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Science
Michael Fernando and Josh Hurwitz
Cancer is a fascinating but rapidly evolving discipline - it's a full-time job just keeping up to date. In this podcast, Dr Michael Fernando and Dr Joshua Hurwitz explore the latest trials, research, and practice-changing updates, as well as regular interviews with renowned oncology specialists. Ideal for those starting their training journey, established specialists and anyone interested in medical science, oncological practice, or terrible jokes. Preferably all three. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Total 154 episodes
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137. Back to Basics - High Risk Breast Cancer

137. Back to Basics - High Risk Breast Cancer

Breast Cancer is complex, as are the treatment options that clinicians and patients must traverse. Stage III breast cancer has up to a 57% chance of recurring up to 20 years after diagnosis. Josh and Michael look at one of the practice-changing papers that tried to address how to manage high-risk patients. This study is called Soft and Text. It asked if adding ovarian suppression to aromatase inhibitors was better than ovarian suppression with selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) to reduce the risk of recurrence in premenopausal women.Studies discussed in the episode:SOFT and TEXTFor more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice.Oncology for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from our foundation partners Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
26:4023/11/2024
136. Evolving landscape of Genitourinary Cancers (Bladder Cancer) - Prof Enrique Grande

136. Evolving landscape of Genitourinary Cancers (Bladder Cancer) - Prof Enrique Grande

Prof Enrique Grande, a medical oncologist from Madrid, Spain, is our guest on Oncology for the Inquisitive Mind this week. Enrique is not your average oncologist nor your average podcast guest with a fascinating back story, a varied career and the charisma and wisdom to match!Enrique has worked in all facets of oncology, including industry and is helping transform how patients access oncology care in Spain. He is the director of the Medical Oncology Program and Clinical Research Lead at the MD Anderson Centre Madrid. Prof Grande strongly focused on genitourinary and endocrine cancer research and was awarded his PhD in pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamics study of tyrosine kinase inhibitors in liver metabolism.Listen on, and you will learn all there is to know about bladder cancer and the world of medical oncology.We explore the #NIAGARA trial, #EV302 and many other trials that are changing the face of bladder cancer!For more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from our foundation partners Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
39:0616/11/2024
135. ESMO 2024 - Breast Cancer with Dr Adam Brufsky

135. ESMO 2024 - Breast Cancer with Dr Adam Brufsky

In our final ESMO 2024 analysis this week, we bring back Dr. Adam Brufsky, "a giant among men (and women)" in breast cancer research and management. He discusses the field, the pivotal updates in ESMO, and what this means for patients. He also explores many of the unanswered questions.Links to studies discussed in this episode (subscription may be required):DESTINYBREAST012KEYNOTE522Many other pearls of wisdom - so tune in!For more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from our foundation partners Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
28:2409/11/2024
134. ESMO 2024 - Lung Cancer with Dr Ned McNamee

134. ESMO 2024 - Lung Cancer with Dr Ned McNamee

Lung cancer treatment has changed seismically since 2018 and the NEJM publication of Keynote 189. This week, we have Dr. Ned Mcnamee on the show to give us his highlights of lung cancer updates from ESMO 2024. He explores the resectable lung cancer space with Checkmate-77T; crosses the ADRIATIC trial in patients with limited-stage small cell lung cancer, and brings in a home run with an updated LAURA trial mention (osimertinib after definitive chemoradiotherapy)Links to studies discussed in this episode (subscription may be required):Checkmate77TADRIATICLAURASpecial mentionsFor more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from our foundation partners Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
30:1502/11/2024
133. ESMO 2024 - Genitourinary Cancers with Prof Anthony Joshua

133. ESMO 2024 - Genitourinary Cancers with Prof Anthony Joshua

ESMO 2024 was the year genitourinary cancer took front and centre stage with many exciting updates, trials, and tribulations. This week, OFTIM brings their greatest champion back to dive deep into the changes that will impact our patients and their families, the NCCN guidelines, and how we practice medicine. Unfortunately, the heavyweight champion boxer was unavailable, but we got the next best thing - Prof Anthony Joshua from St Vincent's Health and The Garvan Institute of Medical Research. This week, he discusses all things genitourinary cancer and gives a knockout performance.Enough boxing analogies - on with the show!Links to studies discussed in this episode (subscription may be required):PATCH+STAMPEDEARANOTESTAMPEDE (metformin Arm)PEACE-3SPLASHNIAGARAAMBASSADORTiNivo-2For more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from our foundation partners Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
31:1226/10/2024
132. ESMO 2024 - Colorectal Cancer with Dr Geoffrey Chong

132. ESMO 2024 - Colorectal Cancer with Dr Geoffrey Chong

With ESMO 24 firmly in the rearview mirror, the dust settling, and the end of the year closing in, Michael and Josh take one final look at the trials that may change practice, direct research, or are just generally interesting. This week, we interviewed Dr Geoffrey Chong, a medical oncologist specialising in gastrointestinal cancers who currently holds appointments at the Olivia Newton-John Cancer Wellness and Research Centre and the Northern Hospital.Enjoy!Links to studies discussed in this episode (subscription may be required):APOLLOLEAP-012CABINETINTERAACT-2MOONLIGHTNICHE-2NICHE-3TOPGEARRAMTASSOLARISFor more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from our foundation partners Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
18:1719/10/2024
131. ESMO 2024 - Plenary Special

131. ESMO 2024 - Plenary Special

We have finally come to the end of ESMO 2024, and as is now tradition, Michael and Josh conclude their epic journey with a special episode highlighting their absolute favourite practice-changing selections from the Plenary Sessions. As always, ESMO brought a selection of wonderful studies that truly deserve the title "practice changing." As always, a huge thanks to everyone who joined us on this amazing journey. It has been a wonderful experience to attend a major international conference for the first time, and we are so privileged to be able to bring these results to you.Stay tuned to Oncology for the Inquisitive Mind in the coming weeks as we will be starting our ESMO 2024: Retrospective miniseries, where we speak to experts in the areas of breast, lung, GI, GU and skin cancers and get their opinions on the goings on in Barcelona.PEACE-3PODIUMKEYNOTE-A18KEYNOTE-522 OS DataNIAGARANote: this episode was recorded over two days at two separate locations.For more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
37:0718/09/2024
130. ESMO 2024 - Day 4

130. ESMO 2024 - Day 4

The end of the road approaches, and ESMO 2024 will soon be in the rearview mirror. However, each new day brings new, incredible advances in the treatment of cancer. Today, Josh and Michael dive into biomarker analyses, overall survival updates and new antibody-drug conjugates galore. Listen on for our penultimate summary of ESMO.Studies discussed in this episode:Biomarker analysis of PEACE-1ARANOTESTAMPEDE - Addition of MetforminClinical activity of BMS-986365, dual androgen receptor ligand-directed degrader and antagonist in heavily pretreated mCRPCNivo (3mg/kg) + ipi (1mg/kg) in molecularly-selected patients with mCRPCNeoadjuvant nivo/rela or nivo/ipi in TNBC with high TILsAdjuvant ribo + NSAI in patients with HR+/HER2- EBC: 4 year NATALEECabozantinib vs placebo for advanced NET after progression on prior therapy (CABINET)Osimertinib after definitive CRT: analysis of CNS and distant progression from LAURAPOTENTIALFor more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
32:2517/09/2024
129. ESMO 2024 - Day 3

129. ESMO 2024 - Day 3

Day three of the European Society of Medical Oncology Congress had many exciting and potentially practice-changing trials in the genitourinary space. Gone are the days of urothelial cancer having a single treatment and prostate cancer only having androgen deprivation therapy.They look at biomarkers for ADC response in bladder cancer, the use of lutetium upfront for metastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer, and novel ADC use in metastatic urothelial carcinoma.Links to studies discussed in this episode (subscription may be required):DV001 (Disitamab vedotin (DV) + pembrolizumab in treatment-naïve HER2-expressing LA/met UC)EV-302 - nectin four expressionUpFrontPSMA StudySplash Study (Lu-PNT2002)For more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice.SplashDisitimab Vedotin Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
22:4516/09/2024
128. ESMO 2024 - Day 2

128. ESMO 2024 - Day 2

Josh and Michael's Spanish Sojourn continues with their review of Day 2 of the European Society of Medical Oncology. Your hosts have been on their feet rushing from lecture theatre to lecture theatre, attending as many incredible presentations and soaking in as much practice-changing information as their brains could manage. In this episode, Michael and Josh report presented data ranging from supportive care to head and neck cancer and so many other fascinating studies in between. Read on to listen to the boys' best bits from Barcelona on Day 2 of ESMO.Studies discussed in this episode:Efficacy and safety of ponsegromab, a first-in-class, monoclonal antibody inhibitor of growth differentiation factor 15, in patients with cancer cachexia: A randomized, placebo-controlled, phase II studyA multicentre, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study of olanzapine-based triplet antiemetic therapy for prevention of delayed and persistent nausea and vomiting induced by trastuzumab deruxtecan in patients with metastatic breast cancer: ERICA study (WJOG14320B)Final analysis of a phase II/III trial of post-operative chemoradiotherapy comparing 3-weekly cisplatin with weekly cisplatin in high-risk patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck (JCOG1008)Final results: Randomized assessment of cisplatin dosing interval for ototoxicity (RADIO) trial comparing chemoradiation (CRT) with cisplatin q3weekly to weekly for locally advanced squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck (LASCCHN)TILs and overall survival (OS) in HER2+ early breast cancer (eBC): 10-year (yr) updated analysis of the ShortHER trialPathologic complete response and survival after neoadjuvant chemotherapy in stage I TNBC: A registry-based studyInterim analysis of GALAXIES Lung-201: belrestotug + dostarlimab in 1L for PD-L1 TPS >/= 50% NSCLCIvonescimab +/- ligufalimab + FOLFOXIRI as 1L treatment for mCRCEfficacy and safety of ribociclib + NSAI in younger patients with HR+/HER2- EBC (NATALEE)For more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
30:0615/09/2024
127. ESMO 2024 - Day 1

127. ESMO 2024 - Day 1

The European Society of Medical Oncology Congress has begun, and Michael and Josh are on the ground, bringing you breaking studies and heartbreaks along with some important updates in the science and art of medical oncology.Michael and Josh cover a range of tumour types on day one, a slight deviation from our regular coverage. They look at hepatocellular carcinoma, renal cancers, and breast cancer, an eclectic but exciting mix of cancer types.Michael investigates HCC treatment with iparomlimab and tuvonaralimab with bevacizumab in a first line setting, along with some updated efficacy from the IMbrave050 trial. He finishes off his whirlwind tour of day one summarising some interesting education points in the metastatic colorectal cancer space. Josh looks at Tivozanib-Nivolumab in advanced RCC following immunotherapy, along with another trial where Belzutifan may be another treatment option. He finishes up with HER3-directed therapy!Links to studies discussed in this episode (subscription may be required):Phs II/III DUBHE-H-308Imbrave050 (HCC)TiNivo-2 Study (mRCC)Litespark 005 (mRCC)Checkmate 8HW (mCRC)Icarus-Breast 01 (mBreast Cancer)For more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
24:0614/09/2024
126. Ocular Melanoma and Prostate Cancer with A/Prof Anthony Joshua

126. Ocular Melanoma and Prostate Cancer with A/Prof Anthony Joshua

Oncology for the Inquisitive Mind has been privileged to interview some truly brilliant specialists, and this week's guest is no exception. Professor Anthony Joshua is the Head of Oncology at the Kinghorn Cancer Centre and St Vincent's Health in Sydney. He is a globally recognised expert in genitourinary cancers and melanoma, with a special interest in ocular melanoma. Professor Joshua completed his PhD in prostatic carcinogenesis under the supervision of Dr Jeremy Squire and a clinical fellowship under Dr Ian Tannock. He worked at Princess Margaret Cancer Centre before returning down under and has helped reshape cancer care at the Kinghorn Cancer Centre, making it one of the largest trial centres in New South Wales. Today, Professor Joshua discusses his journey, the landscape of prostate cancer, and some of his research in the area of ocular melanoma. Professor Anthony Joshua is not a professional British boxer. To find out more about Professor Anthony Joshua's research portfolio, click hereFor more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] Link to Prof Joshua's podcast, Dangerous Ideas in Drug Development: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nectaOncology for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
41:1224/08/2024
125. Spotlight - Biotech ImmVirX with Dr Malcolm McColl and Prof Darren Shafren

125. Spotlight - Biotech ImmVirX with Dr Malcolm McColl and Prof Darren Shafren

Oncolytic viruses thrive in cancer cells and can replicate rapidly, destroying the cells and enabling the immune system to attack tumours. This week, we interview Dr Malcolm McColl and Prof Darren Shafren, a dynamic duo in Australian biotechnology and part of the leadership team of ImmVirx, a viral oncolytic company. Prior to creating ImmVirx, they successfully launched the product Cavatak, used in melanoma and other malignancies.ImmVirx has developed a proprietary bio-selected RNA virus that is showing promising pre-clinical and phase 1 results as monotherapy in hard-to-treat cancers, including colorectal, gastric hepatocellular and ovarian cancers.For more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
37:2917/08/2024
124. Metastatic HER2- positive breast cancer

124. Metastatic HER2- positive breast cancer

Metastatic HER2-positive breast cancer continues to dominate headlines, and new therapeutic options continue to be found for those afflicted with the disease. Before trastuzumab (anti-HER2 therapy), the overall survival for this cohort of patients was less than two years. As technology and treatments changed, it can boast an extended survival well beyond five years in numerous studies, with many patients responding far more than that number.This week, we will discuss two exciting and pioneering studies. The first looks at tucatinib, a tyrosine kinase inhibitor with known results in those with intracranial disease. The second is the use of abemaciclib in hormone receptor-positive, HER2-positive breast cancer in patients previously treated with trastuzumab. Links to studies discussed in this episode (subscription may be required):HER2CLIMB: LinkmonarcHER: LinkFor more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
30:4010/08/2024
123. Spotlight: MARIPOSA for EGFRmut Lung Cancer

123. Spotlight: MARIPOSA for EGFRmut Lung Cancer

The discovery of EGFR as a driver mutation and the development of medications to take advantage of this mutation changed the treatment of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) forever. Not only did it vastly improve outcomes for patients with this subset of cancers, it opened the door for the likes of alectinib, lorlatinib and sotorasib to carve out niches for their own driver mutations. However, the treatment remains imperfect and people much smarter than Josh and Michael have been hard at work trying to improve on the current standard of care, osimertinib. This brings us to MARIPOSA, a study that combined the dual EGFR-MET bispecific antibody amivantamab with the CNS-penetrant anti-EGFR TKI lazertinib, and uniquely compared it to osimertinib. Will this combination dethrone the king and rule the roost in EGFRmut NSCLC? Or will excessive toxicity and logistical concerns consign it to a niche at best? Listen on to find out!Links to studies discussed in this episode (subscription may be required):MARIPOSA: LinkFor more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
25:3303/08/2024
122. Palliative Care with Dr Janet Abrahm

122. Palliative Care with Dr Janet Abrahm

It is rare on any show to be able to interview a true pioneer. On today's episode of Oncology for the Inquisitive Mind, we have the privilege of interviewing Dr Janet Abrahm, a pioneer in every sense of the word. An internist with over 20 years experience, Dr Abrahm was one of the founders and earliest proponents of palliative care in the United States. A staff specialist at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute, she is board-certified in Hematology, Hospice and Palliative Medicine, Internal Medicine, and Oncology. She has lectured on palliative care in the DFCI Master Course for oncologists throughout the US. Since 2010 she has participated internationally in the Education in Palliative and End-of-Life (EPEC)-Oncology course as a Master teacher. Most recently, she was the recipient of the 2024 Walther Cancer Foundation Supportive Oncology Award, recognising a distinguished lecturer and leader with multiple, significant, and enduring contributions to palliative and supportive care in oncology through the prevention, assessment and management of cancer- and treatment-related suffering. Oncology for the Inquisitive Mind is truly privileged to have Dr Abrahm on the show.For more information on Dr Abrahm, or to subscribe to her palliative care newsletter, visit: https://janetabrahm.com/For more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
43:5927/07/2024
121. Dr Elias Chandran, the NCI and Urothelial Caricinoma

121. Dr Elias Chandran, the NCI and Urothelial Caricinoma

This week, we interview Dr Elias Chandran, a medical oncologist and emerging research juggernaut who is an assistant research physician at the National Cancer Institute in Bethesda, Maryland. His focus is on genitourinary cancer, and he has recently published a pivotal systematic review and meta-analysis titled "Mismatch repair deficiency and microsatellite instability-high in urothelial carcinoma: A systematic review and meta-analysis".Dr Chandran is the epitome of a resilient clinician, having trained and worked in multiple countries and taking every opportunity granted to him. For any trainees or junior medical staff curious about oncology careers and how to make the most of your journey, Elias's story is one not to miss.To find out more about Elias and his research, click here: LinkFor more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
36:0420/07/2024
120. Artificial Intelligence & Cancer with Professor Meredith Broussard

120. Artificial Intelligence & Cancer with Professor Meredith Broussard

Today, Michael and Josh interview Professor Meredith Broussard to discuss Artificial Intelligence (AI), its role in cancer diagnosis, her journey with breast cancer and her inspiration for her latest book, More than a Glitch. Meredith is a data journalist at the Arthur L Carter Journalism Institute of New York University and has had an exceptionally versatile career, previously having worked as a software developer for MIT Media Lab and a former features editor at the Philadelphia Inquirer.She is also the author of numerous other books, including Confronting Race, Gender, and Ability Bias in Tech and Artificial Unintelligence. She is the research director at the NYU Alliance for Public Interest Technology.For further information on Meredith, please see the link below:Professor Meredith BroussardFor more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
42:1113/07/2024
119. ASCO 2024 - Plenary Session

119. ASCO 2024 - Plenary Session

"Here at last, at the edge of the sea, comes the end of our Fellowship." So said Gandalf the White at the conclusion of J.R.R Tolkien's epic The Lord of the Rings. Today, Josh and Michael have a no less epic conclusion to their own adventure, that of ASCO 2024. Over the last fifteen days, our intrepid hosts have journeyed across the world of medical oncology, from the highs of colorectal, breast and lung cancer to the dark days of central nervous system tumours. As is our tradition, we end our coverage with a look at the studies chosen by the ASCO committee as worthy of special attention: the plenary presentations. It is rare indeed to have four presentations in one year that all change clinical practice, but that is what we have been treated to this year.Thank you for joining us for coverage of ASCO 2024; we have enjoyed ourselves immensely in covering it, and we hope you have enjoyed our meandering journey through some of the best oncology researchers in the world. We will be back in a couple of weeks as Oncology for the Inquisitive arm returns to its normal programming.Links to studies discussed in this episode (subscription may be required): ESOPEC: LinkNADINA: LinkLAURA: LinkADRIATIC: LinkFor more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
52:1717/06/2024
118. ASCO 2024 - Sarcoma

118. ASCO 2024 - Sarcoma

Today is the penultimate episode in our ASCO 2024 Odyssey. Michael and Josh have neglected sarcoma to date, but today is the day@ Sarcoma is rare, where clinician experience becomes paramount to treatment options and outcomes. They develop in soft tissues and bones and vary in origin, including deep soft tissue, bone, nerves, etc. Today, they explore three trials. The first is paclitaxel and avelumab in inoperable angiosarcoma, the second is perioperative radiotherapy with adjuvant immunotherapy in high-risk soft tissue sarcoma, and the final is a good old head-to-head trial of perioperative chemotherapy in soft tissue sarcoma (adriamycin plus ifosfamide vs gemcitabine and docetaxel.Links to studies discussed in this episode (subscription may be required)SU2C-SARCO32: LinkJCOG1306: LinkPhase II trial, multicenter, first-line paclitaxel-avelumab treatment for inoperable angiosarcoma: LinkFor more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
19:5116/06/2024
117. ASCO 2024 - Central Nervous System

117. ASCO 2024 - Central Nervous System

Some consider the number 13 unlucky; fear of the number has its own name, "triskaidekaphobia." So it is perhaps somewhat fitting that day 13 of our ASCO Odyssey is dedicated to the cancer type with which scientists and doctors have had arguably the least luck in treating: central nervous system cancers. We still await CNS oncology's immunotherapy or EGFR/ALK moment, and unfortunately, as of ASCO 2024, that has not come yet. However, that has not stopped legions of incredibly dedicated and intelligent people from trying. ASCO 2024 brought us several very interesting studies, both in form and function, that we hope will lay the groundwork for that magical breakthrough in this very difficult group of cancers.Links to studies discussed in this episode (subscription may be required)A phase II trial of olaparib and durvalumab in patients with recurrent IDH-mutated gliomas. LinkEvaluation of VAL-083 in GBM AGILE, a phase 3 registration platform trial for newly diagnosed and recurrent glioblastoma. LinkN2M2/NOA-20: Phase I/IIa umbrella trial of molecularly matched targeted therapies plus radiotherapy in patients with newly diagnosed glioblastoma without MGMT promoter hypermethylation. LinkAlliance A071401: Phase II trial of abemaciclib in patients with grade 2/3 meningiomas harboring somatic NF2 or CDK pathway alterations. LinkFor more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
25:2715/06/2024
116. ASCO 2024 - Early Lung Cancer & Mesothelioma

116. ASCO 2024 - Early Lung Cancer & Mesothelioma

ASCO 2024 beat many attendees' expectations with interesting and thought-provoking lung cancer and mesothelioma studies. While not all of these will change the face of patient treatment, they will add to a body of evidence for biomarkers and build on the blocks of tailoring treatment to patients.Links to studies discussed in this episode (subscription may be required):BEAT-meso: Link Checkmate 816 4 year update: LinkMIST5: LinkctDNA-Lung-DETECT: Link BEAT-SC: Link For more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
28:0614/06/2024
115. ASCO 2024 - Head and Neck Cancer

115. ASCO 2024 - Head and Neck Cancer

Our coverage of ASCO 2024 has rounded the final bend, and the finish line is in sight. Today, Josh and Michael examine four studies in the head and neck cancer space. Today's studies include a novel, viral-driven vector that aims to increase the immune response to treatment, potential treatment for the very rare nasal squamous cell cancer, data supporting the treatment of patients with poor prognosis and head and neck patients, and a new, intensive immunotherapy treatment for nasopharyngeal cancer. A wide variety of studies that are sure to satisfy a broad range of palates!Links to studies discussed in this episode (subscription may be required):TARGET-HPV: LinkPhase 3 randomized study for evaluation of physician choice Rx versus best supportive care as second-line or beyond therapy in head and neck cancer with poor performance status: LinkKCSG HN18-07: LinkTislelizumab versus placebo combined with induction chemotherapy followed by concurrent chemoradiotherapy and adjuvant tislelizumab or placebo for locoregionally advanced nasopharyngeal carcinoma: Interim analysis of a multicenter, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, phase 3 trial: LinkFor more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
25:4113/06/2024
114. ASCO 2024 - Early Colorectal Cancer

114. ASCO 2024 - Early Colorectal Cancer

ASCO 2024 never seems to end, and today, Michael and Josh do a bit of a backflip and report on the advancements in early colorectal cancer. Forever a confusing topic with PRODIGE23, OPRA, and many other rectal cancer trials and a spattering of neoadjuvant colorectal trials, the ability to redefine and provide clarity to this area is pertinent. Today, it heavily focuses on immunotherapy in the colon space with sintilimab and IBI310 battling it out with the old master pembrolizumab. The rectal contingent is the TNTCRT trial, looking at total neoadjuvant therapy vs concurrent chemoradiotherapy. While the world may have moved forward, this trial could provide further evidence of the path we should be taking.Links to studies discussed in this episode (subscription may be required)NEOPRISM-CRC: LinkTNTCRC: LinkNeoadjuvant treatment of IBI310 (anti-CTLA-4 antibody) plus sintilimab (anti-PD-1 antibody) in patients with microsatellite instability-high/mismatch repair-deficient colorectal cancer: Results from a randomized, open-labelled, phase Ib study: LinkFor more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
23:5012/06/2024
113. ASCO 2024 - Metastatic Colorectal Cancer

113. ASCO 2024 - Metastatic Colorectal Cancer

Our 2024 ASCO epic trundles onto its next generation, advanced colorectal cancer. Over the last 10 years, treatment in this area has made incremental progress through the discovery of the clinically meaningful KRAS and BRAF mutation pathways and most recently with the potential for immunotherapy in the deficient mismatch repair (dMMR) and high microsatellite instability (MSI-H) subgroups. In this episode, Josh and Michael examine studies looking at KRAS G12C-mutated, HER2-positive and dMMR colorectal cancer, as well as a very exciting study examining the utility of transplantation in patients with liver-only colorectal metastases.Links to studies discussed in this episode (subscription may be required): CODEBREAK300: https://meetings.asco.org/2024-asco-annual-meeting/15829?presentation=234200%23234200 MOUNTAINEER: https://meetings.asco.org/2024-asco-annual-meeting/15829?presentation=231646%23231646  CHECKMATE 8HW: https://meetings.asco.org/2024-asco-annual-meeting/15828?presentation=231645%23231645TRANSMET: https://meetings.asco.org/2024-asco-annual-meeting/15828?presentation=231641%23231641For more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
22:4811/06/2024
112. ASCO 2024 - Upper Gastrointestinal and Hepatobiliary Cancers

112. ASCO 2024 - Upper Gastrointestinal and Hepatobiliary Cancers

Some oncologists may have already started counting down to ASCO 2025. However, Michael and Josh are still digesting the interesting world of ASCO 2024, specifically upper GI and Hepatobiliary Cancers. Like the eponymous lead of the 1992 classic Aladdin, several diamonds lie in the rough.We cover perioperative FLOT in the metastatic setting, but most excitingly, it is a potentially new groundbreaking treatment for hepatocellular carcinoma.Links to studies discussed in this episode (subscription may be required)ECOG-ACRIN EA2174: https://meetings.asco.org/2024-asco-annual-meeting/15831?presentation=231157%23231157ROTG 0848: https://meetings.asco.org/2024-asco-annual-meeting/15831?presentation=231157%23231157CHECKMATE 9DW: https://meetings.asco.org/2024-asco-annual-meeting/15831?presentation=231157%23231157RENAISSANCE: https://meetings.asco.org/2024-asco-annual-meeting/15831?presentation=231157%23231157For more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
29:0510/06/2024
111. ASCO 2024 - Genitourinary Cancers (Prostate/Penile)

111. ASCO 2024 - Genitourinary Cancers (Prostate/Penile)

The second of our two GU ASCO 2024 episodes focusses on prostate and penile cancer, two diseases at different ends of the therapeutic spectrum. Prostate cancer is one of the most common cancers in men, with well established, nuanced treatment paradigms and a glut of high-quality evidence. Penile SCC is a very rare cancer that tragically is much more common in low socioeconomic countries. Treatment options are as limited as available evidence, so any new studies of this cancer are very welcome. Are there any more practice changing twists and turns from ASCO 2024? You'll have to listen to find out!Links to studies discussed in this episode (subscription may be required)Cabazitaxel with abiraterone versus abiraterone alone randomized trial for extensive disease following docetaxel: The CHAARTED2 trial of the ECOG-ACRIN Cancer Research Group (EA8153): LinkCYCLONE 2: A phase 3 study of abemaciclib with abiraterone in patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer: LinkA randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of metformin in reducing progression among men on expectant management for low-risk prostate cancer: The MAST (Metformin Active Surveillance Trial) study: LinkA phase II trial of pembrolizumab plus platinum-based chemotherapy as first-line systemic therapy in advanced penile cancer: HERCULES (LACOG 0218) trial. LinkFor more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
26:3309/06/2024
110. ASCO 2024 - Genitourinary Cancers (Bladder/Kidney)

110. ASCO 2024 - Genitourinary Cancers (Bladder/Kidney)

Genitourinary Cancers dominated ASCO24 this year, and Josh and Michael's ASCO Odyssey needed two episodes to fit it all in. Join them as they board the Nautilus with Captain Nemo in search of the best trials to propel bladder and renal cancer to the forefront of your mind. This episode covers both the use of perioperative sacituzumab govitecan, avelumab as neoadjuvant therapy for bladder cancer and camrelizumab for previously treated advanced adrenocortical carcinoma. Not to be forgotten, they explore a biomarker analysis of the CLEAR trial to see whether any treasure is to be found...Links to studies discussed in this episode (subscription may be required)SURE 01/02: LinkAURA: LinkCLEAR biomarker analysis: LinkCamrelizumab plus apatinib for previously treated advanced adrenocortical carcinoma: A single-arm, open-label, phase 2 trial: LinkFor more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/The Star Spangled Banner courtesy of Music_Unlimited: https://pixabay.com/users/music_unlimited-27600023/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
26:4408/06/2024
109. ASCO 2024 - Early Breast Cancer

109. ASCO 2024 - Early Breast Cancer

Unbeknownst to Josh, we are already at Day 5 of our ASCO Odyssey, and like Odysseus arriving at Circe's island of Aeaea, we have arrived at the episode devoted to early Breast Cancer. Today we examine four very interesting studies, looking at alternative immunotherapy strategies with adjuvant avelumab, adjuvant endocrine therapy omission in low-ER positive disease, ctDNA in predicting disease recurrence, and a study that aims to change the very bedrock of breast cancer classification. Lots to discuss, deconstruct and debate on today's episode!Links to studies discussed (subscription may be required):A-BRAVE: LinkAdjuvant ET omission in ER-low patients: Link Prognostic utility of ctDNA detection in the monarchE trial of adjuvant abemaciclib plus endocrine therapy (ET) in HR+, HER2-, node-positive, high-risk early breast cancer (EBC): Link Rates of pathologic complete response (pCR) after datopotamab deruxtecan (Dato) plus durvalumab (Durva) in the neoadjuvant setting: Results from the I-SPY2.2 trial: Link For more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
37:4307/06/2024
108. ASCO 2024 - Metastatic Breast Cancer

108. ASCO 2024 - Metastatic Breast Cancer

Today, Michael and Josh approach a singular destiny to present their take on Metastatic Breast Cancer at ASCO 2024. Long has Breast Cancer been one of the most diagnosed cancers globally; these days, it leads the herd with effective treatment options and paradigm shifts that benefit millions of people on a massive scale. With CDK4/6 inhibitors, immunotherapy and antibody-drug conjugates, the arsenal of effective treatment tools continues to grow! Nothing excites an oncologist more than a good randomised phase 3 international study. Today, they present the following:Links to studies discussed (subscription may be required):Destiny-Breast06: Link postMONARCH: Link INAVO120: Link OptiTROP-Breast01: Link For more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
34:5706/06/2024
107. ASCO 2024 - Gynaecological Cancer

107. ASCO 2024 - Gynaecological Cancer

Day 3 of Oncology for the Inquisitive Mind's ASCO Odyssey and our hosts show no sign of flagging under this immense pressure, although Josh has started to give up on his famous segues. In this episode, our intrepid hosts tackle gynaecological cancers, reporting on four of their favourite studies from a packed field of gynaecological cancers. Will new treatment options for cervical cancer emerge? Will the sugical approach to recurrent ovarian cancer change? Is there still a place for single agent olaparib in the management of ovarian cancers? Listen on to find out.Links to studies discussed in this episode (subscription may be required):Nimotuzumab plus concurrent chemoradiotherapy for locally advanced cervical squamous cell carcinoma: The randomized, phase 3 CC3 study: Link AXLerate-OC/GOG-3059/ENGOT OV-66: Results of a phase 3, randomized, double-blind, placebo/paclitaxel-controlled study of batiraxcept (AVB-S6-500) in combination with paclitaxel in patients with platinum-resistant recurrent ovarian cancer: Link Secondary cytoreduction followed by chemotherapy versus chemotherapy alone in platinum-sensitive relapsed ovarian cancer (SOC-1): A final overall survival analysis of a multicenter, open-label, randomized, phase 3 trial: LinkOral cyclophosphamide plus bevacizumab in recurrent ovarian, fallopian tube and primary peritoneal cancer: LinkFor more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/The Star Spangled Banner courtesy of Music_Unlimited: https://pixabay.com/users/music_unlimited-27600023/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
33:4705/06/2024
106. ASCO 2024 - Melanoma

106. ASCO 2024 - Melanoma

As the sun rises on another day at ASCO, Michael and Josh are ready to hit the ground running to bring you the latest and greatest in all things oncology in Chicago has to offer. No greek mythology today, only a burning desire to bring you the biggest melanoma trials from ASCO24. Today, they pack a punch, tackling some intriguing phase 1 trials with tongue-twisting names where the novelty wears off pretty quickly!Links to articles discussed in this episode (subscription may be required): RELATIVITY-048: linkSX-682: linkPIVOTAL: linkBRENETAFUSP: linkFor more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
31:2604/06/2024
105. ASCO 2024 - Metastatic Non Small Cell Lung Cancer

105. ASCO 2024 - Metastatic Non Small Cell Lung Cancer

"Tell me, Muse, the story of that resourceful man who was driven to wander far and wide after he had sacked Troy. He saw the cities of many people and he learnt their ways. Tell us this story, goddess daughter of Zeus, beginning at whatever point you will." So begins Homer's epic The Odyssey, the story of the titular hero Odysseus' long, long, LONG journey from the ruins of Troy to his home of Ithaca. Just as Odysseus set out from Troy, so do Michael and Josh begin an "odyssey" of their own. The American Society of Clinical Oncology's 2024 meeting is in full swing, bringing a veritable Charybdis of content into the world of medical oncology. The starting point for this epic journey is updates to non-small cell lung cancer, including a new contender for our hosts' favourite study of all time.Links to articles discussed in this episode (subscription may be required): EVOKE-1: LinkICARUS-LUNG01: LinkCROWN 5-year update: Link HARMONI-A: LinkFor more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/The Star Spangled Banner courtesy of Music_Unlimited: https://pixabay.com/users/music_unlimited-27600023/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
37:4603/06/2024
104. Metastatic Gastric and GOJ Cancer

104. Metastatic Gastric and GOJ Cancer

With ASCO upon us, Michael and Josh squeeze one more episode of their regular schedule to bring you an important update on gastric cancer. For context, the 5 year survival rate for metastatic gastric cancer is 6%, similar to that of pancreatic cancer. Despite improvement in survival due to the addition of nivolumab to chemotherapy (Checkmate 64), few therapies have significantly changed it's overall prognosis.This week Michael and Josh explore the addition of a LAG-3 inhibitor (relatlimab) to the SOC nivolumab and chemotherapy to see if gastric cancers fortune may change. Synergistic evidence has been seen in melanoma, but melanoma has a completely different biology.. Michael engages with Keynote-811, the addition of trastuzumab to SOC chemotherapy for hER2 positive metastatic gastric/GOJ cancer. Is this HER2 antibody strong enough to stop this cancers march?Tune in today, and for the forseeable future and Josh and Michael go where no podcaster has gone before--->Links to articles discussed in this episode (subscription may be required): Relativity 060: Link Keynote 811: LinkFor more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
25:5401/06/2024
103. Metastatic Colorectal Cancer

103. Metastatic Colorectal Cancer

Oncology research never sits still, nor does the desire for better treatment options for metastatic colorectal cancer. Fifty percent of diagnosed cases develop metastatic spread during their disease course. This week, we look for the "SUNLIGHT" and investigate the combination of Lonsurf with Bevacizumab and using Fruquintinib with refractory metastatic colorectal cancer.Links to articles discussed in this episode (subscription may be required): FRESCO-2: Link SUNLIGHT: LinkFor more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
30:3825/05/2024
102. Hepatocellular Carcinoma

102. Hepatocellular Carcinoma

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the sixth most prevalent cancer in the world and the third or fourth leading cause of death (depending on where you do your research). Over 70% of cases are in Asian countries, predominantly due to high rates of endemic hepatitis infections.This week, we climb a mountain in search of treatment options and advancements in this orphan cancer. Two trials are discussed: The first is HIMALAYA comparing durvalumab and tremelimumab versus the old incumbent sorafenib (tyrosine kinase inhibitor). Will immunotherapy take the reigns as the preferred agents? Our second study is Compassion-08, (Michael has an abundance of this). The trial is unique as it involves a first-in-class bispecific antibody targeting PD-1 and CTLA-4 (cadonilimab in combination with lenvatinib).Interesting times ahead in the HCC spaceLinks to articles discussed in this episode (subscription may be required): HIMALAYA: Link COMPASSION-08: LinkFor more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
33:2418/05/2024
Oncosnacks 14: Bevacizumab Toxicity (Part 1)

Oncosnacks 14: Bevacizumab Toxicity (Part 1)

In many parts of the world, Bevacizumab is an important component of the treatment of glioblastoma, colorectal, hepatocellular and ovarian cancers. However, with such widespread use inevitably comes toxicity. Side effects related to bevacizumab are not your garden-variety chemotherapy side effects, nor are they similar to toxicity from immunotherapy. Rather, they stand apart, unique amongst our systemic therapies.In their latest Onconack, Josh and Michael take a look at two of the most commonly described toxicities related to bevacizumab: hypertension and proteinuria. This is sure to be a valuable resource to any oncology trainee blessed (or cursed) with the unit pager!Links to useful sources for further reading (subscription may be required):Chemotherapy plus bevacizumab as an optimal first-line therapeutic treatment for patients with right-sided metastatic colon cancer: a meta-analysis of first-line clinical trials: Link Practical Management of Bevacizumab-Related Toxicities in Glioblastoma: Link Incorporation of Bevacizumab in the Primary Treatment of Ovarian Cancer. Link Bevacizumab Increases Risk for Severe Proteinuria in Cancer Patients: Link For more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comFind us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of Music Unlimited: https://pixabay.com/users/music_unlimited-27600023/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
15:4314/05/2024
101. Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer Update

101. Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer Update

As many philosophers have noted, life often travels in cycles. Almost two years and more than 100 episodes ago, on a virtual call far far away, two young oncologists started on a journey to bring the latest oncology evidence to anyone with ears and the will to listen. Now, for episode number 101, Josh and Michael return to where it all started: prostate cancer. Much has changed in the (nearly) two years since that episode, and so in this episode, our hosts provide an update on two more recent updates in the prostate cancer space: Michael discusses TALAPRO-2, the latest in a flurry of studies examining patients with homologous-repair-deficient prostate cancer examining enzalutamide and talazoparib. Josh presents a study close to his heart; ENZA-P is an Australian-led study combining novel anti-androgen agents with the even-more-novel radioactive agent Lutetium-PSMA. Both represent the crest of the new wave of targeted prostate cancer treatment, and there are many tidbits to be gobbled up in this, the start of a new 100 episode cycle for Oncology for the Inquisitive Mind!Links to articles discussed in this episode (subscription may be required): TALAPRO-2: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41591-023-02704-xENZA-P: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1470204524001359?dgcid=coauthorFor more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
33:3811/05/2024
100. 100th Episode Bonanza

100. 100th Episode Bonanza

For 100 episodes, Josh and Michael have brought to your ears the latest and greatest in oncology research and treatment. In this episode, we will take a trip down memory lane, speaking about our journey up to this point, our favourite guests and favourite trials, and give you a glimpse of what the future holds for Oncology for the Inquisitive Mind. If we're honest, we never expected to get this far, and we have you, our wonderful audience to thank for that. We are so grateful for your support, you are the reason we keep coming back every week to record, and we hope to continue to bring you more oncology-related goodness for many more episodes to come!For more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
28:1904/05/2024
99. Early Mutation-Driver Positive NSCLC

99. Early Mutation-Driver Positive NSCLC

In this episode, Josh and Michael examine the rapidly developing world of early lung cancer treatment. An area that will hopefully only grow in importance, treatment for early NSCLC is becoming ever more sophisticated, with recent developments in neoadjuvant management and confirmation of the benefit of adjuvant driver-mutation inhibitior treatment. Today's articles cover two such topics: will osimertinib finally reach the pinnacle it was born to reach and be used in the neoadjuvant treatment of EGFR-mutant NSCLC? Will alectinib join its older, more successful cousin in being effective in resected ALK-mutant NSCLC? Listen on to find out, but we'll give you this one for free: if you have a patient with early NSCLC, it is becoming imperative that you test them for these mutations. Truly a fascinating time.Links to articles discussed in this episode (subscription may be required): NEOS: https://www.lungcancerjournal.info/article/S0169-5002(23)00072-7/fulltextALINA: https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2310532For more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Pfizer, Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights or early previews, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do.Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
33:4827/04/2024
98. Breast Cancer with Dr Adam Brufsky

98. Breast Cancer with Dr Adam Brufsky

On this very special episode, Josh and Michael welcome Dr Adam Brufsky, a trailblazer in the world of breast cancer treatment and a titan in the frenetic development of breast cancer therapies since the mid-late 90s. Dr Brufsky is a Professor of Medicine at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Chief of the university's Division of Haematology and Oncology and co-director of its Comprehensive Cancer Centre. He received his MD and PhD from the University of Connecticut's School of Medicine in 1990 and has previously worked at Bringham and Women's Hospital and the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. His areas of special interest include novel therapeutics and management strategies for breast cancer, bone-breast cancer interactions and therapeutics and molecular biology of metastatic breast cancer. He is a font of knowledge and we are so privileged to welcome Dr Brufsky onto the show.For more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] for the Inquisitive Mind is recorded with the support of education grants from Gilead Pharmaceuticals and Merck Pharmaceuticals. Our partners have no editorial rights, and they have access to the episode at the same time you do. Art courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
57:5520/04/2024
Fireside Chats 3: Colorectal Cancer in Young People

Fireside Chats 3: Colorectal Cancer in Young People

On today's blessedly brief episode, Josh and Michael give an overview of one of the greatest challenges for any practicing oncologist: the conundrum of cancer in young people. In recent decades, the number and proportion of young patients diagnosed with colorectal cancer has skyrocketed. This trend has been noted in news outlets across the world, reported in sources as disparate as the New York Times and the Australian Broadcasting Company. From the medical to the logistical and emotional, managing a young person with a cancer diagnosis is very difficult. While neither of our intrepid hosts has an answer to this very complex topic, there are a number of nuggets they drop that could help. Listen on for a thought provoking episode of Oncology for the Inquisitive Mind.Article discussed in this episode (subscription may be required): "‘More Young People Than Ever Will Get Colorectal Cancer This Year," by Knuvul Sheikh.Available from: https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/27/well/colon-cancer-symptoms-treatment.html?unlocked_article_code=1.gE0.C_DO.__AnqnMB1F4M&smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShareArt courtesy of Taryn SilverAudio courtesy of:Olexy on pixabay: https://pixabay.com/users/olexy-25300778/JuliusH on pixabay: https://pixabay.com/users/juliush-3921568/The opinions discussed in this episode are those of the authors and should not be taken for medical advice. They exist to engender discussion, debate and thought. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
16:5013/04/2024
Oncosnacks 13: Pancreatic Cancer - NAPOLI-3 Trial Update

Oncosnacks 13: Pancreatic Cancer - NAPOLI-3 Trial Update

IN BREAKING NEWS... Or not really, as we are a bit late to the party. But in honour of liposomal irinotecan's recent approval by the Federal Drugs Administration, we thought we would take another look at the NAPOLI-3 trial. The first potentially practice-changing update to the treatment of advanced pancreatic cancer arguably in more than a decade, the combination of liposomal irinotecan with 5-fluorouracil and oxaliplatin proved itself superior (spoiler alert) to the established combination of gemcitabine and nab-paclitaxel. Will this practically change practice for our patients? The answer, for Australia at least, is a resounding maybe. Listen on for all the juicy details, and the return of OftiM Newsreader "Walter Fernando-Cronkite."Links to articles discussed in this episode (subscription may be required):NAPOLI-3: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(23)01366-1/fulltextFor more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comFind us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of Music Unlimited: https://pixabay.com/users/music_unlimited-27600023/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
09:1909/04/2024
97. Spotlight: Advanced Breast Cancer - Which CDK4/6 Inhibitor is Best?

97. Spotlight: Advanced Breast Cancer - Which CDK4/6 Inhibitor is Best?

It is a tale as old as time, as old as the stars, the heavens and human consciousness itself. Okay, we're exaggerating a bit, but for as long as pharmacology and capitalism have been joined at the hip, the question of "which drug is best" has been at or near the forefront of medical decision-making. With the development of standardised clinical trials and the difficulty of conducting direct head-to-head comparisons, this question has become more difficult to answer conclusively. Nowhere is this epitomised better than with the triptych of available CDK4/6 inhibitors: palbociclib, ribociclib and abemaciclib. A lot of ink and pixels have been devoted to comparing the pivotal trials of these three equally pivotal agents: PALOMA-2, MONALEESA-2 and MONARCH-3, respectively. However, Josh and Michael have brought the definitive and not-at-all rambling answer to this question. Listen on to find out!Links to studies discussed in this episode (subscription may be required):Review Article (Grinshpun et al.): https://www.nature.com/articles/s41523-023-00520-7For more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
25:4606/04/2024
96. Second Line Treatment of Melanoma

96. Second Line Treatment of Melanoma

In this episode, Michael and Josh welcome a very special guest: Michael's Labrador Beans. Beans is a world-renowned expert in eating snacks, but unfortunately, had very little to offer on their topic today: the treatment of progressive or recurrent cutaneous melanoma with primary and secondary resistance to immunotherapy. So, unfortunately, the discussion was left to your regular hosts. For approximately 50% of patients, this is fortunately not a question they need to worry about, as immunotherapy and BRAF/MEK inhibitors remain effective treatments. However, that still leaves half of all patients facing an uncertain future, as treatment beyond these two agents remains uncertain. Josh and Michael examine two studies that may shine a light in this dark corner of oncology: LEAP-004, a single-arm study of lenvatinib + pembrolizumab, and an article published in the New England Journal of Medicine examining the use of tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) as a novel weapon against immunotherapy-resistant melanoma. Links to studies discussed in this episode (subscription may be required):LEAP-004: https://ascopubs.org/doi/full/10.1200/JCO.22.00221Rohaan et al: https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2210233For more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
39:5230/03/2024
95. ASCO GU 2024 Spectacular (Part 2)

95. ASCO GU 2024 Spectacular (Part 2)

While Josh and Michael enjoy a good rambling, meandering podcast as much as the next guy, we made a promise to keep our coverage of the ASCO GU 2024 conference short and sweet. So, as promised, here is the second - and final - episode of our miniseries. For a change of pace, one of our studies involves the adjuvant use of immunotherapy! Specifically, AMBASSADOR looks at pembrolizumab in patients with early urothelial cancer, a patient cohort that is crying out for more effective treatments for early-stage disease. Meanwhile, Josh tries to "BRCAAway" from our comfort zone by discussing the latest trial examining the use of PARP inhibitors in metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer. Yes, we'll show ourselves out now. Links to studies discussed in this episode (subscription may be required):AMBASSADOR (courtesy of ASCO Daily news): https://ascopost.com/news/january-2024/ambassador-pembrolizumab-in-muscle-invasive-and-locally-advanced-urothelial-carcinoma/#:~:text=AMBASSADOR%20(A031501)%20is%20a%20randomized,and%20locally%20advanced%20urothelial%20carcinoma.BRCAAway (courtesy of urotoday.com): https://www.urotoday.com/conference-highlights/asco-2022/asco-2022-prostate-cancer/137781-asco-2022-brcaaway-a-randomized-phase-2-trial-of-abiraterone-olaparib-or-abiraterone-olaparib-in-patients-with-mcrpc-with-dna-repair-defects.htmlFor more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
24:2623/03/2024
94. ASCO GU 2024 Spectacular (Part 1)

94. ASCO GU 2024 Spectacular (Part 1)

With Josh's Grand Adventure(TM) now in the books, he and Michael return to their usual programming, examining two studies presented at the not-so-recent ASCO GU conference in San Fransisco. While the conference took place in January of this year, as the old adage goes: better late than never. In this episode, our hosts examine two studies; the CONTACT-02 study examining a combination of immunotherapy + cabozantinib in patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer, and an update from the KEYNOTE-564 that examined whether pembrolizumab had any benefit in the adjuvant treatment of renal cell cancer. Will either of these studies change practice? Fear not, for our fearless oncological explorers are on hand to guide you through the hazardous ratios and nefarious p values!Links to studies discussed in this episode via ASCO Daily News(subscription may be required):CONTACT-02: https://ascopubs.org/doi/10.1200/JCO.2024.42.4_suppl.18#:~:text=CONTACT%2D02%20is%20the%20only,Clinical%20trial%20information%3A%20NCT04446117.KEYNOTE-564: https://dailynews.ascopubs.org/do/keynote-564-adjuvant-pembrolizumab-prolongs-survival-high-risk-clear-cell-renal-cell#:~:text=KEYNOTE%2D564%20is%20the%20first,at%20higher%20risk%20for%20recurrence.For more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
30:5216/03/2024
93. On the Road with Prof. Elgene Lim

93. On the Road with Prof. Elgene Lim

In this episode, Josh interviews the man who helped make this grand adventure possible, his mentor, Professor Elgene Lim of the Kinghorn Cancer Centre in Sydney. Professor Lim is a medical oncologist specialising in breast cancer research. He has previously worked at the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute, completing his PhD under the mentorship of Dr Geoffrey Lindeman and Dr Jane Visvader with research focussed on identifying culprit cells in BRCA1 mutant gene carriers. He subsequently worked with Dr Eric Winer and Dr Myles Brown at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard Medical School. As if this was not enough, Elgene is proud of his volunteer work with asylum seekers and his work with the Asha Kiran Hospital in Orissa, India, in a program of expertise transfer and partnership with local doctors. The Kinghorn Cancer Centre and The Beverley Alt Scholarship proudly support this mini-series.The Kinghorn Cancer Centre: https://tkcc.org.au/Dana Farber Cancer Institute: https://www.dana-farber.org/For more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Minor edits have been made to the episode to improve sound quality and flow. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
32:0609/03/2024
92. On the Road with Dr. Robert Mayer

92. On the Road with Dr. Robert Mayer

In this episode, Josh interviews Dr Robert Mayer, Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School, former director of the Dana Farber Cancer Institute’s Oncology Fellowship Program for 36 years and an expert in gastrointestinal cancer. He founded the Centre for Gastrointestinal Oncology at Dana Farber and has previously chaired the Gastrointestinal Cancer Committee of the Cancer and Leukemia Group B. Dr Mayer has also been an associate editor for both the New England Journal of Medicine and the Journal of Clinical Oncology and is a former ASCO president. Bob is the recipient of ASCO’s Distinguished Achievement Award in 2019 and as Josh likes to remind me, a living legend.The Kinghorn Cancer Centre and The Beverley Alt Scholarship proudly support this mini-series.The Kinghorn Cancer Centre: https://tkcc.org.au/Dana Farber Cancer Institute: https://www.dana-farber.org/For more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Minor edits have been made to the episode to improve sound quality and flow. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
30:1702/03/2024
91. On the Road with Dr. Ann Partridge

91. On the Road with Dr. Ann Partridge

In this episode, Josh interviewed Dr Ann Partridge, the director of the adult survivorship program at the Dana-Farber Institute. She is the co-founder and director of the Program for Young Women with Breast Cancer and is passionate about communication, risk perception and behavioural aspects of cancer care. Dr Partridge is the principal investigator for the Young Women’s Breast Cancer study, which has currently enrolled over 1300 women throughout the United States, and has chaired both ASCO’s scientific program committee and the ESMO-sponsored Breast Cancer in Young Women Conference. In 2018, Dr Partridge was recognized with the American Association for Cancer Research's Outstanding Investigator Award for Breast Cancer Research.The Kinghorn Cancer Centre and The Beverley Alt Scholarship proudly support this mini-series.The Kinghorn Cancer Centre: https://tkcc.org.au/Dana Farber Cancer Institute: https://www.dana-farber.org/For more episodes, resources and blog posts, visit www.inquisitiveonc.comPlease find us on Twitter @InquisitiveOnc!If you want us to look at a specific trial or subject, email us at [email protected] courtesy of Taryn SilverMusic courtesy of AlisiaBeats: https://pixabay.com/users/alisiabeats-39461785/Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. If you are unwell, seek medical advice. Minor edits have been made to the episode to improve sound quality and flow. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
43:3124/02/2024