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Clinical Advances in Hematology & Oncology
Interest in immune-modulating neoadjuvant therapy for melanoma is growing. It is possible that BRAF/MEK inhibition will be more effective in the neoadjuvant than in the adjuvant setting because of the effect of the tumor biomass. And the benefits neoadjuvant therapy would offer in assessing biologic response assessment to treatment are significant. In this review the authors discuss the rationale for this treatment approach, summarize completed and ongoing neoadjuvant clinical trials, and contextualize these findings within the growing body of knowledge about targeted and immune checkpoint therapy.
Dermatology February 8th 2022
Journal of Clinical Oncology
This study reports long term outcomes on CALGB 40603 at a median follow-up of 7.9 years. Event-free survival and other LTOs were not significantly improved with either study drug overall or in studied sub-populations. Results showed that patients with any residual disease had significantly worse outcomes. This finding supports considering adjuvant therapy even in the setting of minimal residual disease.
Oncology, Medical February 1st 2022
JAMA Network
Publication: JAMA Oncology Design: An analysis of data from the I-SPY2 randomized clinical trial that included 938 women with breast cancer.Results: In this randomized clinical trial, the prognostic significance of RCB was consistent regardless of cancer subtype and treatment.
Internal Medicine September 21st 2021
Is there a benefit for patients who receive celecoxib as an addition to conventional therapy for women with ERBB2 (formerly HER2)–negative primary breast cancer? A report on the Randomized European Celecoxib Trial (REACT), a phase 3, randomized, double-blind study conducted in 160 centers across the UK and Germany testing two years of adjuvant celecoxib vs. placebo among 2,639 patients recruited between 2007 and 2012, with follow-up 10 years after treatment completion.
Internal Medicine July 19th 2021
The International Duration of Adjuvant Chemotherapy (IDEA) collaboration investigated whether 3-month adjuvant chemotherapy treatment can be given for colon cancer without compromising efficacy, as six-month adjuvant chemotherapy with a fluoropyrimidine and oxaliplatin doublet is an option for high-risk stage II colon cancer. Here are the results.
Gastroenterology January 27th 2021