Within the lung cancer community, the biggest story from the ASCO meeting was the long-awaited plenary session presentation (abstract here) of the FLEX trial of chemo with or without the EGFR monoclonal antibody Erbitux (cetuximab) that we knew was statistically significantly positive for an overall survival benefit as far back as September of last […]
0 Comments    So I’ve been invited to be on the faculty of a lung cancer conference in Kauai next month (yes, a good gig, but this is the first year that the flights are so expensive that I can’t bring my family to this normally very family-friendly event), and my topic is to argue in a […]
0 Comments  Continuing with the analysis of a publication about tarceva (erlotinib) for patients with advanced BAC that I introduced in the last post, we’ll turn now to the analysis that Dr. Vince Miller and colleagues did on the biomarkers that might predict more or less clinical benefit with an EGFR inhibitor like tarceva (abstract here).  The trial looked at three […]
0 Comments  In a recent issue of the Journal of Clinical Oncology, Dr. Vince Miller and colleagues published the results of an important trial of the EGFR inhibitor tarceva (erlotinib) in the unusual NSCLC subtype bronchioloalveolar carcinoma, or BAC (abstract here).  This work was predicated on the observation, also by Dr. Miller and his colleagues at Memorial […]
1 Comments  Although it’s only a leak from a “reliable sourceâ€, news came yesterday (link here) about a new lung cancer development from a financial source (yet another example of us learning oncology from Wall Streeters). Specifically, we heard that the BMS-099 that I described in a prior post is actually demonstrating a significant benefit in […]
3 Comments  Since the anti-angiogenic agent avastin (bevacizumab) has been shown to confer a survival benefit in a subset of patients with previously untreated advanced NSCLC (see prior post), we have been struggling with questions of whether the restricted eligibility requirements in the pivotal initial avastin trial were necessary. Specifically, the trial, called ECOG 4599 (abstract […]
0 Comments  Several members have asked about the appropriate dose of avastin (bevacizumab), which is really still a controversial subject. It’s worth exploring how we got here and where we are now.
  While other doses of avastin have been used with other tumor types, the first study in lung cancer that used avastin tested two different doses, […]
   One of the issues we struggle the most with, as oncologists, patients, and families, is how to choose a therapy that won’t make someone feel worse. There are so many things to factor into these decisions: what is the baseline function of the person, what comorbidities (other chronic illnesses) might interact or interfere, what side […]
6 Comments  There’s a really helpful resource for patients, developed by several leading experts in EGFR-based therapy and specifically the very common skin toxicity associated with EGFR inhibitors like iressa, tarceva, erbitux, and some others. I’ve already described some early ideas about rash management (prior post) and a more recent medical education program video on the same […]
1 Comments  I still need to add a post on the more recent history of managing Pancoast tumors, but I wanted to add an important and potentially relevant bit of information I learned today. I’m attending a small meeting in New York and had the opportunity to talk with some folks from the company that makes Tarceva, OSI Pharmaceuticals, […]
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