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Expert’s Corner

Issues in Oncology

Raising Awareness of the Health Consequences of Alcohol Consumption During and After a Cancer Diagnosis

Jo Cavallo  /  October 25, 2024

In 2023, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared that “no level of alcohol consumption is safe for our health.”1 The warning came decades after the International Agency for Research on Cancer classified alcohol as a Group 1 carcinogen, which is the highest risk group, and also includes asbestos...

Global Cancer Care

Meeting the Long-Term Challenge of Achieving Equity in Global Cancer Care

Jo Cavallo  /  October 25, 2024

Although significant progress has been made against cancer, especially in the United States, which has seen the overall death rate from cancer fall by 33% over the past 3 decades, translating into averting an estimated 3.8 million deaths from the disease,1 progress worldwide has not been as successf...

Global Cancer Care

Prescription for Progress: Lancet Oncology Commission’s Practical Strategies for Global Cancer Surgery

Chase Doyle  /  September 25, 2024

In certain regions of the world, cancer claims more lives than HIV, tuberculosis, and malaria combined, yet surgery has been relegated to the sidelines of global health initiatives. This critical need to address global inequities in access to safe, timely, and affordable cancer surgery led to the cr...

Issues in Oncology

Overcoming the Disparity in Cancer Incidence and Mortality Rates Among Alaska Native Individuals

Jo Cavallo  /  July 25, 2024

Research has consistently shown that Native American and Alaska Native individuals are among the most underserved minority populations in the United States and are disproportionately affected by cancer. The results from a 50-year report by the Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium’s Alaska Native T...

Palliative Care

In Celebration of a Remarkable Life and Career in Oncology

Jo Cavallo  /  June 10, 2024

When Jamie H. Von Roenn, MD, FASCO, graduated from high school in 1970 and enrolled at the University of Illinois in Champaign, she was determined to seek a career in special education, because she wanted to “help people through difficult situations.” Although Dr. Von Roenn ultimately decided to d...

How the Museum of Medicine and Biomedical Discovery Aims to Bring Scientific Achievements of the Past, Present, and Future to Life

Jo Cavallo  /  June 10, 2024

Several years ago, a visit to the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, DC, so fascinated and inspired Mace L. Rothenberg, MD, FASCO, about the history of flight, he wondered why there was not a similar museum showcasing the past and present achievements in science and medicine. The result is...

Applying the Power of Knowledge to Drive Positive Change in Oncology Care

Jo Cavallo  /  May 25, 2024

An ASCO volunteer for nearly 30 years, Robin T. Zon, MD, FACP, FASCO, is humbled and honored to be elected ASCO’s 61st President, effective during the 2024 ASCO Annual Meeting, May 31 to June 4, 2024, in Chicago and online. Dr. Zon began her 4-year term in June 2023 as President-Elect and will beco...

A Look Back on an Impactful and Inspiring Presidential Year

Jo Cavallo  /  May 25, 2024

Serving as ASCO’s 60th President over the past year has been an honor and a privilege, said Lynn M. Schuchter, MD, FASCO, who will end her Presidential term during ASCO’s Annual Meeting, being held from May 31 to June 4, 2024, in Chicago, and welcome incoming President Robin Zon, MD, FACP, FASCO, wh...

Issues in Oncology

ASCO Survey Finds Oncologists’ Well-Being Worsened Over the Past Decade—but Steps Can Be Taken to Mitigate Burnout

Jo Cavallo  /  May 10, 2024

A recent survey by ASCO measuring postpandemic burnout among oncologists in the United States shows that professional satisfaction and work-life balance have significantly deteriorated over the past decade, with 59% of respondents reporting one or more symptoms of burnout, compared with 34% in 2013...

Issues in Oncology
Multiple Myeloma

From Fatal to Fearless: How Patients Can Take Control of Their Disease and Fear Cancer Less

Jo Cavallo  /  March 25, 2024

In 1996, at the age of 37, Kathy Giusti was diagnosed with the incurable blood cancer multiple myeloma and told she had about 3 years to live. In the mid-1990s, effective therapies for this second most common blood cancer were nearly nonexistent. Standard of care for myeloma consisted of oral melpha...

Breast Cancer
Global Cancer Care

A Pioneering Female Oncologist in Morocco Helps Advance the Global Shift Toward Gender Equity in Academia

Khalid El Bairi, MD  /  April 25, 2024

Success stories in research, advocacy, and education from low- and middle-income countries deserve international recognition to motivate the next generation of researchers and practitioners and enrich global oncology. I recently had the privilege to speak with Ouissam Al Jarroudi, MD, about her care...

Issues in Oncology

How The Max Foundation Is Accelerating Equitable Cancer Care Globally

Jo Cavallo  /  March 10, 2024

When Pat Garcia-Gonzalez’ stepson, Max, was diagnosed with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) in 1988 at the age of 14, the Internet was still in its infancy and decades away from the networking resource it has become today. Told that Max would need an allogeneic stem cell transplant to survive, the f...

Multiple Myeloma

Understanding Risk Stratification in Monoclonal Gammopathy of Undetermined Significance

Jo Cavallo  /  February 25, 2024

About 4 years ago, I [Jo Cavallo] wrote about the death of my brother Dom from multiple myeloma in 2011 and my subsequent enrollment in the PROMISE trial (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT03689595). My goal for enrolling in the study was twofold: to honor Dom and others with the cancer and to make ...

Global Cancer Care

How ASCO’s Regional Councils Are Having an International Impact on Patients With Cancer

Jo Cavallo  /  February 25, 2024

In September 2023, ASCO announced the establishment of its fourth regional council, the Central and Eastern European Regional Council, which includes representatives from 17 countries, with the goal of expanding ASCO’s mission globally to “conquer cancer through research, education, and promotion of...

Issues in Oncology

How Being a Member of the President’s National Cancer Advisory Board Is Contributing to High-Quality Oncology Care

Jo Cavallo  /  January 25, 2024

This past year, President Joe Biden announced the appointment of six members to the National Cancer Advisory Board (NCAB; see related article). This board plays a crucial role in advising and assisting the director of the National Cancer Institute (NCI) in setting the activities of the national canc...

Issues in Oncology
Global Cancer Care

Improving Cancer Control in a Changing World

Jo Cavallo  /  December 25, 2023

On October 16 and 17, 2023, the Union for International Cancer Control (UICC) welcomed more than 350 attendees from over 75 countries to its World Cancer Leaders’ Summit in Long Beach, California, to discuss some of the most challenging issues facing patients with cancer worldwide. The theme of this...

Issues in Oncology

How ASCO Is Tackling the Need to Improve Workforce Diversity and the Looming Oncology Workforce Shortage

Jo Cavallo  /  November 10, 2023

On June 29, 2023, the U.S. Supreme Court, in a 6-to-3 decision, essentially overturned affirmative action in college admissions, which had allowed, since 1978, for colleges and universities to consider race as a factor in student admissions.1 The ruling will impact enrollment decisions at public and...

Breast Cancer

Tracking the Progress Being Made in the Treatment of Breast Cancer and the Challenges Ahead

Jo Cavallo  /  October 10, 2023

Jame Abraham, MD, FACP, has been in the field of oncology for more than 2 decades, he and says this is both one of the most exhilarating and challenging times in cancer care. “What excites me the most are the innovations in treatment that are literally transforming the lives of our patients and allo...

Issues in Oncology

Accelerating Progress Against Cancer and Other Life-Threatening Diseases

Jo Cavallo  /  September 25, 2023

Cancer—and the quest to accelerate more effective treatments and potential cures for all life-threatening diseases—has perhaps shaped the life of financier Michael Milken more than his legendary career on Wall Street. In the early 1970s, Mr. Milken’s mother-in-law was diagnosed with metastatic brea...

Lung Cancer

Data Analysis of Young-Onset Lung Cancer Reveals Key Differences Compared With the Disease in Older Adults

Jo Cavallo  /  September 10, 2023

Lung cancer, both small cell and non–small cell, is the second most common cancer in both men and women in the United States, with about 238,340 new cases diagnosed each year, and the leading cause of cancer-related mortality, accounting for more than 127,000 deaths annually.1 Lung cancer in younge...

Issues in Oncology
Cardio-oncology

The Emerging Role of Exercise in Cancer Prevention and Treatment

Ronald Piana  /  March 10, 2021

The holistic benefits derived from exercise in preventing and ameliorating chronic health conditions such as cardiovascular disease and diabetes are well documented. However, less is known about the salutary effects exercise may have across the cancer setting, especially during treatment. Originall...

Issues in Oncology
Cardio-oncology

Newer Cancer Therapies Offer Hope but Also May Confer Cardiac Risk

Ronald Piana  /  December 10, 2021

Since many different chemotherapeutic agents have been linked with cardiac adverse events, there is a growing need for strategies for the assessment and mitigation of treatment-induced cardiotoxicity. Moreover, the rapid rise of immunotherapies has added a new dimension to this clinical setting. ...

Survivorship

How the Cancer Moonshot Aims to Improve the Quality of Life for Adolescent and Young Adult Cancer Survivors

Jo Cavallo  /  August 25, 2023

Several recent studies have shown an increasingly disturbing trend: the incidence of early-onset cancers—those diagnosed in individuals younger than age 50—is on the rise, and not just in the United States but globally as well. Worldwide, in 2019, there were a reported 1.19 million new cases of canc...

Issues in Oncology

Keeping Staff and Patients Safe From Workplace Violence

Jo Cavallo  /  July 25, 2023

The statistics are chilling. According to estimates from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, workers in the fields of health care and social services are five times more likely to suffer from a workplace violence injury than workers overall.1 The Bureau statistics show that the rate of injuries fro...

Geriatric Oncology
Global Cancer Care

Assessing Geriatric Oncology Practice in Portugal

Jo Cavallo  /  July 10, 2023

The global population is aging rapidly. Currently, there are more than 703 million people worldwide aged 65 and older, representing 9.1% of the global population. It is estimated that this percentage will grow to 15.9%—1.5 billion people—by 2050.1 And with that growing aging population will come inc...

Issues in Oncology

Involving All of Society to End Cancer as We Know It

Jo Cavallo  /  June 10, 2023

This has been a year of firsts and seconds for Monica M. Bertagnolli, MD, FACS, FASCO. This past October, Dr. Bertagnolli became the 16th Director of the National Cancer Institute (NCI), the first woman and the first clinical trials cooperative group chair to hold that position. Then, 2 months later...

Making the Art of Oncology and Cancer Care Central to Her Presidential Term

Jo Cavallo  /  May 25, 2023

Lynn M. Schuchter, MD, FASCO, has said that volunteering and working with ASCO over many years has been the highlight of her career. She served on the ASCO Board of Directors from 2009 to 2012 and on several ASCO committees, including terms as Chair of the Annual Meeting Scientific Program Committee...

Issues in Oncology

How Patient Navigation Programs Are Helping Drive Equitable Care for Patients With Cancer and Improve Outcomes

Jo Cavallo  /  March 10, 2023

Although patient navigation is increasingly recognized as an important component in the delivery of patient-centered cancer care, the service is not universally available across all cancer programs in the United States, often because of the concerns of extra cost without tangible financial benefits....

Issues in Oncology

Understanding the Health Disparities That Sexual and Gender Minorities Face in Oncology Care

Jo Cavallo  /  February 25, 2023

In its programming for the 2022 ASCO Annual Meeting, ASCO included a special Education Session on “Gender-Based and Sexual Orientation Inequities: Promoting Inclusion, Visibility, and Data Accuracy in Oncology.” The session offered a comprehensive discussion on the challenges that sexual and gender ...

Issues in Oncology

Ensuring a More Diverse, Equitable, and Inclusive Workforce Within the SWOG Cancer Research Network

Jo Cavallo  /  January 25, 2023

For more than 2 decades, Don S. Dizon, MD, FACP, FASCO, has devoted his medical career to the care of women’s cancers and the sexual health of cancer survivors of all genders and sexual identities. Early in his career, Dr. Dizon founded the Center for Sexuality, Intimacy, and Fertility at Women &...

Breast Cancer
Gynecologic Cancers
Issues in Oncology

How the American Cancer Society Aims to Improve Outcomes in Breast and Cervical Cancers and Reduce Health Disparities

Jo Cavallo  /  December 25, 2022

Just days before the publication of the 2022 Annual Report to the Nation on the Status of Cancer on October 27, 2022,1 which showed a continued downward trend in cancer deaths, Karen Knudsen, MBA, PhD, Chief Executive Officer of the American Cancer Society (ACS), joined the First Lady Dr. Jill Biden...

Issues in Oncology

New Approaches Still Needed to Treat Patients With Cancer Who Have Serious Mental Illness

Ronald Piana  /  December 25, 2022

Although mandates by ASCO and the American Cancer Society to meet the needs of underserved populations have drawn much-needed awareness to the issue, patients with cancer who experience bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and other debilitating mental illnesses continue to experience significantly wors...

Pancreatic Cancer

How the Pancreatic Cancer Early Detection Consortium Aims to Advance Survival Rates in This Deadly Disease

Jo Cavallo  /  December 10, 2022

The statistics are grim: Worldwide, pancreatic cancer is the 12th most common cancer and the seventh leading cause of cancer mortality.1 In the United States, the malignancy has the highest mortality rate of all major cancers. It is currently the third leading cause of cancer-related death after lun...

Breast Cancer

Study Finds Nearly Half of Black Women With Metastatic Breast Cancer Never Receive Information About Clinical Trial Participation

Jo Cavallo  /  November 10, 2022

When Stephanie L. Walker, RN, was diagnosed with metastatic breast cancer in 2015, she was not given information about an appropriate clinical trial or help navigating her way through the financial difficulties she was having after a stroke from complications of the cancer forced her to leave her jo...

Leukemia

The Evolving Role of PI3K Inhibitors in Double-Refractory CLL

Chase Doyle  /  November 10, 2022

The treatment paradigm for chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) continues to evolve in the first-line setting and beyond, with the availability of Bruton’s tyrosine kinase (BTK) inhibitors, the BCL2 inhibitor venetoclax, and novel combinations of these agents with anti-CD20 monoclonal antibodies. ...

Prostate Cancer

A Urologic Surgeon Shares His Insights on Robotic Radical Prostatectomy

Ronald Piana  /  October 25, 2022

In 2000, the da Vinci Surgical System broke new ground by becoming the first robotic surgery system approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for general laparoscopic surgery. In its early years, robot-assisted radical prostatectomy was characterized by some in the surgical community as an e...

Global Cancer Care

Update on the Impact of the Russian Invasion of Ukraine on Patients With Cancer

Jo Cavallo  /  October 10, 2022

In the more than 7 months since Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24, 2022, cancer care for Ukrainian citizens has changed dramatically. Ukraine was once a country able to provide its approximately 160,000 newly diagnosed patients with cancer each year with modern diagnostic methods, including tiss...

Multiple Myeloma

Is Science Getting Closer to Preventing Multiple Myeloma?

Jo Cavallo  /  August 25, 2022

About 3 years ago, researchers from Dana-Farber Cancer Institute launched PROMISE (Predicting Progression of Developing Myeloma in a High-Risk Screen Population; ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT03689595), a large, ambitious screening study to identify individuals at high risk of developing multiple...

Multiple Myeloma
Immunotherapy

Patients With Multiple Myeloma May Face CAR T-Cell Shortages

Alice Goodman  /  September 25, 2022

From microchips to automobiles, people in the United States are experiencing shortages of all kinds of products, and oncology treatments are no exception. In particular, shortages related to chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy have been reported, most acutely, for B-cell maturation antige...

Issues in Oncology

How EQRx Aims to Reengineer the Health-Care System to Produce More Effective, Less Costly Cancer Drugs

Jo Cavallo  /  September 10, 2022

The numbers are dizzying. The costs of cancer care in the United States are rising so fast that by 2030, it is projected the national cancer-attributable costs will total more than $246 billion, up from $183 billion in 2015—a 34% increase.1 And although the total global economic burden of cancer is ...

CNS Cancers
Genomics/Genetics

Deciphering the Elusive Origin and Pathways of Brain Metastases

Ronald Piana  /  July 25, 2022

The effective treatment of patients with brain metastases is an unmet need because, until fairly recently, patients with brain metastases were excluded from clinical trials of systemic therapies. However, the emergence of molecular targeted therapies has allowed a new treatment approach in patients ...

Former NCI Director Takes Stock of His Accomplishments and Looks Ahead to the Next Challenge

Jo Cavallo  /  July 10, 2022

After nearly 5 years as Director of the National Cancer Institute (NCI), interrupted by 7 months as Acting Commissioner for the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Norman E. “Ned” Sharpless, MD, left his position on April 29 to concentrate on his family and contemplate his next career choice. D...

Issues in Oncology

Raising the Bar: Rethinking the Accelerated Drug Approval Process

Ronald Piana  /  July 10, 2022

Our growing knowledge of the molecular and genomic drivers of cancer has translated into a robust pipeline of promising anticancer agents. However, bringing new drugs from the lab to the patient with cancer can be frustratingly slow. To that end, the accelerated approval system was created by the U....

Issues in Oncology

How Social Media Is Fueling an Epidemic of Misinformation and Disinformation—and Distrust in Science

Jo Cavallo  /  June 10, 2022

The COVID-19 pandemic and the confluence of events that followed—including the rapid development of vaccines, the mixed messaging on mitigation efforts to prevent coronavirus infection, and the growing political polarization—helped spark public mistrust and skepticism toward science. This mistrust h...

ASCO’s President-Elect Makes Partnering With Patients the Cornerstone of His Presidential Term

Jo Cavallo  /  June 3, 2022 - Narratives Special Issue

This year, Eric P. Winer, MD, FASCO, takes on two new leadership roles in his illustrious medical career. In February, Dr. Winer left his positions as Chief Clinical Development Officer and Senior Vice President for Medical Affairs at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, and Leader of the Dana-Farber/Harva...

Global Cancer Care

How St. Jude and the WHO Are Sparking an International Movement to Increase Treatment Access for Children With Cancer

Jo Cavallo  /  May 25, 2022

The toll of cancer on children, especially those living in low-resource countries, is staggering. Each year, an estimated 400,000 children and adolescents worldwide develop cancer,1 and despite improved survival rates, the global 5-year net childhood cancer survival rate is only 37.4%,2 making cance...

Global Cancer Care

How ASCO, ECO, and WHO Are Marshalling Resources to Provide Care for Ukrainian Civilians and Refugees With Cancer

Jo Cavallo  /  April 25, 2022

Since Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24, the number of attacks on health-care facilities continues to mount. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), as of March 16, there have been 43 attacks on health facilities, including 34 attacks that have directly impacted health facilities and 7...

COVID-19

Protecting the Immunocompromised From COVID-19: Practical Information for Physicians

Chase Doyle  /  April 10, 2022

COVID-19 may have caught the world off guard in 2020, but in the 2 years since the pandemic began, several effective monoclonal antibodies and antiviral drugs have emerged to protect the most vulnerable patients. The ASCO Post spoke with Gunjan L. Shah, MD, a hematologic oncologist at Memorial Sloa...

Issues in Oncology

Emerging Issues Regarding Artificial Intelligence in Cancer Research and Clinical Practice

Ronald Piana  /  March 10, 2022

Artificial intelligence (AI) has captured society’s imagination and generated enthusiasm for its potential to improve our quality of life, especially in the health-care arena. The availability of high-dimensionality data sets along with innovations in high-performance computing and deep-learning arc...

Pain Management

Studies Show That Laws to Limit Opioid Prescribing Have Hampered Pain Control for Patients With Cancer

Ronald Piana  /  February 25, 2022

In 2015, an unprecedented phenomenon occurred in the United States: according to the World Bank Group, the nation’s average life expectancy fell from 78.8 years in 2014 to 78.7 years in 2015, then to 78.5 years in 2017. The last time our life expectancy registered a similar decline was in the years ...

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