Latest updates on BTKi-treatment in WM

Ibrutinib monotherapy is approved for all lines of therapy in patients with WM, although its initial trial was focused on patients who relapsed, only (NCT01614821). Thus, clinical research on the use of ibrutinib monotherapy in the frontline setting of WM is warranted. At this year’s iwWM congress, Jorge Castillo presented long term data (4 years) of ibrutinib monotherapy in treatment-naïve WM patients.

Emergent BTKi treatments in WM

Additionally to ibrutinib, to date the only once-daily BTK inhibitor approved in the USA and the European Union either as monotherapy or in combination with RTX for patients with WM [1], other BTKis, such as acalabrutinib and zanubrutinib, are now emerging as potential therapeutic alternatives. Acalabrutinib is an emergent, potent, and selective BTKi, which has received accelerated approval by the US FDA for the treatment of adult patients with relapsed or refractory (R/R) MCL and is in clinical development for CLL and DLBCL.

New insights into BTKi treatment of Waldenström‘s macroglobulinemia

Waldenström’s macroglobulinemia (WM) is a low-grade non-Hodgkin B-cell lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma, characterized by the accumulation of clonal lymphoplasmacytic cells secreting monoclonal IgM protein in the bone marrow and other organs. WM is a lymphoma accounting for only 1–2 % of all hematologic tumors, with an annual incidence of three to four cases per million people in the USA and Europe, classifying it as a rare disease.

Preface – iwWM 2022

The 11th International Workshop on Waldenström’s Macroglobulinemia (iwWM), held in Madrid, Spain, and virtually from 27th–30th October 2022, featured 20 sessions with more than 100 presentations.

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