Advertisement

Search Results

Advertisement



Your search for The ASCO Post Staff ,The ASCO Post Staff matches 6181 pages

Showing 1451 - 1500


prostate cancer
issues in oncology

Despite Gender-Affirming Surgery, Transgender Women May Still Be at Risk of Developing Prostate Cancer

Researchers have estimated that about 14 of every 10,000 transgender women may be at risk of developing prostate cancer, according to a new study published by Nik-Ahd et al in JAMA.  Background Transgender women keep their prostates even after gender-affirming surgery, but the extent to which they...

breast cancer
supportive care
cost of care

Remote Outreach May Increase Uptake of and Adherence to Cancer Screenings in Females in Rural Settings

Females in rural areas may be six times more likely to receive timely breast, cervical, and colorectal cancer screenings with remote outreach that involves interactive education and follow-up support by telephone compared with females in rural areas who don’t have remote outreach, according to a...

skin cancer
genomics/genetics

Researchers Study Genetic Changes Across Multiple Organs of Metastatic Melanoma

Researchers have found that studying the landscape of DNA and RNA alterations across multiple organs of metastasis may provide a new direction in cancer therapeutics to address treatment failure, according to a new study published by Liu et al in Nature Medicine. The new findings from analyzing...

breast cancer
issues in oncology

Preoperative MRI Scans May Not Reduce Positive Margins and Reoperations in Patients With Breast Cancer Undergoing Lumpectomy

Preoperative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans were not associated with a reduction in positive margins at the tumor site or in the need to reoperate to help ensure complete tumor excision in patients with breast cancer undergoing lumpectomy, according to new findings presented by Cairns et al ...

supportive care
symptom management
breast cancer
colorectal cancer

Lindsay L. Peterson, MD, on Exercise and Cancer Outcomes

Lindsay L. Peterson, MD, of the Washington University, St. Louis, discusses the value of physical activity in improving cancer prognosis, especially for patients with breast or colon cancer. Aerobic exercises and resistance training are recommended during and after treatment. Exercise may help...

issues in oncology

Carmen E. Guerra, MD, MSCE, on Strategies for Equitable Access to Cancer Clinical Trials

Carmen E. Guerra, MD, MSCE, of the University of Pennsylvania Abramson Cancer Center, discusses the ways in which community outreach, programs to help patients access cancer clinical trials, and institutional policies such as ASCO’s Just Ask program can help increase equity, diversity, and...

breast cancer
issues in oncology

Intraoperative vs Postoperative Lymph Node Pathology Evaluation in Patients With Breast Cancer Undergoing Mastectomy

Patients who underwent pathology evaluation of their sentinel lymph nodes during mastectomy surgery may have been significantly more likely to receive aggressive nodal therapy than patients whose lymph node biopsies and treatment strategies were evaluated after surgery. The new findings were...

breast cancer
supportive care

Exercise and Wellness Programs May Enhance Well-Being and Reduce Health-Care Costs in Patients With Breast Cancer

Two new studies revealed that specialized exercise and wellness programs may significantly increase physical well-being and quality of life as well as reduce health-care costs in patients with breast cancer, according to findings presented by Wonders et al and Brahmbhatt et al at the 24th American...

breast cancer
geriatric oncology

Does Surveillance Mammography Benefit Geriatric Patients With Breast Cancer?

Investigators have found that undergoing an annual surveillance mammography may remain common among geriatric patients with breast cancer, even in those with only a small risk of developing a second primary tumor or with significant competing mortality risks as a result of advanced age and...

breast cancer
issues in oncology

Extended Antibiotic Prophylaxis May Not Prevent Infections, Improve Outcomes in Patients With Breast Cancer Undergoing Postmastectomy Breast Reconstruction

Prescribing extended antibiotic prophylaxis may not reduce the risk of infections in patients with breast cancer undergoing breast reconstruction following mastectomy, according to a new study published by Sisco et al in Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. "Our experience suggests that...

survivorship
issues in oncology

Cancer Survivors With Transportation Challenges May Face Higher Risk of Emergency Room Use and Mortality

Investigators have found that transportation barriers—delayed care as a result of a lack of transportation—may be associated with increased emergency room use and a higher risk of mortality among patients with and without a history of cancer, according to a new study published by Jiang et al in the ...

bladder cancer

AUA and SUO Release New Guidelines for the Diagnosis and Treatment of Patients With Nonmetastatic Upper Tract Urothelial Carcinoma

The American Urological Association (AUA), in partnership with the Society of Urologic Oncology (SUO), have released recommendations for the diagnosis and management of patients with nonmetastatic upper tract urothelial carcinoma. The new clinical practice guidelines were published by Coleman et al ...

kidney cancer
issues in oncology

Study Explores Impact of Radiation Therapy on Immune Cells and Tumor Cells in Renal Cell Carcinoma

Researchers may have shed light on how radiation therapy impacts immune cells and tumor cells in renal cell carcinoma, according to a novel study published by Chow et al in the Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer. The new findings may provide key information for planning treatment regimens that...

lung cancer
issues in oncology

ASTRO and ESTRO Issue New Clinical Guidelines on Local Therapy for Patients With Oligometastatic NSCLC

The American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) and the European Society for Radiotherapy & Oncology (ESTRO) provided advice on the use of definitive local therapy—including radiation and surgery—to treat patients with oligometastatic non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), according to new...

issues in oncology
covid-19

E-Cigarette Use Increased Significantly Among Younger U.S. Adults Between 2019 and 2021

Almost 750,000 more adults in the United States, aged 18 to 29 years, may have used e-cigarettes during the period that spanned the e-cigarette or vaping-product use–associated lung injury outbreak and COVID-19 pandemic from 2019 to 2021, according to a new study published by Bandi et al in the...

breast cancer
genomics/genetics

TONSL Gene May Be Potential New Target for Breast Cancer Therapy

Researchers may have discovered a new therapeutic target for patients with breast cancer—the TONSL gene—while attempting to understand the mechanisms behind breast cancer cell pathogenesis, according to a novel study published by Khatpe et al in Cancer Research. “Most of the cancer research to date ...

lymphoma

Are Patients With Inflammatory Bowel Disease at Increased Risk for Developing Lymphoma?

Patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) may be at an increased risk for developing lymphoma, a risk that has increased in patients with Crohn’s disease in recent years, according to a new study published by Olén et al in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology. The new findings revealed...

palliative care
supportive care

Advance Care Planning May Lead to Less Aggressive, More Comfort-Focused Care for Patients With Cancer

Investigators have found that patients with advanced cancer who participated in advance care planning may have received less aggressive and more comfort-focused end-of-life cancer care compared with those who did not participate in advance care planning, according to a new study published by Levoy...

immunotherapy

Dario A. Vignali, PhD, on LAG3: The Third Checkpoint Inhibitor

Dario A. Vignali, PhD, of the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, discusses LAG3, the third inhibitory receptor to be used in the clinic. He describes the signaling mechanism this immunotherapy uses; new insight into its function, alone and in combination with PD-1; and an analysis of...

skin cancer

Jeffrey S. Weber, MD, PhD, on Melanoma: New Data on a Cancer Vaccine Combined With Pembrolizumab

Jeffrey S. Weber, MD, PhD, of the Perlmutter Cancer Center at New York University Langone, discusses efficacy and safety results from the phase II KEYNOTE-942 trial, which showed that a personalized mRNA-based cancer vaccine, combined with the immune checkpoint inhibitor pembrolizumab, improved...

solid tumors
supportive care

Christina M. Dieli-Conwright, PhD, MPH, on Resistance Exercise as Medicine: Improving Health and Cancer Outcomes

Christina M. Dieli-Conwright, PhD, MPH, of Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, discusses her research on the ways in which postdiagnosis exercise, particularly resistance exercise, can build strength and muscle mass and affect cancer outcomes. She also describes her focus on biomarkers related to body...

Patricia M. LoRusso, DO, PhD (hc), Chosen as AACR President-Elect for 2023–2024

The members of the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) have selected Patricia M. LoRusso, DO, PhD (hc), as the AACR President-Elect for 2023–2024. Dr. LoRusso became President-Elect during the AACR’s Annual Business Meeting of Members at the AACR Annual Meeting 2023 in Orlando,...

prostate cancer
issues in oncology

Vitamin D Deficiencies May Lead to Health Disparities in Black Patients With Prostate Cancer

Investigators have found that vitamin D deficiencies may contribute to more aggressive prostate cancer in Black patients at a younger age compared with White patients, according to a new study published by Siddappa et al in Cancer Research Communications. The new findings could pave the way for...

issues in oncology

Black Patients With Cancer May Be More Likely to Experience Cardiotoxicity Following Chemotherapy

Chemotherapy may be associated with a 71% increased risk of treatment-related cardiotoxicity—including heart failure and cerebrovascular disease—among Black patients or patients of African ancestry compared with White patients, according to new findings presented by Gebeyehu et al at the American...

leukemia
issues in oncology

Extreme Poverty May Be a Key Driver for Relapse in Pediatric Patients With ALL

Pediatric patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) living in extreme poverty and undergoing maintenance therapy may have almost a twofold greater risk of relapse compared with pediatric patients who weren’t living in extreme poverty, according to a new study published by Wadhwa et al in...

prostate cancer

Biochemical Recurrence of Prostate Cancer

This is Part 1 of Novel Hormonal Therapies for Prostate Cancer, a three-part video roundtable series. Scroll down to watch the other videos from this Roundtable.   In this video, Drs. Alicia K. Morgans, Neeraj Agarwal, and David VanderWeele discuss biochemical recurrence in prostate cancer. The...

hepatobiliary cancer

R. Katie Kelley, MD, on Biliary Tract Cancer: Data From KEYNOTE-966 on Pembrolizumab, Gemcitabine, and Cisplatin

R. Katie Kelley, MD, of the Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center at the University of California, San Francisco, discusses phase III findings of the KEYNOTE-966 study, which showed that adding the immune checkpoint inhibitor pembrolizumab to gemcitabine and cisplatin improved overall...

solid tumors
genomics/genetics

Early Trial Results Show Potential Benefits of FGFR Inhibitors and PARP/ATR Inhibitor Combinations in Multiple Tumor Types

In three new clinical trials, researchers have found that the novel fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) inhibitor pemigatinib and new poly (ADP ribose) polymerase (PARP)/ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3-related (ATR) inhibitor combinations may be effective at treating patients with multiple...

kidney cancer

Patients With Brain Metastases From Renal Cell Carcinoma May Have Distinct Immunosuppressive Tumor Microenvironment

Researchers have created the largest single-cell atlas of renal cell carcinoma brain metastases, with matched primary and extracranial metastases, which has potentially enabled them to discover key biological mechanisms contributing to an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment in the brain...

covid-19
issues in oncology

COVID-19 Pandemic May Have Disrupted Cancer Reporting in 2020 and Beyond

Investigators have uncovered factors contributing to the COVID-19 pandemic’s destabilization of the usual patterns of cancer care, described specific ways that National Cancer Database data models were impacted by the pandemic, and offered guidance to cancer centers across the United States on how...

lung cancer
genomics/genetics

Study Identifies Mutations That May Be Associated With Poor Outcomes in Patients With NSCLC Treated With KRAS G12C Inhibitors

Researchers have discovered that co-occurring mutations in three tumor-suppressor genes—KEAP1, SMARCA4, and CDKN2A—may be linked with poor clinical outcomes in patients with KRAS G12C–mutant non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) who were treated with the KRAS G12C inhibitors adagrasib or sotorasib,...

kidney cancer
immunotherapy

Novel CAR T-Cell Therapy Under Study in Metastatic Clear Cell Renal Cell Carcinoma

Treatment with the allogeneic chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy ALLO-316 resulted in encouraging response rates and disease control rates for patients with metastatic clear cell renal cell carcinoma who did not respond to prior therapy, according to new findings presented by Srour et...

lung cancer
solid tumors

VT3989 May Be Safe, Effective in Patients With Advanced Mesothelioma and NF2-Mutant Solid Tumors

The yes-associated protein (YAP)/transcriptional enhancer activator domain (TEAD) inhibitor VT3989 may have been well tolerated with durable antitumor responses in patients with advanced malignant mesothelioma as well as other NF2-mutated solid tumors, according to new findings presented by Yap et...

lymphoma
immunotherapy

FDA Approves Polatuzumab Vedotin-piiq Plus R-CHP for Previously Untreated DLBCL–Not Otherwise Specified and High-Grade B-Cell Lymphoma

On April 19, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the antibody-drug conjugate polatuzumab vedotin-piiq (Polivy) with a rituximab product, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, and prednisone (R-CHP) for previously untreated adult patients who have diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL)–not...

issues in oncology

Harry Klein, PhD, on MatchMiner: An Open-Source AI Precision Medicine Trial Matching Platform

Harry Klein, PhD, of Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, discusses MatchMiner, a software platform launched in 2017, that matches patients with appropriate clinical trials of targeted therapies. The platform uses data on the genetic features of a patient’s cancer, as well as clinical data, to identify...

issues in oncology

Karriem S. Watson, DHSc, on Early Engagement in Clinical Trials for Underrepresented Communities

Karriem S. Watson, DHSc, MPH, of the National Institutes of Health All of Us Research Program, discusses the importance of engaging in clinical trials for those who are underrepresented in biomedical research. Community engagement is a proven and effective tool, Dr. Watson says, to enhance...

breast cancer

Sherry X. Yang, MD, PhD, on Breast Cancer: New Recurrence Score Data From the TAILORx Trial

Sherry X. Yang, MD, PhD, of the National Cancer Institute, discusses findings from the TAILORx trial, which showed that, despite chemotherapy, patients with high recurrence scores continue to have a poor prognosis. This result suggests the need to develop new management strategies for patients with ...

solid tumors

Timothy A. Yap, MD, PhD, on New Findings on Treating Solid Tumors With PARP and ATR Inhibitors

Timothy A. Yap, MD, PhD, of The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, discusses safety and efficacy data on three different PARP inhibitors combined with the ATR inhibitor camonsertib in patients with solid tumors harboring DNA damage response alterations. The findings showed that low-dose ...

breast cancer
gynecologic cancers
colorectal cancer
genomics/genetics

Whole-Exome Sequencing May Help Identify Individuals With Cancer Predisposition Syndromes Missed by Current Screening Guidelines

Researchers revealed that 39.2% of patients who consented to whole-exome sequencing and were identified as carriers of predisposition genes for hereditary breast and ovarian cancer or Lynch syndrome did not qualify for genetic screening under current guidelines, according to new findings presented...

gynecologic cancers

Investigational Deep Learning Model May Help Stratify Risk of Distant Recurrence in Patients With Endometrial Cancer

An investigational deep learning model requiring one histopathologic slide may be effective at predicting the risk of distant recurrence in patients with endometrial cancer, according to novel findings presented by Fremond et al at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting...

solid tumors
genomics/genetics

Olaparib Plus Ceralasertib May Benefit Pediatric Patients With Cancer Who Have DNA Replication and/or Damage Repair–Deficient Tumors

Researchers have found that a combination of the PARP inhibitor olaparib and the investigational ATR inhibitor ceralasertib showed clinical benefit in pediatric patients with solid tumors exhibiting DNA replication and/or damage repair deficiencies, according to new findings presented by Gatz et al ...

hepatobiliary cancer

Pierce K.H. Chow, PhD, MBBS, on Hepatocellular Carcinoma: New Data From the IMbrave050 Trial of Atezolizumab, Bevacizumab, and Active Surveillance

Pierce K.H. Chow, PhD, MBBS, of the National Cancer Centre, Singapore and Duke-NUS Medical School, discusses phase III findings showing that, for patients with hepatocellular carcinoma at high risk of disease recurrence, adjuvant therapy with atezolizumab plus bevacizumab after resection or thermal ...

solid tumors

Diana Azzam, PhD, on Pediatric Cancers: Efficacy of a Precision Medicine Approach

Diana Azzam, PhD, of Florida International University, Robert Stempel College of Public Health and Social Work, discusses her study results, which showed that treatment protocols guided by functional precision medicine yielded significantly longer progression-free survival and improved overall...

lung cancer
issues in oncology

Study Finds Lung Cancer Incidence Rates Vary Significantly Among Florida’s Black and Hispanic Ethnic Subgroups

An analysis of lung cancer incidence rates showed wide variations among the racial and ethnic subgroups in Florida’s Black and Hispanic population, according to data presented by Cranford et al at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting 2023 (Abstract 1902/8). Study...

issues in oncology
gynecologic cancers

Awareness of the Link Between HPV and Cervical Cancer Has Declined Between 2014 and 2020

Americans have become less aware that the human papillomavirus (HPV) causes cervical cancer in recent years, according to survey data presented by Adjei Boakye et al at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting 2023 (Abstract 4210 /11). Survey respondents also showed low...

hematologic malignancies
supportive care

FDA Approves Omidubicel-onlv to Reduce Time to Neutrophil Recovery and Infection in Patients With Hematologic Malignancies

On April 17, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved omidubicel-onlv (Omisirge) for use in adult and pediatric patients aged 12 years and older with hematologic malignancies who are planned for umbilical cord blood transplantation following myeloablative conditioning to reduce the time ...

breast cancer

Sherry X. Yang, MD, PhD, on Breast Cancer: New Recurrence Score Data From the TAILORx Trial

Sherry X. Yang, MD, PhD, of the National Cancer Institute, discusses findings from the TAILORx trial, which showed that, despite chemotherapy, patients with high recurrence scores continue to have a poor prognosis. This result suggests the need to develop new management strategies for patients with ...

lung cancer

John V. Heymach, MD, PhD, on NSCLC: New Data on Durvalumab Plus Chemotherapy From the AEGEAN Trial

John V. Heymach, MD, PhD, of The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, discusses phase III results from the AEGEAN trial, which showed that patients with treatment-naive, resectable, non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) who received neoadjuvant durvalumab plus chemotherapy and adjuvant...

hepatobiliary cancer
immunotherapy

IMbrave050: Recurrence-Free Survival With Adjuvant Atezolizumab Plus Bevacizumab for HCC

Adjuvant therapy with atezolizumab and bevacizumab improved recurrence-free survival in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) following surgical resection or ablation, according to results from the phase III IMbrave050 clinical trial, which were presented by Chow et al at the American...

issues in oncology

NIH Study Outlines Opportunities to Achieve Cancer Moonshot Goal of Reducing Cancer Mortality in the United States

Researchers from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) have outlined opportunities for achieving President Joe Biden and First Lady Jill Biden’s Cancer Moonshot national goal of reducing the cancer death rate by at least 50% over the next 25 years. A study published by Shiels et al in Cancer...

Advertisement

Advertisement




Advertisement