In the January issue of Blood, a study shows that in rare cases of chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML), treatment with Gleevec can be discontinued.
The researchers think that some patients treated with Gleevec (imatinib mesylate) that go into extended remissions can stop the drug. They add that patients continue strict monitoring for relapse.
Twelve patients were put into remission with Gleevec for over two years. Six of these patients experienced a relapse within five months after being taken off the drug. When Gleevec was restarted, residual disease again declined.
The other six patients remain in remission after nine to twenty four months follow up.
Despite these results the researchers say 'we do not widely recommend imatinib discontinuation at the present time".
I do have a few questions myself that the article did not address:
Does Gleevec have severe side effects that warrants stopping it at all?
Do they think that Gleevec can potentially cure the patient and some might be able to stop treatment all together?


Some women opt to remove their ovaries to prevent breast cancer recurrence. I considered it -- and then decided I would not take such an extreme measure when I wasn't all that sure I was done having children.
It's a question that could face any one of us at any time -- the question over whether to pay the high cost of cancer treatment, when it could send us into debt, or to discontinue treatment in order to save money for the family members who will survive us. Dying of lung cancer, 







