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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...

bladder cancer

Updated Findings From JAVELIN Bladder 100 Trial of Avelumab First-Line Maintenance in Advanced Urothelial Carcinoma

An updated analysis of the phase III JAVELIN Bladder 100 trial continued to show benefits in overall survival and progression-free survival with avelumab maintenance plus best supportive care vs best supportive care alone in patients with advanced urothelial carcinoma who were progression-free...

breast cancer

Long-Term Cardiac Safety and Efficacy of SB3 Trastuzumab Biosimilar vs Reference Trastuzumab in HER2-Positive Early Breast Cancer

In a secondary analysis of the phase III SB3-G31-BC trial, Pivot et al found that perioperative use of the trastuzumab biosimilar SB3 was associated with a similar cardiac safety profile and similar efficacy outcomes compared with reference trastuzumab after up to 6 years of follow-up in patients...

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...

breast cancer

Trastuzumab Deruxtecan vs Physician’s Choice in HER2-Positive Metastatic Breast Cancer Previously Treated With Trastuzumab Emtansine

As reported in The Lancet by André et al, the phase III DESTINY-Breast02 trial has shown improved progression-free survival with fam-trastuzumab deruxtecan-nxki vs physician’s choice of treatment in patients with HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer who had received prior ado-trastuzumab...

solid tumors
genomics/genetics

KRYSTAL-1 Update: Adagrasib Yields Benefit in Variety of KRAS G12C–Mutated Tumors

In the phase I/II KRYSTAL-1 trial, the KRAS inhibitor adagrasib demonstrated promising clinical activity in previously treated patients with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma, biliary tract cancer, and other solid tumors harboring KRAS G12C mutations, according to research presented at the April...

lymphoma

Third-Line Treatment of Follicular Lymphoma

This is Part 3 of Advances in Follicular Lymphoma, a three-part video roundtable series. Scroll down to watch the other videos from this Roundtable.   In this video, Drs. Stephen M. Ansell, Loretta J. Nastoupil, and Gilles Salles discuss the third-line treatment of follicular lymphoma. The patient...

lymphoma

Recurrent Follicular Lymphoma

This is Part 2 of Advances in Follicular Lymphoma, a three-part video roundtable series. Scroll down to watch the other videos from this Roundtable.   In this video, Drs. Stephen M. Ansell, Loretta J. Nastoupil, and Gilles Salles discuss the management of recurrent follicular lymphoma. The patient...

lymphoma

Newly Diagnosed Follicular Lymphoma

This is Part 1 of Advances in Follicular Lymphoma, a three-part video roundtable series. Scroll down to watch the other videos from this Roundtable.   In this video, Drs. Stephen M. Ansell, Loretta J. Nastoupil, and Gilles Salles discuss the management of newly diagnosed follicular lymphoma. The...

gastrointestinal cancer
hepatobiliary cancer

Second-Line Liposomal Irinotecan Plus Fluorouracil/Leucovorin in Metastatic Biliary Tract Cancer

In an updated analysis of a Korean phase IIb trial (NIFTY) reported in JAMA Oncology, Hyung et al found that the addition of nanoliposomal irinotecan to fluorouracil and leucovorin significantly improved progression-free survival in patients with metastatic biliary tract cancer with disease...

cost of care

Financial Impact on Caregivers of Spouses With Cancer

In a study reported in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, Bradley et al found that approximately one-third of caregivers of spouses with cancer reported they had stopped working and had increased household debt. In the subgroup with a lower-than-median household income, cancer caregivers were more...

prostate cancer

Study Investigates Prevalence of ‘Low-Value’ PSA Screening for Prostate Cancer in Older Patients

In a survey study reported in JAMA Network Open, Kalavacherla et al found a high prevalence of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) screening for prostate cancer among older patients than recommended for such screening in U.S. Preventive Services Task Force guidelines. The investigators stated: “The...

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...

leukemia

Homage to a Giant in Hematology: The Fascinating Story of the Quest to Cure Leukemia

Bone marrow transplantation in leukemia is one of the great success stories in the history of oncology, as is that of the late Nobel Laureate E. Donnall Thomas, MD, the pioneering clinical researcher whose name is synonymous with life-saving marrow transplantation. Dr. Thomas, who was born in the...

head and neck cancer

Dabrafenib With Trametinib for Pediatric Low-Grade Glioma With BRAF V600E Mutation

On March 16, 2023, dabrafenib with trametinib was approved for pediatric patients aged 1 year and older with low-grade glioma with a BRAF V600E mutation who require systemic therapy.1,2 The U.S. Food and Drug Administration also approved new oral formulations of both drugs suitable for patients who ...

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,...

breast cancer
pancreatic cancer

I’m BRCA-Positive and Survived Both Breast and Pancreatic Cancers

Cancer has stalked my family for generations. My mother, brother, and maternal uncle were diagnosed with melanoma. Fortunately, all survived. When my sister was diagnosed with early-stage invasive ductal carcinoma in 2010, she underwent genetic testing, which showed she was positive for the BRCA2...

issues in oncology

ASCO Member Testifies Before Congress, Urging Significant Increase in Federal Cancer Research Funding

Brian Persing, MD, a medical oncologist and hematologist in Mobile, Alabama, and a member of ASCO, the world’s leading professional organization representing nearly 45,000 oncology professionals, testified before the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor Health and Human Services and...

breast cancer

Emerging Success With Novel Targeted Therapies in Endocrine-Resistant Metastatic Breast Cancer

In hormone receptor–positive breast cancer, the ability to successfully target key mediators of endocrine resistance is changing the outlook of metastatic disease in this subtype, according to Aditya Bardia, MD, MPH, FASCO, Director of Breast Cancer Research and Associate Professor at Harvard...

Expert Point of View: Callisia N. Clarke, MD, MS, FACS, FSSO

Moderator of the press conference at the 2023 Society of Surgical Oncology (SSO) International Conference on Surgical Cancer Care, Callisia N. Clarke, MD, MS, FACS, FSSO, Assistant Professor of Surgery, Medical College of Wisconsin, shared insights on the transition of circulating tumor DNA...

solid tumors

Using Circulating Tumor DNA to Predict Early Recurrence of Soft-Tissue Sarcomas

Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) may transform disease monitoring and guide treatment for soft-tissue sarcomas, according to data presented at the 2023 Society of Surgical Oncology (SSO) International Conference on Surgical Cancer Care.1 Findings of a retrospective review showed that 85% of patients...

issues in oncology

Social Drivers of Health: Grabbing the Steering Wheel

Study after study has demonstrated race-based differences in survival and other clinical outcomes for patients with cancer. But as health professionals, we are learning that these differences are less about a patient’s skin color and more about the legacy of racial inequality.1 This knowledge...

Expert Point of View: Yelena Y. Janjigian, MD

The GLOW study’s invited discussant, Yelena Y. Janjigian, MD, Chief of the Gastrointestinal Oncology Service at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, said the GLOW findings are “practice-changing,” validating that high claudin-18.2 (CLDN18.2) expression as an important biomarker in...

solid tumors

GLOW Trial: Zolbetuximab Plus Chemotherapy Sets New Treatment Standard in Gastric Cancer Subset

In the first-line setting, the monoclonal antibody zolbetuximab in combination with chemotherapy extended overall survival in patients with claudin-18.2 (CLDN18.2)-positive, HER2-negative, locally advanced or metastatic gastric adenocarcinoma. This regimen is now positioned as a new standard of...

Expert Point of View: Rebecca Arend, MD, MSH and Ilaria Colombo, MD

“Endometrial cancer is the most frequently diagnosed gynecologic malignancy in the United States, and it is the only one where the mortality has actually risen over the past 40 years,” noted Rebecca Arend, MD, MSH, Associate Professor at the University of Alabama and Associate Scientist in the...

gynecologic cancers

Checkpoint Inhibitors Poised to Change Standard of Care in Advanced Endometrial Cancer

The addition of a checkpoint inhibitor to standard chemotherapy as first-line treatment of advanced endometrial cancer reduced the risk of disease progression or death by 70% in patients with mismatch repair–deficient (dMMR) tumors in two recent phase III studies. The results of the two...

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...

sarcoma

Neoadjuvant Trabectedin and Radiotherapy in Myxoid Liposarcoma

In the phase II TRASTS study reported in JAMA Oncology, Sanfilippo et al found that neoadjuvant trabectedin and radiotherapy did not meet the target objective response rate per Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST) in patients with myxoid liposarcoma but did exhibit activity...

lung cancer
immunotherapy

Toripalimab Plus Chemotherapy May Improve Event-Free Survival in Resectable Stage III NSCLC

An interim analysis of the Neotorch study highlighted the potential of immunotherapy for the treatment of early-stage non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), according to data presented by Lu et al during the ASCO Plenary Series: April 2023 Session (Abstract 425126). The findings showed a significant...

breast cancer

Racial/Ethnic Disparities in Locoregional Recurrence Among Patients With Breast Cancer Treated in the TAILORx Trial

In a retrospective post hoc analysis reported in JAMA Surgery, Olga Kantor, MD, and colleagues found that locoregional recurrence was more common among Black and Asian vs White patients with hormone receptor (HR)-positive, HER2-negative, node-negative breast cancer in the context of similar access...

prostate cancer

Locally Advanced High-Risk Prostate Cancer

This is Part 3 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 the management of locally advanced high-risk...

prostate cancer

De Novo Metastatic Hormone-Sensitive Prostate Cancer

This is Part 2 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 the management of de novo metastatic...

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...

Highlights From the AACR Annual Meeting 2023

On this episode, we are sharing news presented during the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting, which was held earlier this month in Orlando. We feature three researchers discussing their findings in non–small cell lung cancer, early-stage breast cancer, and solid tumors...

issues in oncology

Association of Delayed or Foregone Care Among Patients With Cancer and Patient-Clinician Identity Discordance

In a study reported in a research letter in JAMA Oncology, Patel et al found that delayed or foregone care due to patient-clinician discordance of identity (eg, race, religion, gender) was more common among patients with cancer vs noncancer controls. Approximately one-quarter of younger patients...

lymphoma
immunotherapy

Sugemalimab in Relapsed or Refractory Extranodal Natural Killer/T-Cell Lymphoma

In a Chinese phase II study (GEMSTONE-201) reported in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, Huang et al found that the PD-L1 inhibitor sugemalimab produced durable responses in patients with relapsed or refractory extranodal natural killer/T-cell lymphoma. Study Details In the multicenter trial, 78...

prostate cancer

Validation of a Prognostic Model for Overall Survival in Chemotherapy-Naive Patients With Metastatic Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer

In a study reported in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, Susan Halabi, PhD, and colleagues validated an overall survival prognostic model for docetaxel-naive patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer. As noted by the investigators, “We have previously developed and externally...

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...

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