Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 16
Researchers Extend D.M.G. Survival Beyond 1 Year With Mutation-Targeted Therapies
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 16

Researchers Extend D.M.G. Survival Beyond 1 Year With Mutation-Targeted Therapies

3 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jul 16

Summary

  • Diffuse midline glioma patients are beginning to live beyond the roughly one-year survival once typical for the deadliest pediatric brain cancer, as researchers report treatments that can slow the disease.
  • Recent progress came from identifying a genetic mutation that underlies many D.M.G. cases and testing therapies aimed at its effects, shifting the field beyond radiation-only care.
  • Radiation had long offered only temporary symptom relief—such as easing weakness or double vision—before the tumor returned and patients died soon after.
  • A small number of patients are now surviving for several years, an early but notable change that researchers say marks the first measurable survival gains in D.M.G.

Insights

With one drug approved for DMG, is the ultimate cure a cocktail of drugs targeting different tumor cells?
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