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Home>Activities>Reports on Overseas' Conferences and Meetings>A Society Participation Report on
The American Society of Hematology 49th Annual Meeting and Exposition
 
Reports on Overseas' Conferences and Meetings
   
 
A Society Participation Report on
The American Society of Hematology
49th Annual Meeting and Exposition

Masako Iwanaga, Department of Molecular Medicine and Hematology


The American Society of Hematology (ASH) 49th Annual Meeting and Exposition was held in Georgia World Congress Center Atlanta, Georgia state, USA. Professor Masao Tomonaga, Associate Professor Kunihiro Tsukasaki, Graduate Student Koji Ando, and I from Department of Molecular Medicine and Hematology, and Dr. Yumi Takasaki from the Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Hospital, attended and presented in the meeting.

ASH Annual Meeting is one of the large-scale scientific meetings in which more than 20000 clinicians and scientists attend from all over the world every year. The meeting programs consist of a variety of scientific sessions from the cutting-edge diagnosis and therapeutic method for hematological diseases to molecular biology, epidemiology, education, and health service research. Because the meeting has a peer-review system that select only the latest researches in the field for poster or oral presentation among the thousands submitted abstracts, we Japanese hematologists feel humble pride that "I can present my research on ASH Annual Meeting".

There were more presentations of clinical trials than basic researches in this year meeting. Especially, the session of therapeutic strategies for multiple myeloma was the highlight. A number of therapeutic options using novel medicines were presented. Until recently, multiple myeloma remains incurable despite advances in the first-line treatment. However, combination regimens incorporating three novel agents, bortezomib, thalidomide, and lenalidomide, together with commonly used conventional drugs or stem cell transplantation substantially improved prognosis of multiple myeloma, which gives hope to myeloma patients. Other than treatment of the multiple myeloma, the effectiveness of novel medicines (AMG531, Eltrombopag) for the chronic idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura and the AZT/IFN combination therapy for adult T cell leukemia were received heavy attention. Unfortunately, use of these novel therapeutic medicines is limited or unauthorized in Japan. I was keenly aware of problems of the medical service system in Japan on my flight back from Atlanta.

Reference: http://www.hematology.org/meetings/2007/index.cfm
 
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