Stephanie Jackson, DNP, MSN, RN, AOCNS, BMTCN, Oncology Nursing News co-editor in chief, comments on how health care providers can effectively care for patients with COVID-19 and hematologic malignancies.
Health care providers can effectively care for patients with COVID-19 and hematologic malignancies, said Stephanie Jackson DNP, MSN, RN, AOCNS, BMTCN.
Jackson, unit director, hematology/stem cell transplantation, UCLA, recently presented on leukemia essentials for the oncology nurse at the 5th Annual School of Nursing Oncology. In an interview, Jackson, who is also co-editor in chief of Oncology Nursing News, discussed the increased risk for COVID-19 that individuals with leukemia face, and how providers have adjusted their care strategies in response to the virus.
“What we do whenever we have a patient that has had COVID, we look at their cyclin time, because it may not manifest on the COVID-19 test,” said Jackson, “but we look at the cyclin time of that virus, to see how quickly it’s replicating, and to see how many antibodies they have to make sure that we’re watching that over a scheduled amount of time.”
UGN-102 Produces Comparable Responses Regardless of Surgery in NMIBC Subset
May 8th 2024Patients with newly diagnosed and recurrent low-grade intermediate-risk non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer treated with UGN-102 displayed meaningful and similar responses and disease-free survival regardless of whether they underwent surgery.
Acalabrutinib Plus Chemoimmunotherapy Improves PFS in Mantle Cell Lymphoma
May 6th 2024Patients with untreated mantle cell lymphoma treated with acalabrutinib plus bendamustine and rituximab had significant improvements in progression-free survival compared with bendamustine and rituximab alone.