ASCO

This category contains 34 posts

ASCO Audio Journal of Oncology - July 15th 2006

David Cunningham
David Cunningham
Kenneth MacDonald
Kenneth MacDonald
Mark Pomerantz
Mark Pomerantz
Jorge Garcia
Jorge Garcia

 

REFERENCE: N Engl J Med 2006;355:11
David Cunningham, Royal Marsden Hospital
The July 6th edition of the New England Journal of Medicine leads with an article from the Royal Marsden Hospital pointing to better survival rates among patients with gastric cancer who received perioperative chemotherapy as compared with those having surgery alone. David Cunningham tells Peter Goodwin how the study (which took 16 years from design to publication) has provided clinicians with another option for extending life in gastric cancer.

 

REFERENCE: Abstract 4570
Kenneth MacDonald, University of Utah, Salt Lake City
At the 2006 Annual Meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology in Atlanta Kenneth MacDonald from the University of Utah in Salt Lake City explained to Sarah Maxwell how registry data has provided guidance that salvage radiotherapy for prostate-specific antigen relapse after radical prostatectomy may yield benefits in greater numbers of patients.

 

REFERENCE: Abstract 4560
Mark Pomerantz, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston
The same prostate cancer session of ASCO also heard from Mark Pomerantz of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston that premarin – the hormonal therapy known for its use in women – may have value for treating men with androgen-dependent prostate cancer.

 

REFERENCE: Abstract 4564
Jorge Garcia, Cleveland Clinic
In high-risk prostate cancer, neoadjuvant therapy with thalidomide plus granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor appears to be a candidate therapy to prepare some patients for radical prostatectomy by manipulating immunological factors  reported Jorge Garcia from the Cleveland Clinic during the ASCO conference in Atlanta.



ASCO Audio Journal of Oncology - July 1st 2006

Better Combine Chemotherapy with Radiation for Hodgkin’s Disease?

Joachim Yahalom
Joachim Yahalom

George Canellos
George Canellos

 

REFERENCE: Education Session: Saturday June 3rd, 2006 ASCO Annual Meeting, June 2-6, Atlanta
Joachim Yahalom, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York
Should patients with low-risk early stage Hodgkin’s disease be treated with combined modality treatment? Or can most of them receive chemotherapy alone, and have radiation only in the relatively unlikely event of recurrent disease? Should transplantation be considered? These issues were debated at the 2006 Annual Meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology in Atlanta by George Canellos (Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston) and Joachim Yahalom (Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York). With equal short-term efficacy using either short courses of ABVD chemotherapy followed by involved-field radiotherapy, or curative doses of ABVD alone, the discussions addressed the long-term risks of second tumors and cardiac morbidity, side effects that occasionally resulted from older regimens including whole-body radiation.



ASCO Audio Journal of Oncology - June 15th 2006

Arlene Forastiere
Arlene Forastiere
Everett Vokes
Everett Vokes
Michael Skinner
Michael Skinner
Mark Chambers
Mark Chambers

Larynx Cancer: Concurrent Chemoradiotherapy: Best for Larynx Preservation

REFERENCE: Abstract 5517
Arlene Forastiere, Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center, Baltimore
In patients with larynx cancer, Arlene Forastiere of the Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center in Baltimore says that the best way to treat the cancer and preserve the larynx is to give radiation and chemotherapy concurrently – and not to use “induction” chemotherapy. Everett Vokes from the University of Chicago adds his comments and recommendations.

ZD6474: New Treatment Avenue in Thyroid Cancer?

REFERENCE: Abstract 5533
Michael Skinner, Duke University Medical Center, Durham
Patients with hereditary metastatic medullary thyroid cancer could have a new treatment on the horizon, in the form of ZD6474, an inhibitor of the RET receptor. Michael Skinner from Duke University Medical Center in Durham had the data at ASCO.

New Remedy for Radiation Induced Oral Mucositis

REFERENCE: Abstract 5523
Mark Chambers, MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston
Patients with oral mucositis induced by radiation for head and neck cancer may soon be able to turn to a new drug called RK-0202. Mark Chambers of the MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston told ASCO delegates about his new study.

Audio Journal of Oncology - June 7th 2006, from the ASCO Annual Meeting in Atlanta, June 2-6

Robert Ozols
Robert Ozols
Lawrence Wickerham
Lawrence Wickerham
Patricia Ganz
Patricia Ganz
Jorma Paavonen
Jorma Paavonen
Noah Kauff
Noah Kauff

Robert Ozols of the Fox Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia joins Derek Thorne to talk about the top presentations on cancer prevention.

- Raloxifene is as good as tamoxifen at preventing breast cancer in high-risk women. Lawrence Wickerham of the National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project in Pittsburgh presented the clinical data from the STAR trial, while Patricia Ganz of UCLA had information on quality of life (Abstracts 5 and 561)
- The human papillomavirus vaccine (HPV) doesn’t just protect against cervical cancer – it may protect against vaginal and vulvar cancers as well. That’s according to findings from the FUTURE II study, presented by Jorma Paavonen of the University of Helsinki (Abstract 5011)
- Noah Kauff, of the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York, has data confirming that women with mutations in the genes for BRCA1 and 2 can reduce their risk of breast and ovarian cancer if they have their ovaries and fallopian tubes removed (Abstract 1003)



ASCO Audio Journal of Oncology - June 6th 2006, from the ASCO Annual Meeting in Atlanta, June 2-6

Robert Mayer
Robert Mayer
Thierry Facon
Thierry Facon
 Ibrahim Yakoub-Agha
Ibrahim Yakoub-Agha
Peter Paschka
Peter Paschka

Robert Mayer of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston joins Derek Thorne to discuss the major hematologic malignancy news reported at the 2006 ASCO meeting.

- Older patients with multiple myeloma can benefit from adding thalidomide to their standard therapy of melphalan and prednisone; and the thalidomide regimen is also better than melphalan followed by autologous stem cell transplantation. Thierry Facon from the University of Lille told ASCO delegates about his group’s findings (Abstract 1)
- A decreased dose of thalidomide may be just as effective in multiple myeloma while having a better side effect profile – but should these results change practice? Ibrahim Yakoub-Agha from the University of Lille had the data at ASCO (Abstract 7520)
- Imatinib is still proving effective at treating chronic myeloid leukemia, even after more than 5 years of follow up. Robert Mayer describes the latest findings from the IRIS study
- In the “core-binding factor” subtype of acute myeloid leukemia, certain mutations in the KIT gene predict for a poor prognosis. This could help tailor therapy for this disease, according to Peter Paschka of Ohio State University



ASCO Audio Journal of Oncology - June 5th 2006, from the ASCO Annual Meeting in Atlanta, June 2-6

Dean Bajorin
Dean Bajorin
Robert Motzer
Robert Motzer
Gary Hudes
Gary Hudes
Marshall Posner
Marshall Posner

Some major progress in kidney cancer and head and neck cancer was announced at the ASCO meeting in Atlanta, and the Audio Journal of Oncology has all the details, plus expert comment from Dean Bajorin of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York.

- Sunitinib is superior to interferon alpha as first line therapy in metastatic kidney cancer. Robert Motzer from the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York told the ASCO conference about his team’s ground-breaking phase III trial with this drug
- In high risk advanced renal cell carcinoma, temsirolimus has proved more effective than interferon alpha – that’s according to a study presented by Gary Hudes, of the Fox Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia
- A new three-drug “induction” chemotherapy regimen involving docetaxel has produced a significant benefit in advanced head and neck cancer. Marshall Posner of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute had the data at the ASCO meeting



ASCO Audio Journal of Oncology - June 4th 2006, from the ASCO Annual Meeting in Atlanta, June 2-6; in the company of Julie Gralow

Julie Gralow
Julie Gralow
Charles Geyer
Charles Geyer
Judith Bliss
Judith Bliss
Robert Coleman
Robert Coleman

Julie Gralow, from the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, joins Derek Thorne to talk about the latest news from the ASCO annual meeting in Atlanta.

- In women with advanced HER2/neu positive breast cancer, lapatinib plus capecitabine is better than capecitabine alone and could be recommended for compassionate use. Charles Geyer, from Allegheny General Hospital in Pittsburgh, presented the data to the ASCO meeting in a Scientific Special Session
- Postmenopausal women with breast cancer may benefit from a switching strategy, where tamoxifen is replaced by exemestane after two to three years – that’s according to the Intergroup Exemestane Study, presented by Judith Bliss of the Institute of Cancer Research in London (Late Breaking Abstract 527)
- Is the higher bone loss associated with anastrozole a concern? Robert Coleman, of Sheffield University, presented bone mineral density data from the ATAC study, which compared anastrozole and tamoxifen in postmenopausal women (Abstract 511)



Audio Journal of Oncology - June 3rd 2006, from the ASCO Annual Meeting in Atlanta, June 2-6; in the company of George Canellos

George Canellos
George Canellos
Carmela Pepe
Carmela Pepe
John Goldman
John Goldman
Roy Herbst
Roy Herbst
Sandra Horning
Sandra Horning

George Canellos, from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, joins Derek Thorne to talk about the first day’s news at the ASCO annual meeting in Atlanta.

- Elderly patients with non-small cell lung cancer can benefit from chemotherapy after surgery, and do not experience increased toxicity when compared to younger patients – that’s according to Carmela Pepe of the Princess Margaret Hospital in Toronto (abstract 7009)
- the Oncology Drugs Advisory Committee has concluded that the drug dasatinib should be recommended for the treatment of chronic myeloid leukaemia. Breaking the news at the Atlanta meeting was John Goldman of Imperial College London, and the National Heart Lung and Blood Institute, NIH, Bethesda
- Roy Herbst from the MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston tells the Audio Journal about some of the most exciting announcements to be made at the 2006 ASCO conference, including progress in multiple myeloma and targeted therapy in renal cancer
- the outgoing president of ASCO, Sandra Horning, of Stanford University, explains how ASCO has focussed on cancer survivorship over the last year – and how cancer survivors can expect to receive more support in the future.


ASCO Audio Journal of Oncology - May 15th, 2006

Myeloablative Radioimmunotherapy Eases Autologous Stem Cell Transplantations in Patients Age 60 years or Older With Relapsed or Refractory B-Cell Lymphoma

Ajay Gopal
ABSTRACT: 2005 American Society of Hematology Meeting, Atlanta, Abstract 487
Ajay Gopal, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle
Radioimmunotherapy at myeloablative doses may hold the key to treating patients with lymphoma over the age of 60 who would otherwise be denied transplants on grounds of the treatment being too harsh for their age.

New Targeted Therapy for Older Patients With Advanced Acute Myeloid Leukemia

John Pagel
REFERENCE: 2005 American Society of Hematology Meeting, Atlanta, Abstract 397
John Pagel, University of Washington, Seattle
Reduced intensity conditioning, sometimes called “mini transplants” offer an option which could safely be used to treat older patients with multiple myeloma.

Phase III Study of Lenalidomide Plus Dexamethasone Versus Dexamethasone Alone in Multiple Myeloma

Catherine E. Lofton-Day
REFERENCE: 2005 American Society of Hematology Meeting, Atlanta, Abstract 6
Meletios Dimopoulos, University of Athens, Greece
58% of patients with heavily pre-treated multiple myeloma responded to a combination of the thalidomide analog lenalidomide combined with the standard drug dexamethazone, as compared with only 22% treated with dexamethazone alone. The study of 700 patients found better response rates and time to progression in the lenalidomide-treated group.

ASCO Audio Journal of Oncology - May 1st, 2006 - In the company of Gordon McVie

Tamoxifen After Chemotherapy Protects Premenopausal Patients with Breast Cancer

Gordon McVie
ABSTRACT: J Clin Oncol 24:1322, 2006
Gordon McVie, European Institute of Oncology, Milan
The use of tamoxifen after chemotherapy for premenopausal patients with breast cancer has been shown to almost double disease-free survival among estrogen receptor positive patients, with the greatest benefits among younger patients. These findings emerge from a publication in the Journal of Clinical Oncology by the International Breast Cancer Study group, led by Marco Colleoni of Milan. Gordon McVie from the European Institute of Oncology comments.

Gene Expression Blood Test for Earlier Breast Cancer Detection?

Anne-Lise Børresen-Dale
REFERENCE: 2006 American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting, April 1-5, Washington, DC, Abstract 125
Anne-Lise Børresen-Dale, Norwegian Radium Hospital, Oslo
A Norwegian group has identified genes that discriminate breast cancer from non-breast cancer tissues and used them in a blood test for breast cancer and reported high specificity and sensitivity at the 2006 American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting in Washington, DC. Anne-Lise Børresen-Dale discussed her results with Karen Regester.

Blood Test of Gene Methylation Detects Early Colorectal Cancer

Catherine E. Lofton-Day
REFERENCE: 2006 American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting, April1-5, Washington, DC, Abstract LB-224
Catherine E. Lofton-Day, Epigenomics Inc., Seattle
A new blood test for colorectal cancer that looks for methylation of the septin 9 gene has been found to be more sensitive and specific than fecal occult blood when tested on samples from colonoscopy-defined individuals with colorectal cancer, as compared to those without the disease. Catherine Lofton-Day from Epigenomics Inc. of Seattle talked about the test during the 2006 American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting in Washington, DC.

Airway Gene Signatures Detect Early Lung Cancer

Avrum Spira
REFERENCE: 2006 American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting, April1-5, Washington, DC, Abstract 2420
Avrum Spira, Boston University
Airway gene signatures may be the ideal test to be added to bronchoscopy for diagnosing early lung cancer according to findings presented to the 2006 American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting in Washington, DC. Avrum Spira from Boston University said that where bronchoscopy is weakest, gene profiling is strongest: picking up 90 % of early cancers, as compared with only 30 % from bronchoscopy alone.

Nicotine Can Inhibit Lung Cancer Chemotherapy

REFERENCE: 2006 American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting,April 1-5, 2006, Washington, DC, Abstract 787
Piyali Dasgupta, H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center, Tampa
Smoking has been observed to reduce the effectiveness of chemotherapy for non-small cell lung cancer, and according to findings presented to the 2006 American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting in Washington, DC, it is the nicotine in cigarette smoke that is mainly responsible for the effect, and not necessarily the hundreds of other toxic components of the smoke. Pivali Dasgupta from the Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa told Audio Medica about her findings.

Intraperitoneal Therapy and Survival in Ovarian Cancer

Gordon McVie
ABSTRACT:J Clin Oncol 24:1322, 2006, N Engl J Med 354:3, 2006
Gordon McVie, European Institute of Oncology, Milan
Intraperitoneal therapy for ovarian cancer has achieved successes recently with improvements in median survival among patients receiving a number of different regimens intraperitoneally as compared with intravenously, and a new study from Nijmegen on the use of monoclonal antibody known to target cells has now been published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology. Gordon McVie from the European Institute of Oncology comments on these reports, and about the potential for improving ovarian cancer survival based on the new therapies recently investigated.

ASCO Audio Journal of Oncology - Volume 14, April 15th, 2006

Thalidomide Adds to Multiple Myeloma Chemotherapy Benefit in Older Patients

George Canellos
ABSTRACT: Lancet 2006;367:825
George Canellos, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston
The combination of thalidomide together with standard agents melphalan and predisone has been found to be an effective first-line treatment for older patients with multiple myeloma. George Canellos discusses the findings published in The Lancet of an Italian multicenter study led by Antonio Palumbo from Turin.

Dasatinib Ready for Imatinib-Resistant Philadelphia-Chromosome Positive Leukemias?

Charles Sawyers
REFERENCE: AACR CP-2 Clinical Plenary Session, Monday April 3rd 2006
Charles Sawyers, University of California, Los Angeles
The BCR-ABL kinase-targeting drug dasatinib seems poised for use in patients whose Philadelphia-chromosome positive leukemias are resistant to imatinib. Charles Sawyers from the University of California gave the Clinical Plenary Session of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting in Washington, DC his assessment of study findings to date.

Cetuximab Enhances Radiation in Head and Neck Cancer

James Bonner
ABSTRACT: N Engl J Med 2006;354:567
James Bonner, University of Alabama, Birmingham
A combination of the epidermal growth factor receptor inhibitor cetuximab and radiotherapy has brought better responses and survival among patients with locoregionally advanced head and neck cancer. This finding is published in the New England Journal of Medicine by James Bonner and his group in Birmingham, Alabama.

Panitumomab Response and Survival in Refractory Metastatic Colorectal Cancer

Marc Peeters
REFERENCE: American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting, 2006, Plenary Session, Monday 3rd April
Marc Peeters, University of Ghent
A fully human anti-epidermal growth factor receptor monoclonal antibody has been investigated for treating colorectal cancer and has achieved benefits after standard therapies have failed, according to results presented at the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting in Washington DC. Marc Peeters from the University of Ghent presented results from patients for whom standard therapy with fluoropyrimidine, oxaliplatin, or irinotecan had already failed.

Preventive Vaccines Soon for Human Papillomavirus

Luisa Lina Villa
REFERENCE: AACR Educational Sessions, Saturday April 1st 2006
Luisa Lina Villa, Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, São Paulo, Brasil
The dream of eliminating cervical cancer was shared during an educational session of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting in Washington, DC. Luisa Lina Villa presented the latest data on the quadravalent vaccine for human papillomavirus, protective against four subtypes of the virus: the oncogenic types 16 and 18 and the wart-casuing HPV 6 and 11 subtypes.

Subscribe to Audio Medica Podcast