Oncology Times - Ot Broadcasts From The Ipad Archives

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Independent and targeted hematology/oncology news for cancer patient care team; breaking clinical news; oncology analysis and commentary; professional trends.

Episódios

  • Bispecific T-cell Engager Antibody Brings Deep, Durable Remissions in R/R Multiple Myeloma

    02/05/2024 Duração: 15min

    Linvoseltamab, a B-cell maturation antigen-targeted T-cell-engaging bispecific antibody, brought robust clinical benefit to patients with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma, including those in difficult-to-treat subgroups, in a multi-center, international study reported to the 2024 American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting. After giving his talk in San Diego, lead author Sundar Jagannath MBBS, Professor of Medicine, Hematology and Medical Oncology and Director of the Center of Excellence for Multiple Myeloma at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York, met up with OncTimesTalk correspondent Peter Goodwin to discuss the therapeutic progress the drug offers.

  • Exosome-Based Liquid Biopsy Promises Very Early Pancreatic Cancer Detection

    02/05/2024 Duração: 12min

    An opportunity to detect pancreatic cancer at stages where early intervention can greatly extend life and even make cure possible seems to be on offer, according to findings from a study of a new liquid biopsy method based on so-called exosomes: subcellular molecules shed into the circulation by cancer cells. At the AACR Annual Meeting 2024 in San Diego, Peter Goodwin talked with Ajay Goel, PhD, AGAF, senior author of the study and Chair of the Molecular Diagnostics and Experimental Therapeutics in the Beckman Research Institute at City of Hope in Los Angeles.

  • Polyepitopic Personalized Vaccine Brought Durable Immune Responses & Clinical Benefit in Resected Head & Neck Cancers

    02/05/2024 Duração: 13min

    Designed with the help of artificial intelligence to recognize multiple genetic features of each patient’s tumor, a small clinical trial of a personalized therapeutic vaccine has shown durable tumor-specific immune responses in patients with surgically resected HPV-negative head and neck squamous cell cancer. The vaccine also prevented relapse in some patients. At the AACR Annual Meeting 2024, Olivier Lantz, MD, PhD, Head of the Clinical Immunology Laboratory at the Institut Curie Hospital in Paris, reported data using a “neoantigen-based vaccine” specifically designed to recognize multiple genetic features unique to each patient’s tumor. During the conference, Lantz called into the OncTimesTalk studio to tell Peter Goodwin about the clinical options that could develop from such highly personalized vaccines.

  • Mesh-Supported Prepectoral Method of Breast Reconstruction After Breast Cancer Surgery

    29/04/2024 Duração: 10min

    Higher rates of satisfaction and psychosocial well-being and low complication rates were reported by patients who had a new mesh-supported prepectoral method of breast reconstruction using titanized mesh pockets after their surgery for breast cancer. At the 14th European Breast Cancer Conference in Milan, Stefan Paepke, MD, from the Interdisciplinary Breast Centre at the Technical University of Munich in Germany, said the technique prevents the unnatural breast mobility patients can experience after reconstruction, sometimes called jumping breasts. After reporting his group’s 24-month follow-up data from the prospective international mesh-supported, pre-pectoral breast reconstruction trial (PRO-Pocket Trial) at the conference, he discussed the findings with Peter Goodwin.

  • Radiotherapy Boost Protects Young Patients With Early Breast Cancer, High Dose Boost Not Needed

    29/04/2024 Duração: 08min

    The value of adding a radiation boost to postoperative radiotherapy for patients younger than 50 with early breast cancer has been confirmed by 10 years of data from the Young Boost trial conducted in the Netherlands. However, by randomizing patients between the standard radiation boost and a lower dose boost, the study demonstrated comparable efficacy for the two boost regimens, with less toxicity among patients receiving the low boost. The trial findings were reported by Sophie Bosma, MD, PhD, Radiation Oncologist from The Netherlands Cancer Institute in Amsterdam at the 14th European Breast Cancer Conference held in Milan. After her talk, she discussed the findings with Peter Goodwin.

  • Breast-Conserving Therapy Effective for Ductal Carcinoma in Situ, But Questions Remain

    26/04/2024 Duração: 15min

    A 30-year-long population-based study, reported at the 14th European Breast Cancer conference held in Milan, Italy, showed that breast-conserving therapy for ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) had become increasingly effective in preventing the emergence of breast cancer over the long term, but that there were still unanswered questions. The population-based Netherlands Cancer Registry retrospective cohort study of 25,719 women with DCIS diagnosed from 1989 up to 2021 (all of whom were treated with standard conservative therapy) found there were successes and limitations with the current standard of care for DCIS. Surprisingly, long-term risk appeared to have been unrelated to tumor grade. Also, despite a continuing improvement in outcomes during this period, the investigators concluded that specific molecular predictors of outcome still needed to be identified to distinguish intrinsically low-risk tumors (that did not require even conservative therapy) from those that carry higher risk and are highly likely

  • Three-Node Breast Cancer Spread: Most Patients Can Safely Avoid Axillary Dissection

    26/04/2024 Duração: 09min

    Most patients whose breast cancer has spread to more than three lymph nodes can nevertheless be spared extensive axillary dissection, according to the findings of a study presented at the 2024 European Breast Cancer Conference in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Annemiek van Hemert, a Medical Doctor and PhD candidate at the Surgical Oncology Department of the Antoni van Leeuwenhoek-Netherlands Cancer Institute in Amsterdam, The Netherlands, reported her findings from a study using the MARI protocol (marking axillary lymph nodes with radioactive iodine seeds) that predicts cancer outcomes. The protocol was developed at the AVL Hospital in 2014 and is now being used in several Dutch hospitals. After her session at the Milan conference, van Hemert talked with OncTimesTalk correspondent Peter Goodwin about the clinical implications of her group’s findings.

  • Artificial Intelligence Tool Predicts Postoperative Radiotherapy Lymphedema

    15/04/2024 Duração: 34min

    Artificial intelligence is being harnessed by a team of researchers at Leicester University in the United Kingdom to predict the risk of lymphedema (and potentially other toxicities) from the use of postoperative radiation therapy for breast cancer. The 2024 European Breast Cancer Conference heard the latest news on an artificial intelligence tool that promises to help cancer clinicians individualize radiotherapy regimens after surgery to minimize toxicity. Tim Rattay, MBChB, PhD, Associate Professor in Breast Surgery in the Leicester Cancer Research Centre at the University of Leicester and Consultant Breast Surgeon at the University Hospitals of Leicester in the UK, told the conference about his group’s machine-learning algorithm, PRE-ACT (Prediction of Radiotherapy side Effects using explainable AI for patient Communication and Treatment modification), that predicts post-operative lymphedema. After reporting his research in Milan, Rattay called into the OncTimesTalk studio to give Peter Goodwin the det

  • Neoadjuvant Pembrolizumab Improves High-Risk Early Breast Cancer Outcomes

    15/04/2024 Duração: 08min

    New data from the Phase III KEYNOTE-756 clinical trial show that adding pembrolizumab immunotherapy to chemotherapy before and after surgery for high-risk breast cancer (which was estrogen receptor (ER)-positive and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-negative) resulted in better outcomes for patients regardless of their age or menopausal status. The findings were presented at the 14th European Breast Cancer Conference by KEYNOTE-756 study co-author Heather McArthur, MD, MPH, Clinical Director of the Breast Cancer Program and Komen Distinguished Chair in Clinical Breast Research at the UT Southwestern Medical Center. She reported the findings at the Milan conference on behalf of her co-author Javier Cortés MD, Head of the International Breast Cancer Centre in Barcelona, Spain. After her talk in Milan, McArthur called into the OncTimesTalk Studio to talk about the findings with Peter Goodwin.

  • Preoperative Partial Breast Irradiation: Marked Benefit in Low-Risk Breast Cancer

    12/04/2024 Duração: 09min

    Offering MRI-guided partial breast irradiation before surgery to patients with low-risk breast cancer could become the norm, according to Yasmin Civil, MD, in the Department of Radiation Oncology at the Amsterdam UMC in the Netherlands, who reported 5-year results from the ABLATIVE trial to the 14th European Breast Cancer Conference. The researchers found that single-dose, MRI-guided, partial breast irradiation given before breast-conserving surgery achieved durable pathologic complete remissions in low-risk breast cancer, as well as held out the prospect of surgery-free treatment for some patients.  After giving her talk in Milan, Civil discussed the details of the ABLATIVE study findings with Peter Goodwin.

  • Adjuvant Atezolizumab: No Survival Benefit in Triple-Negative Breast Cancer

    11/04/2024 Duração: 09min

    Adding checkpoint inhibition immunotherapy to adjuvant chemotherapy did not improve survival among patients with triple-negative breast cancers.   These findings from a study reported at the 14th European Breast Cancer Conference were presented by Heather McArthur, MD, MPH, Clinical Director of Breast Cancer and Komen Distinguished Chair in Clinical Breast Research at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center.   After McArthur’s talk in Italy, she shared the details with Peter Goodwin, OncTimesTalk correspondent.

  • Gene Test Shows Which Triple-Negative Breast Cancers Do Not Need Pre-Op Pembrolizumab

    27/03/2024 Duração: 15min

    About a quarter of all patients with newly diagnosed triple-negative breast cancer will not benefit from neoadjuvant checkpoint inhibitor immunotherapy with an agent such as pembrolizumab—even though it improves outcomes among the remaining majority.   At the 14th European Breast Cancer Conference, held in Milan, Italy, Laura van ’t Veer, PhD, Program Leader of the Breast Oncology Program at the UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center, reported findings from the I-SPY2 TRIAL showing that analysis of “response predictive subtypes” identified a subset of patients with triple-negative early-stage breast cancers with a very low likelihood of response to neoadjuvant immunotherapy and can be spared potential toxicities.   After her talk in Milan, van ’t Veer called in to the OncTimesTalk studio to talk about the I-SPY findings with Peter Goodwin. 

  • Triple Therapy for Patients With Mutated FLT3 Gene in Acute Myeloid Leukemia

    22/03/2024 Duração: 20min

    An early study of patients (Phase I/II) with acute myeloid leukemia found that a new three-drug combination therapy greatly improved outcomes—both in patients with relapsed or refractory disease and as initial therapy.  The new research involved adding quizartinib that targets fms-related tyrosine kinase 3 (FLT3) oncogene. Mutations of FLT3 are present in nearly a third of all AML tumors. The internal tandem duplication mutation of FLT3, in particular, is associated with poor prognosis in AML. So, it was hypothesized that targeting FLT3 could help in treating FLT3-mutated AML. First author Musa Yilmaz MD, Associate Professor in the Department of Leukemia at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, has been talking with OncTimesTalk correspondent Peter Goodwin. 

  • Important Mantle Cell Lymphoma Findings From the Sympatico Study

    12/03/2024 Duração: 13min

    How best to treat patients with relapsed or refractory mantle cell lymphoma has been made clearer by a report from the multinational Phase III Sympatico Study, presented at the 65th ASH Annual Meeting and Exposition held in San Diego. Lead author Michael Wang, MD, Professor in the Department of Lymphoma & Myeloma at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, told the conference how a combination of two targeted drugs—ibrutinib and venetoclax—improved outcomes.

  • World’s Largest Prostate Cancer Trial, STAMPEDE, Celebrates 20 Years of Progress

    06/03/2024 Duração: 17min

    2024 is the 20th year of clinical studies conducted as part of the STAMPEDE (Systemic Therapy in Advancing or Metastatic Prostate Cancer: Evaluation of Drug Efficacy) trial, a series of investigational approaches to initial therapy for patients with high-risk prostate cancer. Patient accrual has now ended, but practice-changing data continue to emerge from STAMPEDE. New agents, regimens, and optimized treatment combinations have been assessed in patients whose tumors already metastasized or were localized but judged highly likely to progress.   Noel Clarke, MBBS, FRCS, ChM, FRCS (Urol), Consultant Urological Surgeon and Professor of Urological Oncology at the Christie at Salford Royal Hospitals in Manchester, said the study is a multi-arm, multi-stage trial in which the current standard of care has continually been compared during the past 20 years with various candidate interventions tested against it.    “Multiple thousands of patients have taken part in the trial,” Clarke said. &

  • Doublet Inhibitor Therapy Restrains Metastatic EGFR-Mutated NSCLC Progression

    04/03/2024 Duração: 16min

    The multicenter RAMOSE randomized clinical trial has found that doublet growth factor tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapy, when compared with standard osimertinib monotherapy, achieved a statistically significant improvement in progression-free survival in patients whose advanced non-small cell lung cancers were driven by mutated epidermal growth factor receptor. First author Xiuning Le, MD, PhD, Associate Professor in the Department of Thoracic/Head and Neck Medical Oncology at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, has been discussing her group’s findings with Peter Goodwin, an OncTimesTalk correspondent.

  • Gene-Targeted Agent Brings Clinical Benefit in R/R Acute Leukemias

    29/02/2024 Duração: 24min

    A new targeted drug, revumenib, was found to increase response rates and survival in patients whose previously treated acute leukemias relapsed or were refractory to treatment. A Phase II clinical study found revumenib met its primary endpoint and was stopped early because of a high patient response rate and clinical efficacy. Revumenib acts on the hitherto untargeted histone-lysine N-methyltransferase 2A (KMT2A)-rearranged gene, which is present in around 1 in 10 acute leukemias among patients of all ages. The drug inhibits the interaction of the protein menin (associated with tumor suppression) and the KMT2A-fusion protein, which is believed to be an oncogenic driver in leukemias. OncTimesTalk correspondent Peter Goodwin heard the latest from lead study author Ibrahim Aldoss, MD, Associate Professor in the Division of Leukemia of the Department of Hematology & Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation at the City of Hope, after his report to the 65th ASH Annual Meeting & Exposition.

  • INTERLACE Study Boosts Cervical Cancer Survival

    28/02/2024 Duração: 18min

    A marked improvement in the outlook for patients with locally advanced cervical cancer has been achieved thanks to a neoadjuvant regimen using standard anti-cancer drugs added to usual therapy.  At the ESMO Congress 2023 held in Madrid, Spain, Mary McCormack, PhD, MBBS, FRCR, Consultant Clinical Oncologist at University College London Hospitals, reported findings from the GCIG INTERLACE randomized Phase III trial of induction chemotherapy. This involved the use of carboplatin with paclitaxel for 6 weeks immediately before standard chemoradiotherapy. After the conference, OncTimesTalk’s correspondent Peter Goodwin visited McCormack to find out more about the clinical implications arising from the INTERLACE study.

  • RET Fusion-Targeted Drug Doubles Progression-Free Survival in NSCLC Patients

    16/02/2024 Duração: 18min

    Patients whose advanced non-small cell lung cancers harbor the RET gene fusion should receive initial treatment with the RET-targeted agent selpercatinib rather than chemotherapy or chemotherapy combined with immunotherapy. This clear message comes from the randomized Phase III LIBRETTO-431 study reported at ESMO Congress 2023 by Herbert Ho Fung Loong, MBBS, FRCP, Associate Professor in the Department of Clinical Oncology at The Chinese University of Hong Kong in China. After his talk in Madrid, OncTimesTalk correspondent Peter M. Goodwin talked with him about the study findings and clinical implications, as well as selpercatinib’s role in the landscape of cancer treatments along with other targeted therapies, chemotherapy, and immunotherapy.

  • Afatinib Recommended for Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer With Uncommon EGFR Mutations

    16/02/2024 Duração: 08min

    The preferred first-line treatment for patients with uncommon sensitizing mutations in tumor epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) should now be the tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) afatinib, rather than osimertinib, according to Japanese researchers reporting the ACHILLES trial results at the ESMO Congress 2023 held in Madrid. OncTimesTalk correspondent Peter Goodwin talked with Satoru Miura, MD, from the Niigata Cancer Center Hospital in Japan, after he reported his findings at the ESMO meeting.

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