provided new data across newly diagnosed and relapsed/refractory disease settings. The studies spanned aggressive B-cell lymphomas and classic Hodgkin lymphoma, evaluating novel antibody-based combinations, epigenetic targeting strategies and chemotherapy-sparing approaches. Dr Tycel Phillips provides his expert insights into the six most important studies of the meeting.
At EBMT26, Prof Meral Beksac discusses data from the phase III PERSEUS trial, where adding daratumumab to standard VRd induction and consolidation – followed by daratumumab–lenalidomide maintenance – has delivered striking gains in sustained MRD negativity and progression-free survival. The findings reinforce a shift toward quadruplet therapy as the new standard of care in TE NDMM.
The panel reviews treatment decision-making and monitoring for patients with chronic-phase chronic myeloid leukaemia on tyrosine kinase inhibitors.
We often focus on clinical excellence, but spend less time developing broader skills that could help us better lead with purpose and build more fulfilling, impactful careers. In this episode, part of a mini-series in partnership with LEADderm, Dr Jennifer Soung and Denise Mann explore how clinicians can engage with the media to educate, empower and extend their impact beyond the clinic.
In this edition of Haematology Horizons, we speak with Dr Hannah Levavi about the transformative role of immunotherapy in ALL. Dr. Levavi highlights how agents such as blinatumomab, inotuzumab and CD19-directed CAR-T therapies are reshaping frontline approaches, particularly for older or unfit patients traditionally unable to tolerate intensive chemotherapy.
Key takeaways Primary endpoint not met, but promising trends observed – The Galleri® test did not achieve a statistically significant reduction in combined Stage III–IV cancer diagnoses, but showed favourable shifts toward earlier detection in 12 high-risk cancers. Reduction in late-stage ...
As part of our Haematology Horizons practice pearl series, Dr Douglas Tremblay (Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York City, NY, USA) explores the contemporary role and limitations of HMAs across chronic myelomonocytic leukaemia subtypes, contrasts treatment goals by patient fitness and transplant eligibility and looks ahead to emerging HMA combinations and novel agents designed specifically for CMML.
In the randomized phase II PARADIGM trial, azacitidine plus venetoclax outperformed intensive chemotherapy in fit patients with newly diagnosed AML, improving event-free survival and response rates while reducing hospitalization and symptom burden. Patients receiving aza-ven were more likely to proceed to transplant and reported better quality of life, supporting its potential role as an alternative frontline strategy.
The FDA has awarded orphan drug designation to zavabresib for myelofibrosis, recognizing early clinical evidence of meaningful spleen size reduction and a manageable safety profile in combination with ruxolitinib. Interim data show durable responses in a subset of patients who had inadequate benefit from ruxolitinib alone, setting the stage for further development of this investigational bromodomain and extra-terminal (BET) inhibitor in advanced myelofibrosis treatment.
Three experts discuss latest data from IMS and ASH 2025 on BCMA-directed agents for multiple myeloma.
2025 has brought exciting developments in haematology, with groundbreaking research and real-world progress showcased at EHA, ASH, EBMT and many more leading conferences around the world. We asked our key faculty to share what they believe has been most impactful so far this year – here’s what they told us.
The 67th ASH Annual Meeting and Exposition brought over 30,000+ attendees, 5,000+ novel abstracts and 275+ exhibitors corporate supporters, academic leaders and patient-advocacy groups. The meeting highlighted innovations ranging from novel agents to real-world evidence and patient-centred care. In this article, hear from the experts on the key breakthroughs and clinical insights set to shape the future of haematology practice.
Discover the practice-changing data shaping the future of myeloma, chronic lymphocytic leukemia and small lymphocytic lymphoma. Our ASH25 coverage highlights the pivotal Majestec-3 results, emerging CAR T-cell innovations, and the landmark BRUIN CLL-313 trial poised to redefine first-line therapy. With expert commentary from Prof. Meletios-Athanasios Dimopoulos, this in-depth analysis uncovers what these breakthroughs mean for clinical practice.
Discover how ASH25 is reshaping frontline lymphoma care, particularly for older and frail patients. From chemolight combinations to the growing role of bispecific antibodies, Dr Tycel Phillips highlights the five key abstracts poised to influence clinical decision-making.
Watch expert haematologists discuss managing cytopenias in patients with myelofibrosis.
Learn more about the six highly anticipated late-breaking abstracts at ASH 2025. From in-vivo CAR-T technology and novel ITP strategies to genomic diagnostics and pragmatic perioperative trials. These data showcase fresh, innovative research, potential practice shifts and early signals that we will all want to follow closely.
CML experts consider early-line treatment and how quality of life can be optimized.
CAR-T cell therapy is rapidly altering the standard of care for lymphoma, offering durable responses—even in high-risk disease—and shifting long-held treatment algorithms. In this exclusive interview, Dr Alexey Danilov explains how CAR-T is advancing into earlier lines, what drives decisions between CAR-T and bispecific antibodies, and why access remains a major barrier.
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