POPULARITY
Go online to PeerView.com/SQN860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The immune checkpoint inhibitors have started to radically transform the perioperative treatment of resectable stage I-III NSCLC, with the goals of reducing the risk of recurrence and improving cure rates in these settings. Several important phase 3 clinical trials evaluating neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant immunotherapies have already yielded impressive data, leading to regulatory approvals and new standards of care, and additional studies have recently been reported to be positive, adding to the evidence base but also increasing complexity. What do these advances mean for thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, and other multidisciplinary specialists, and what changes in practice are needed? What challenges and unanswered questions remain? This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent live symposium, brings together top experts to evaluate the new practice-changing research, assess the implications for practice, and provide practical guidance for how to improve interdisciplinary alliances, develop real-world workflows, and optimally integrate immunotherapies into treatment plans for patients with resectable NSCLC. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Evaluate the current evidence guiding the use of neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapy in resectable stage I-III NSCLC, including rational clinical trial designs, novel endpoints, and efficacy, safety, surgical outcomes, and other essential data from key clinical trials; Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are candidates for perioperative immunotherapy; and Integrate neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant immunotherapy into individualized treatment plans for patients with resectable NSCLC based on all the relevant factors, effective multidisciplinary collaboration, and shared decision-making
Go online to PeerView.com/SQN860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The immune checkpoint inhibitors have started to radically transform the perioperative treatment of resectable stage I-III NSCLC, with the goals of reducing the risk of recurrence and improving cure rates in these settings. Several important phase 3 clinical trials evaluating neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant immunotherapies have already yielded impressive data, leading to regulatory approvals and new standards of care, and additional studies have recently been reported to be positive, adding to the evidence base but also increasing complexity. What do these advances mean for thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, and other multidisciplinary specialists, and what changes in practice are needed? What challenges and unanswered questions remain? This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent live symposium, brings together top experts to evaluate the new practice-changing research, assess the implications for practice, and provide practical guidance for how to improve interdisciplinary alliances, develop real-world workflows, and optimally integrate immunotherapies into treatment plans for patients with resectable NSCLC. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Evaluate the current evidence guiding the use of neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapy in resectable stage I-III NSCLC, including rational clinical trial designs, novel endpoints, and efficacy, safety, surgical outcomes, and other essential data from key clinical trials; Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are candidates for perioperative immunotherapy; and Integrate neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant immunotherapy into individualized treatment plans for patients with resectable NSCLC based on all the relevant factors, effective multidisciplinary collaboration, and shared decision-making
Go online to PeerView.com/SQN860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The immune checkpoint inhibitors have started to radically transform the perioperative treatment of resectable stage I-III NSCLC, with the goals of reducing the risk of recurrence and improving cure rates in these settings. Several important phase 3 clinical trials evaluating neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant immunotherapies have already yielded impressive data, leading to regulatory approvals and new standards of care, and additional studies have recently been reported to be positive, adding to the evidence base but also increasing complexity. What do these advances mean for thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, and other multidisciplinary specialists, and what changes in practice are needed? What challenges and unanswered questions remain? This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent live symposium, brings together top experts to evaluate the new practice-changing research, assess the implications for practice, and provide practical guidance for how to improve interdisciplinary alliances, develop real-world workflows, and optimally integrate immunotherapies into treatment plans for patients with resectable NSCLC. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Evaluate the current evidence guiding the use of neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapy in resectable stage I-III NSCLC, including rational clinical trial designs, novel endpoints, and efficacy, safety, surgical outcomes, and other essential data from key clinical trials; Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are candidates for perioperative immunotherapy; and Integrate neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant immunotherapy into individualized treatment plans for patients with resectable NSCLC based on all the relevant factors, effective multidisciplinary collaboration, and shared decision-making
Go online to PeerView.com/SQN860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The immune checkpoint inhibitors have started to radically transform the perioperative treatment of resectable stage I-III NSCLC, with the goals of reducing the risk of recurrence and improving cure rates in these settings. Several important phase 3 clinical trials evaluating neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant immunotherapies have already yielded impressive data, leading to regulatory approvals and new standards of care, and additional studies have recently been reported to be positive, adding to the evidence base but also increasing complexity. What do these advances mean for thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, and other multidisciplinary specialists, and what changes in practice are needed? What challenges and unanswered questions remain? This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent live symposium, brings together top experts to evaluate the new practice-changing research, assess the implications for practice, and provide practical guidance for how to improve interdisciplinary alliances, develop real-world workflows, and optimally integrate immunotherapies into treatment plans for patients with resectable NSCLC. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Evaluate the current evidence guiding the use of neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapy in resectable stage I-III NSCLC, including rational clinical trial designs, novel endpoints, and efficacy, safety, surgical outcomes, and other essential data from key clinical trials; Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are candidates for perioperative immunotherapy; and Integrate neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant immunotherapy into individualized treatment plans for patients with resectable NSCLC based on all the relevant factors, effective multidisciplinary collaboration, and shared decision-making
Go online to PeerView.com/SQN860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The immune checkpoint inhibitors have started to radically transform the perioperative treatment of resectable stage I-III NSCLC, with the goals of reducing the risk of recurrence and improving cure rates in these settings. Several important phase 3 clinical trials evaluating neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant immunotherapies have already yielded impressive data, leading to regulatory approvals and new standards of care, and additional studies have recently been reported to be positive, adding to the evidence base but also increasing complexity. What do these advances mean for thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, and other multidisciplinary specialists, and what changes in practice are needed? What challenges and unanswered questions remain? This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent live symposium, brings together top experts to evaluate the new practice-changing research, assess the implications for practice, and provide practical guidance for how to improve interdisciplinary alliances, develop real-world workflows, and optimally integrate immunotherapies into treatment plans for patients with resectable NSCLC. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Evaluate the current evidence guiding the use of neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapy in resectable stage I-III NSCLC, including rational clinical trial designs, novel endpoints, and efficacy, safety, surgical outcomes, and other essential data from key clinical trials; Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are candidates for perioperative immunotherapy; and Integrate neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant immunotherapy into individualized treatment plans for patients with resectable NSCLC based on all the relevant factors, effective multidisciplinary collaboration, and shared decision-making
Go online to PeerView.com/SQN860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The immune checkpoint inhibitors have started to radically transform the perioperative treatment of resectable stage I-III NSCLC, with the goals of reducing the risk of recurrence and improving cure rates in these settings. Several important phase 3 clinical trials evaluating neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant immunotherapies have already yielded impressive data, leading to regulatory approvals and new standards of care, and additional studies have recently been reported to be positive, adding to the evidence base but also increasing complexity. What do these advances mean for thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, and other multidisciplinary specialists, and what changes in practice are needed? What challenges and unanswered questions remain? This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent live symposium, brings together top experts to evaluate the new practice-changing research, assess the implications for practice, and provide practical guidance for how to improve interdisciplinary alliances, develop real-world workflows, and optimally integrate immunotherapies into treatment plans for patients with resectable NSCLC. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Evaluate the current evidence guiding the use of neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapy in resectable stage I-III NSCLC, including rational clinical trial designs, novel endpoints, and efficacy, safety, surgical outcomes, and other essential data from key clinical trials; Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are candidates for perioperative immunotherapy; and Integrate neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant immunotherapy into individualized treatment plans for patients with resectable NSCLC based on all the relevant factors, effective multidisciplinary collaboration, and shared decision-making
Go online to PeerView.com/SQN860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The immune checkpoint inhibitors have started to radically transform the perioperative treatment of resectable stage I-III NSCLC, with the goals of reducing the risk of recurrence and improving cure rates in these settings. Several important phase 3 clinical trials evaluating neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant immunotherapies have already yielded impressive data, leading to regulatory approvals and new standards of care, and additional studies have recently been reported to be positive, adding to the evidence base but also increasing complexity. What do these advances mean for thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, and other multidisciplinary specialists, and what changes in practice are needed? What challenges and unanswered questions remain? This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent live symposium, brings together top experts to evaluate the new practice-changing research, assess the implications for practice, and provide practical guidance for how to improve interdisciplinary alliances, develop real-world workflows, and optimally integrate immunotherapies into treatment plans for patients with resectable NSCLC. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Evaluate the current evidence guiding the use of neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapy in resectable stage I-III NSCLC, including rational clinical trial designs, novel endpoints, and efficacy, safety, surgical outcomes, and other essential data from key clinical trials; Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are candidates for perioperative immunotherapy; and Integrate neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant immunotherapy into individualized treatment plans for patients with resectable NSCLC based on all the relevant factors, effective multidisciplinary collaboration, and shared decision-making
Go online to PeerView.com/SQN860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The immune checkpoint inhibitors have started to radically transform the perioperative treatment of resectable stage I-III NSCLC, with the goals of reducing the risk of recurrence and improving cure rates in these settings. Several important phase 3 clinical trials evaluating neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant immunotherapies have already yielded impressive data, leading to regulatory approvals and new standards of care, and additional studies have recently been reported to be positive, adding to the evidence base but also increasing complexity. What do these advances mean for thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, and other multidisciplinary specialists, and what changes in practice are needed? What challenges and unanswered questions remain? This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent live symposium, brings together top experts to evaluate the new practice-changing research, assess the implications for practice, and provide practical guidance for how to improve interdisciplinary alliances, develop real-world workflows, and optimally integrate immunotherapies into treatment plans for patients with resectable NSCLC. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Evaluate the current evidence guiding the use of neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapy in resectable stage I-III NSCLC, including rational clinical trial designs, novel endpoints, and efficacy, safety, surgical outcomes, and other essential data from key clinical trials; Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are candidates for perioperative immunotherapy; and Integrate neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant immunotherapy into individualized treatment plans for patients with resectable NSCLC based on all the relevant factors, effective multidisciplinary collaboration, and shared decision-making
Go online to PeerView.com/YRK860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The immunotherapy revolution has swiftly expanded from advanced lung cancer to the early-stage, resectable, curative-intent setting, and it is radically transforming the standards of care for stage I-III resectable NSCLC. Immunotherapies are now approved in both adjuvant and neoadjuvant settings, and ongoing trials are expected to propel more immunotherapy-based options into early-stage disease settings as well as clarify the best perioperative approaches. What do these developments mean for thoracic surgeons and other members of the multidisciplinary lung cancer care team? How should best practices and standards of care be modernized? What new workflows need to be established to guide individualized treatment selection and make the most of new immunotherapy options to reduce the risk of recurrence and increase the possibility of cure for more patients? This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent live symposium, brings together top experts to answer these questions. The faculty panel discusses new, practice-changing evidence, implications and applicability of these advances to practice, and how to best facilitate the incorporation of perioperative immunotherapy into new standards of care to improve outcomes and quality of life for patients with resectable NSCLC. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Analyze the current evidence supporting the use of neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapy approaches in stage I-III NSCLC, including the biologic and mechanistic rationale, novel endpoints, and data from key clinical trials; Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are candidates for perioperative immunotherapy; and Implement neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant immunotherapy as part of individualized treatment plans for patients with resectable stage I-III NSCLC based on all the relevant factors, effective multidisciplinary collaboration, and shared decision-making
Go online to PeerView.com/YRK860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The immunotherapy revolution has swiftly expanded from advanced lung cancer to the early-stage, resectable, curative-intent setting, and it is radically transforming the standards of care for stage I-III resectable NSCLC. Immunotherapies are now approved in both adjuvant and neoadjuvant settings, and ongoing trials are expected to propel more immunotherapy-based options into early-stage disease settings as well as clarify the best perioperative approaches. What do these developments mean for thoracic surgeons and other members of the multidisciplinary lung cancer care team? How should best practices and standards of care be modernized? What new workflows need to be established to guide individualized treatment selection and make the most of new immunotherapy options to reduce the risk of recurrence and increase the possibility of cure for more patients? This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent live symposium, brings together top experts to answer these questions. The faculty panel discusses new, practice-changing evidence, implications and applicability of these advances to practice, and how to best facilitate the incorporation of perioperative immunotherapy into new standards of care to improve outcomes and quality of life for patients with resectable NSCLC. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Analyze the current evidence supporting the use of neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapy approaches in stage I-III NSCLC, including the biologic and mechanistic rationale, novel endpoints, and data from key clinical trials; Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are candidates for perioperative immunotherapy; and Implement neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant immunotherapy as part of individualized treatment plans for patients with resectable stage I-III NSCLC based on all the relevant factors, effective multidisciplinary collaboration, and shared decision-making
Go online to PeerView.com/YRK860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The immunotherapy revolution has swiftly expanded from advanced lung cancer to the early-stage, resectable, curative-intent setting, and it is radically transforming the standards of care for stage I-III resectable NSCLC. Immunotherapies are now approved in both adjuvant and neoadjuvant settings, and ongoing trials are expected to propel more immunotherapy-based options into early-stage disease settings as well as clarify the best perioperative approaches. What do these developments mean for thoracic surgeons and other members of the multidisciplinary lung cancer care team? How should best practices and standards of care be modernized? What new workflows need to be established to guide individualized treatment selection and make the most of new immunotherapy options to reduce the risk of recurrence and increase the possibility of cure for more patients? This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent live symposium, brings together top experts to answer these questions. The faculty panel discusses new, practice-changing evidence, implications and applicability of these advances to practice, and how to best facilitate the incorporation of perioperative immunotherapy into new standards of care to improve outcomes and quality of life for patients with resectable NSCLC. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Analyze the current evidence supporting the use of neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapy approaches in stage I-III NSCLC, including the biologic and mechanistic rationale, novel endpoints, and data from key clinical trials; Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are candidates for perioperative immunotherapy; and Implement neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant immunotherapy as part of individualized treatment plans for patients with resectable stage I-III NSCLC based on all the relevant factors, effective multidisciplinary collaboration, and shared decision-making
Go online to PeerView.com/YRK860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The immunotherapy revolution has swiftly expanded from advanced lung cancer to the early-stage, resectable, curative-intent setting, and it is radically transforming the standards of care for stage I-III resectable NSCLC. Immunotherapies are now approved in both adjuvant and neoadjuvant settings, and ongoing trials are expected to propel more immunotherapy-based options into early-stage disease settings as well as clarify the best perioperative approaches. What do these developments mean for thoracic surgeons and other members of the multidisciplinary lung cancer care team? How should best practices and standards of care be modernized? What new workflows need to be established to guide individualized treatment selection and make the most of new immunotherapy options to reduce the risk of recurrence and increase the possibility of cure for more patients? This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent live symposium, brings together top experts to answer these questions. The faculty panel discusses new, practice-changing evidence, implications and applicability of these advances to practice, and how to best facilitate the incorporation of perioperative immunotherapy into new standards of care to improve outcomes and quality of life for patients with resectable NSCLC. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Analyze the current evidence supporting the use of neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapy approaches in stage I-III NSCLC, including the biologic and mechanistic rationale, novel endpoints, and data from key clinical trials; Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are candidates for perioperative immunotherapy; and Implement neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant immunotherapy as part of individualized treatment plans for patients with resectable stage I-III NSCLC based on all the relevant factors, effective multidisciplinary collaboration, and shared decision-making
Go online to PeerView.com/YRK860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The immunotherapy revolution has swiftly expanded from advanced lung cancer to the early-stage, resectable, curative-intent setting, and it is radically transforming the standards of care for stage I-III resectable NSCLC. Immunotherapies are now approved in both adjuvant and neoadjuvant settings, and ongoing trials are expected to propel more immunotherapy-based options into early-stage disease settings as well as clarify the best perioperative approaches. What do these developments mean for thoracic surgeons and other members of the multidisciplinary lung cancer care team? How should best practices and standards of care be modernized? What new workflows need to be established to guide individualized treatment selection and make the most of new immunotherapy options to reduce the risk of recurrence and increase the possibility of cure for more patients? This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent live symposium, brings together top experts to answer these questions. The faculty panel discusses new, practice-changing evidence, implications and applicability of these advances to practice, and how to best facilitate the incorporation of perioperative immunotherapy into new standards of care to improve outcomes and quality of life for patients with resectable NSCLC. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Analyze the current evidence supporting the use of neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapy approaches in stage I-III NSCLC, including the biologic and mechanistic rationale, novel endpoints, and data from key clinical trials; Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are candidates for perioperative immunotherapy; and Implement neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant immunotherapy as part of individualized treatment plans for patients with resectable stage I-III NSCLC based on all the relevant factors, effective multidisciplinary collaboration, and shared decision-making
Go online to PeerView.com/YRK860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The immunotherapy revolution has swiftly expanded from advanced lung cancer to the early-stage, resectable, curative-intent setting, and it is radically transforming the standards of care for stage I-III resectable NSCLC. Immunotherapies are now approved in both adjuvant and neoadjuvant settings, and ongoing trials are expected to propel more immunotherapy-based options into early-stage disease settings as well as clarify the best perioperative approaches. What do these developments mean for thoracic surgeons and other members of the multidisciplinary lung cancer care team? How should best practices and standards of care be modernized? What new workflows need to be established to guide individualized treatment selection and make the most of new immunotherapy options to reduce the risk of recurrence and increase the possibility of cure for more patients? This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent live symposium, brings together top experts to answer these questions. The faculty panel discusses new, practice-changing evidence, implications and applicability of these advances to practice, and how to best facilitate the incorporation of perioperative immunotherapy into new standards of care to improve outcomes and quality of life for patients with resectable NSCLC. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Analyze the current evidence supporting the use of neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapy approaches in stage I-III NSCLC, including the biologic and mechanistic rationale, novel endpoints, and data from key clinical trials; Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are candidates for perioperative immunotherapy; and Implement neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant immunotherapy as part of individualized treatment plans for patients with resectable stage I-III NSCLC based on all the relevant factors, effective multidisciplinary collaboration, and shared decision-making
Go online to PeerView.com/YRK860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The immunotherapy revolution has swiftly expanded from advanced lung cancer to the early-stage, resectable, curative-intent setting, and it is radically transforming the standards of care for stage I-III resectable NSCLC. Immunotherapies are now approved in both adjuvant and neoadjuvant settings, and ongoing trials are expected to propel more immunotherapy-based options into early-stage disease settings as well as clarify the best perioperative approaches. What do these developments mean for thoracic surgeons and other members of the multidisciplinary lung cancer care team? How should best practices and standards of care be modernized? What new workflows need to be established to guide individualized treatment selection and make the most of new immunotherapy options to reduce the risk of recurrence and increase the possibility of cure for more patients? This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent live symposium, brings together top experts to answer these questions. The faculty panel discusses new, practice-changing evidence, implications and applicability of these advances to practice, and how to best facilitate the incorporation of perioperative immunotherapy into new standards of care to improve outcomes and quality of life for patients with resectable NSCLC. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Analyze the current evidence supporting the use of neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapy approaches in stage I-III NSCLC, including the biologic and mechanistic rationale, novel endpoints, and data from key clinical trials; Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are candidates for perioperative immunotherapy; and Implement neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant immunotherapy as part of individualized treatment plans for patients with resectable stage I-III NSCLC based on all the relevant factors, effective multidisciplinary collaboration, and shared decision-making
Go online to PeerView.com/YRK860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The immunotherapy revolution has swiftly expanded from advanced lung cancer to the early-stage, resectable, curative-intent setting, and it is radically transforming the standards of care for stage I-III resectable NSCLC. Immunotherapies are now approved in both adjuvant and neoadjuvant settings, and ongoing trials are expected to propel more immunotherapy-based options into early-stage disease settings as well as clarify the best perioperative approaches. What do these developments mean for thoracic surgeons and other members of the multidisciplinary lung cancer care team? How should best practices and standards of care be modernized? What new workflows need to be established to guide individualized treatment selection and make the most of new immunotherapy options to reduce the risk of recurrence and increase the possibility of cure for more patients? This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent live symposium, brings together top experts to answer these questions. The faculty panel discusses new, practice-changing evidence, implications and applicability of these advances to practice, and how to best facilitate the incorporation of perioperative immunotherapy into new standards of care to improve outcomes and quality of life for patients with resectable NSCLC. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Analyze the current evidence supporting the use of neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapy approaches in stage I-III NSCLC, including the biologic and mechanistic rationale, novel endpoints, and data from key clinical trials; Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are candidates for perioperative immunotherapy; and Implement neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant immunotherapy as part of individualized treatment plans for patients with resectable stage I-III NSCLC based on all the relevant factors, effective multidisciplinary collaboration, and shared decision-making
Go online to PeerView.com/CDB860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Research and clinical practice continue to build on the success achieved to date with cancer immunotherapy and to refine rational strategies to expand its benefits to more patients, including in curative-intent settings. Immunotherapy has started to radically transform the multimodal approach to treatment of resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Recently, highly positive data have emerged from the first few phase 3 trials evaluating neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapies in resectable lung cancer, leading to regulatory approvals and new standards of care in these settings. What do these advances mean for thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, pulmonologists, and other multidisciplinary specialists, and what changes in practice are needed? What challenges and unanswered questions remain? This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent live symposium, brings together top experts to discuss new, practice-changing evidence, the implications and applicability of the latest data to practice, and how to achieve better partnerships across disciplines to facilitate the incorporation of immunotherapies into new standards of care to improve outcomes and quality of life for patients with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Discuss the mechanistic and biologic rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in early-stage lung cancer and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapies in these settings; Summarize the latest findings on surrogate endpoints, such as pathologic response criteria, to assess treatment response and evaluate the prognosis of patients with resectable lung cancer who are receiving immunotherapy; Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are eligible for perioperative immunotherapy, considering the benefits/limitations and surgical implications based on an understanding of the latest evidence and persisting misperceptions; and Collaborate with the multidisciplinary team to integrate immunotherapy into individualized, multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with stage I-III resectable NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/CDB860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Research and clinical practice continue to build on the success achieved to date with cancer immunotherapy and to refine rational strategies to expand its benefits to more patients, including in curative-intent settings. Immunotherapy has started to radically transform the multimodal approach to treatment of resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Recently, highly positive data have emerged from the first few phase 3 trials evaluating neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapies in resectable lung cancer, leading to regulatory approvals and new standards of care in these settings. What do these advances mean for thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, pulmonologists, and other multidisciplinary specialists, and what changes in practice are needed? What challenges and unanswered questions remain? This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent live symposium, brings together top experts to discuss new, practice-changing evidence, the implications and applicability of the latest data to practice, and how to achieve better partnerships across disciplines to facilitate the incorporation of immunotherapies into new standards of care to improve outcomes and quality of life for patients with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Discuss the mechanistic and biologic rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in early-stage lung cancer and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapies in these settings; Summarize the latest findings on surrogate endpoints, such as pathologic response criteria, to assess treatment response and evaluate the prognosis of patients with resectable lung cancer who are receiving immunotherapy; Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are eligible for perioperative immunotherapy, considering the benefits/limitations and surgical implications based on an understanding of the latest evidence and persisting misperceptions; and Collaborate with the multidisciplinary team to integrate immunotherapy into individualized, multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with stage I-III resectable NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/CDB860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Research and clinical practice continue to build on the success achieved to date with cancer immunotherapy and to refine rational strategies to expand its benefits to more patients, including in curative-intent settings. Immunotherapy has started to radically transform the multimodal approach to treatment of resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Recently, highly positive data have emerged from the first few phase 3 trials evaluating neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapies in resectable lung cancer, leading to regulatory approvals and new standards of care in these settings. What do these advances mean for thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, pulmonologists, and other multidisciplinary specialists, and what changes in practice are needed? What challenges and unanswered questions remain? This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent live symposium, brings together top experts to discuss new, practice-changing evidence, the implications and applicability of the latest data to practice, and how to achieve better partnerships across disciplines to facilitate the incorporation of immunotherapies into new standards of care to improve outcomes and quality of life for patients with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Discuss the mechanistic and biologic rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in early-stage lung cancer and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapies in these settings; Summarize the latest findings on surrogate endpoints, such as pathologic response criteria, to assess treatment response and evaluate the prognosis of patients with resectable lung cancer who are receiving immunotherapy; Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are eligible for perioperative immunotherapy, considering the benefits/limitations and surgical implications based on an understanding of the latest evidence and persisting misperceptions; and Collaborate with the multidisciplinary team to integrate immunotherapy into individualized, multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with stage I-III resectable NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/CDB860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Research and clinical practice continue to build on the success achieved to date with cancer immunotherapy and to refine rational strategies to expand its benefits to more patients, including in curative-intent settings. Immunotherapy has started to radically transform the multimodal approach to treatment of resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Recently, highly positive data have emerged from the first few phase 3 trials evaluating neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapies in resectable lung cancer, leading to regulatory approvals and new standards of care in these settings. What do these advances mean for thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, pulmonologists, and other multidisciplinary specialists, and what changes in practice are needed? What challenges and unanswered questions remain? This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent live symposium, brings together top experts to discuss new, practice-changing evidence, the implications and applicability of the latest data to practice, and how to achieve better partnerships across disciplines to facilitate the incorporation of immunotherapies into new standards of care to improve outcomes and quality of life for patients with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Discuss the mechanistic and biologic rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in early-stage lung cancer and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapies in these settings; Summarize the latest findings on surrogate endpoints, such as pathologic response criteria, to assess treatment response and evaluate the prognosis of patients with resectable lung cancer who are receiving immunotherapy; Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are eligible for perioperative immunotherapy, considering the benefits/limitations and surgical implications based on an understanding of the latest evidence and persisting misperceptions; and Collaborate with the multidisciplinary team to integrate immunotherapy into individualized, multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with stage I-III resectable NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/CDB860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Research and clinical practice continue to build on the success achieved to date with cancer immunotherapy and to refine rational strategies to expand its benefits to more patients, including in curative-intent settings. Immunotherapy has started to radically transform the multimodal approach to treatment of resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Recently, highly positive data have emerged from the first few phase 3 trials evaluating neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapies in resectable lung cancer, leading to regulatory approvals and new standards of care in these settings. What do these advances mean for thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, pulmonologists, and other multidisciplinary specialists, and what changes in practice are needed? What challenges and unanswered questions remain? This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent live symposium, brings together top experts to discuss new, practice-changing evidence, the implications and applicability of the latest data to practice, and how to achieve better partnerships across disciplines to facilitate the incorporation of immunotherapies into new standards of care to improve outcomes and quality of life for patients with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Discuss the mechanistic and biologic rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in early-stage lung cancer and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapies in these settings; Summarize the latest findings on surrogate endpoints, such as pathologic response criteria, to assess treatment response and evaluate the prognosis of patients with resectable lung cancer who are receiving immunotherapy; Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are eligible for perioperative immunotherapy, considering the benefits/limitations and surgical implications based on an understanding of the latest evidence and persisting misperceptions; and Collaborate with the multidisciplinary team to integrate immunotherapy into individualized, multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with stage I-III resectable NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/CDB860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Research and clinical practice continue to build on the success achieved to date with cancer immunotherapy and to refine rational strategies to expand its benefits to more patients, including in curative-intent settings. Immunotherapy has started to radically transform the multimodal approach to treatment of resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Recently, highly positive data have emerged from the first few phase 3 trials evaluating neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapies in resectable lung cancer, leading to regulatory approvals and new standards of care in these settings. What do these advances mean for thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, pulmonologists, and other multidisciplinary specialists, and what changes in practice are needed? What challenges and unanswered questions remain? This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent live symposium, brings together top experts to discuss new, practice-changing evidence, the implications and applicability of the latest data to practice, and how to achieve better partnerships across disciplines to facilitate the incorporation of immunotherapies into new standards of care to improve outcomes and quality of life for patients with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Discuss the mechanistic and biologic rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in early-stage lung cancer and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapies in these settings; Summarize the latest findings on surrogate endpoints, such as pathologic response criteria, to assess treatment response and evaluate the prognosis of patients with resectable lung cancer who are receiving immunotherapy; Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are eligible for perioperative immunotherapy, considering the benefits/limitations and surgical implications based on an understanding of the latest evidence and persisting misperceptions; and Collaborate with the multidisciplinary team to integrate immunotherapy into individualized, multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with stage I-III resectable NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/CDB860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Research and clinical practice continue to build on the success achieved to date with cancer immunotherapy and to refine rational strategies to expand its benefits to more patients, including in curative-intent settings. Immunotherapy has started to radically transform the multimodal approach to treatment of resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Recently, highly positive data have emerged from the first few phase 3 trials evaluating neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapies in resectable lung cancer, leading to regulatory approvals and new standards of care in these settings. What do these advances mean for thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, pulmonologists, and other multidisciplinary specialists, and what changes in practice are needed? What challenges and unanswered questions remain? This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent live symposium, brings together top experts to discuss new, practice-changing evidence, the implications and applicability of the latest data to practice, and how to achieve better partnerships across disciplines to facilitate the incorporation of immunotherapies into new standards of care to improve outcomes and quality of life for patients with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Discuss the mechanistic and biologic rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in early-stage lung cancer and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapies in these settings; Summarize the latest findings on surrogate endpoints, such as pathologic response criteria, to assess treatment response and evaluate the prognosis of patients with resectable lung cancer who are receiving immunotherapy; Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are eligible for perioperative immunotherapy, considering the benefits/limitations and surgical implications based on an understanding of the latest evidence and persisting misperceptions; and Collaborate with the multidisciplinary team to integrate immunotherapy into individualized, multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with stage I-III resectable NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/CDB860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Research and clinical practice continue to build on the success achieved to date with cancer immunotherapy and to refine rational strategies to expand its benefits to more patients, including in curative-intent settings. Immunotherapy has started to radically transform the multimodal approach to treatment of resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Recently, highly positive data have emerged from the first few phase 3 trials evaluating neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapies in resectable lung cancer, leading to regulatory approvals and new standards of care in these settings. What do these advances mean for thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, pulmonologists, and other multidisciplinary specialists, and what changes in practice are needed? What challenges and unanswered questions remain? This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent live symposium, brings together top experts to discuss new, practice-changing evidence, the implications and applicability of the latest data to practice, and how to achieve better partnerships across disciplines to facilitate the incorporation of immunotherapies into new standards of care to improve outcomes and quality of life for patients with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Discuss the mechanistic and biologic rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in early-stage lung cancer and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapies in these settings; Summarize the latest findings on surrogate endpoints, such as pathologic response criteria, to assess treatment response and evaluate the prognosis of patients with resectable lung cancer who are receiving immunotherapy; Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are eligible for perioperative immunotherapy, considering the benefits/limitations and surgical implications based on an understanding of the latest evidence and persisting misperceptions; and Collaborate with the multidisciplinary team to integrate immunotherapy into individualized, multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with stage I-III resectable NSCLC.
Aaron Franke M.D., M.S highlights current challenges facing the shifting paradigm of early-stage NSCLC management. He analyzes recent data supporting novel therapeutic approaches vs standard of care in resectable NSCLC. He reviews anticipated and ongoing clinical trials using IO-based therapy in early-stage NSCLC. Additionally, he examines knowledge gaps and challenges facing adopting the neoadjuvant paradigm in clinical practice as he helps us to understand clinical parameters that qualify patients for ICI-based neoadjuvant therapy and he highlights how to plan therapy for patients with stage I-III NSCLC based on individual patient considerations, expert recommendations, and available clinical data.
Go online to PeerView.com/GWF860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are swiftly transitioning from the metastatic to the early-stage setting and transforming the multimodal management of resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Remarkable data have emerged from several immunotherapy trials in perioperative settings and FDA has granted new regulatory approvals for both neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapy regimens, effectively establishing new standards of care in early-stage NSCLC. Still, many questions remain on how to transition these exciting advances to practice and improved patient outcomes in real-world setting. What are the pros/cons of neoadjuvant versus adjuvant immunotherapy, and how should the best approach be determined for each patient? What is the optimal timing and duration of therapy, and how should responses be assessed? What adverse events should be anticipated, and are perioperative complications higher? These and other essential topics are addressed by two leading experts in thoracic surgery in this PeerView educational activity based on a recent live event. Watch this stimulating discussion of practice-changing data on perioperative immunotherapy, surgical implications and applicability to practice, and how to make the most of ICIs as part of multimodal management of resectable NSCLC. Watch intriguing debates framed by real cases and discussion points selected to highlight the practicalities and challenges of integrating perioperative immunotherapy into practice. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Discuss the mechanistic and biologic rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in early-stage lung cancer and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapies in these settings, Summarize the latest findings on surrogate endpoints, such as pathologic response criteria, to assess treatment response and evaluate the prognosis of patients with resectable lung cancer who are receiving immunotherapy, Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are eligible for perioperative immunotherapy, considering the benefits/limitations and surgical implications based on an understanding of the latest evidence and persisting misperceptions, Integrate best practices for multidisciplinary communication and collaboration to enhance appropriate incorporation of immunotherapies into multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with stage I-III resectable NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/GWF860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are swiftly transitioning from the metastatic to the early-stage setting and transforming the multimodal management of resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Remarkable data have emerged from several immunotherapy trials in perioperative settings and FDA has granted new regulatory approvals for both neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapy regimens, effectively establishing new standards of care in early-stage NSCLC. Still, many questions remain on how to transition these exciting advances to practice and improved patient outcomes in real-world setting. What are the pros/cons of neoadjuvant versus adjuvant immunotherapy, and how should the best approach be determined for each patient? What is the optimal timing and duration of therapy, and how should responses be assessed? What adverse events should be anticipated, and are perioperative complications higher? These and other essential topics are addressed by two leading experts in thoracic surgery in this PeerView educational activity based on a recent live event. Watch this stimulating discussion of practice-changing data on perioperative immunotherapy, surgical implications and applicability to practice, and how to make the most of ICIs as part of multimodal management of resectable NSCLC. Watch intriguing debates framed by real cases and discussion points selected to highlight the practicalities and challenges of integrating perioperative immunotherapy into practice. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Discuss the mechanistic and biologic rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in early-stage lung cancer and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapies in these settings, Summarize the latest findings on surrogate endpoints, such as pathologic response criteria, to assess treatment response and evaluate the prognosis of patients with resectable lung cancer who are receiving immunotherapy, Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are eligible for perioperative immunotherapy, considering the benefits/limitations and surgical implications based on an understanding of the latest evidence and persisting misperceptions, Integrate best practices for multidisciplinary communication and collaboration to enhance appropriate incorporation of immunotherapies into multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with stage I-III resectable NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/GWF860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are swiftly transitioning from the metastatic to the early-stage setting and transforming the multimodal management of resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Remarkable data have emerged from several immunotherapy trials in perioperative settings and FDA has granted new regulatory approvals for both neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapy regimens, effectively establishing new standards of care in early-stage NSCLC. Still, many questions remain on how to transition these exciting advances to practice and improved patient outcomes in real-world setting. What are the pros/cons of neoadjuvant versus adjuvant immunotherapy, and how should the best approach be determined for each patient? What is the optimal timing and duration of therapy, and how should responses be assessed? What adverse events should be anticipated, and are perioperative complications higher? These and other essential topics are addressed by two leading experts in thoracic surgery in this PeerView educational activity based on a recent live event. Watch this stimulating discussion of practice-changing data on perioperative immunotherapy, surgical implications and applicability to practice, and how to make the most of ICIs as part of multimodal management of resectable NSCLC. Watch intriguing debates framed by real cases and discussion points selected to highlight the practicalities and challenges of integrating perioperative immunotherapy into practice. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Discuss the mechanistic and biologic rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in early-stage lung cancer and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapies in these settings, Summarize the latest findings on surrogate endpoints, such as pathologic response criteria, to assess treatment response and evaluate the prognosis of patients with resectable lung cancer who are receiving immunotherapy, Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are eligible for perioperative immunotherapy, considering the benefits/limitations and surgical implications based on an understanding of the latest evidence and persisting misperceptions, Integrate best practices for multidisciplinary communication and collaboration to enhance appropriate incorporation of immunotherapies into multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with stage I-III resectable NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/GWF860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are swiftly transitioning from the metastatic to the early-stage setting and transforming the multimodal management of resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Remarkable data have emerged from several immunotherapy trials in perioperative settings and FDA has granted new regulatory approvals for both neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapy regimens, effectively establishing new standards of care in early-stage NSCLC. Still, many questions remain on how to transition these exciting advances to practice and improved patient outcomes in real-world setting. What are the pros/cons of neoadjuvant versus adjuvant immunotherapy, and how should the best approach be determined for each patient? What is the optimal timing and duration of therapy, and how should responses be assessed? What adverse events should be anticipated, and are perioperative complications higher? These and other essential topics are addressed by two leading experts in thoracic surgery in this PeerView educational activity based on a recent live event. Watch this stimulating discussion of practice-changing data on perioperative immunotherapy, surgical implications and applicability to practice, and how to make the most of ICIs as part of multimodal management of resectable NSCLC. Watch intriguing debates framed by real cases and discussion points selected to highlight the practicalities and challenges of integrating perioperative immunotherapy into practice. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Discuss the mechanistic and biologic rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in early-stage lung cancer and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapies in these settings, Summarize the latest findings on surrogate endpoints, such as pathologic response criteria, to assess treatment response and evaluate the prognosis of patients with resectable lung cancer who are receiving immunotherapy, Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are eligible for perioperative immunotherapy, considering the benefits/limitations and surgical implications based on an understanding of the latest evidence and persisting misperceptions, Integrate best practices for multidisciplinary communication and collaboration to enhance appropriate incorporation of immunotherapies into multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with stage I-III resectable NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/GWF860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are swiftly transitioning from the metastatic to the early-stage setting and transforming the multimodal management of resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Remarkable data have emerged from several immunotherapy trials in perioperative settings and FDA has granted new regulatory approvals for both neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapy regimens, effectively establishing new standards of care in early-stage NSCLC. Still, many questions remain on how to transition these exciting advances to practice and improved patient outcomes in real-world setting. What are the pros/cons of neoadjuvant versus adjuvant immunotherapy, and how should the best approach be determined for each patient? What is the optimal timing and duration of therapy, and how should responses be assessed? What adverse events should be anticipated, and are perioperative complications higher? These and other essential topics are addressed by two leading experts in thoracic surgery in this PeerView educational activity based on a recent live event. Watch this stimulating discussion of practice-changing data on perioperative immunotherapy, surgical implications and applicability to practice, and how to make the most of ICIs as part of multimodal management of resectable NSCLC. Watch intriguing debates framed by real cases and discussion points selected to highlight the practicalities and challenges of integrating perioperative immunotherapy into practice. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Discuss the mechanistic and biologic rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in early-stage lung cancer and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapies in these settings, Summarize the latest findings on surrogate endpoints, such as pathologic response criteria, to assess treatment response and evaluate the prognosis of patients with resectable lung cancer who are receiving immunotherapy, Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are eligible for perioperative immunotherapy, considering the benefits/limitations and surgical implications based on an understanding of the latest evidence and persisting misperceptions, Integrate best practices for multidisciplinary communication and collaboration to enhance appropriate incorporation of immunotherapies into multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with stage I-III resectable NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/GWF860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are swiftly transitioning from the metastatic to the early-stage setting and transforming the multimodal management of resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Remarkable data have emerged from several immunotherapy trials in perioperative settings and FDA has granted new regulatory approvals for both neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapy regimens, effectively establishing new standards of care in early-stage NSCLC. Still, many questions remain on how to transition these exciting advances to practice and improved patient outcomes in real-world setting. What are the pros/cons of neoadjuvant versus adjuvant immunotherapy, and how should the best approach be determined for each patient? What is the optimal timing and duration of therapy, and how should responses be assessed? What adverse events should be anticipated, and are perioperative complications higher? These and other essential topics are addressed by two leading experts in thoracic surgery in this PeerView educational activity based on a recent live event. Watch this stimulating discussion of practice-changing data on perioperative immunotherapy, surgical implications and applicability to practice, and how to make the most of ICIs as part of multimodal management of resectable NSCLC. Watch intriguing debates framed by real cases and discussion points selected to highlight the practicalities and challenges of integrating perioperative immunotherapy into practice. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Discuss the mechanistic and biologic rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in early-stage lung cancer and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapies in these settings, Summarize the latest findings on surrogate endpoints, such as pathologic response criteria, to assess treatment response and evaluate the prognosis of patients with resectable lung cancer who are receiving immunotherapy, Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are eligible for perioperative immunotherapy, considering the benefits/limitations and surgical implications based on an understanding of the latest evidence and persisting misperceptions, Integrate best practices for multidisciplinary communication and collaboration to enhance appropriate incorporation of immunotherapies into multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with stage I-III resectable NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/GWF860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are swiftly transitioning from the metastatic to the early-stage setting and transforming the multimodal management of resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Remarkable data have emerged from several immunotherapy trials in perioperative settings and FDA has granted new regulatory approvals for both neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapy regimens, effectively establishing new standards of care in early-stage NSCLC. Still, many questions remain on how to transition these exciting advances to practice and improved patient outcomes in real-world setting. What are the pros/cons of neoadjuvant versus adjuvant immunotherapy, and how should the best approach be determined for each patient? What is the optimal timing and duration of therapy, and how should responses be assessed? What adverse events should be anticipated, and are perioperative complications higher? These and other essential topics are addressed by two leading experts in thoracic surgery in this PeerView educational activity based on a recent live event. Watch this stimulating discussion of practice-changing data on perioperative immunotherapy, surgical implications and applicability to practice, and how to make the most of ICIs as part of multimodal management of resectable NSCLC. Watch intriguing debates framed by real cases and discussion points selected to highlight the practicalities and challenges of integrating perioperative immunotherapy into practice. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Discuss the mechanistic and biologic rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in early-stage lung cancer and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapies in these settings, Summarize the latest findings on surrogate endpoints, such as pathologic response criteria, to assess treatment response and evaluate the prognosis of patients with resectable lung cancer who are receiving immunotherapy, Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are eligible for perioperative immunotherapy, considering the benefits/limitations and surgical implications based on an understanding of the latest evidence and persisting misperceptions, Integrate best practices for multidisciplinary communication and collaboration to enhance appropriate incorporation of immunotherapies into multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with stage I-III resectable NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/GWF860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are swiftly transitioning from the metastatic to the early-stage setting and transforming the multimodal management of resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Remarkable data have emerged from several immunotherapy trials in perioperative settings and FDA has granted new regulatory approvals for both neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapy regimens, effectively establishing new standards of care in early-stage NSCLC. Still, many questions remain on how to transition these exciting advances to practice and improved patient outcomes in real-world setting. What are the pros/cons of neoadjuvant versus adjuvant immunotherapy, and how should the best approach be determined for each patient? What is the optimal timing and duration of therapy, and how should responses be assessed? What adverse events should be anticipated, and are perioperative complications higher? These and other essential topics are addressed by two leading experts in thoracic surgery in this PeerView educational activity based on a recent live event. Watch this stimulating discussion of practice-changing data on perioperative immunotherapy, surgical implications and applicability to practice, and how to make the most of ICIs as part of multimodal management of resectable NSCLC. Watch intriguing debates framed by real cases and discussion points selected to highlight the practicalities and challenges of integrating perioperative immunotherapy into practice. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Discuss the mechanistic and biologic rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in early-stage lung cancer and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapies in these settings, Summarize the latest findings on surrogate endpoints, such as pathologic response criteria, to assess treatment response and evaluate the prognosis of patients with resectable lung cancer who are receiving immunotherapy, Identify patients with resectable NSCLC who are eligible for perioperative immunotherapy, considering the benefits/limitations and surgical implications based on an understanding of the latest evidence and persisting misperceptions, Integrate best practices for multidisciplinary communication and collaboration to enhance appropriate incorporation of immunotherapies into multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with stage I-III resectable NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/CRA860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are swiftly transitioning from the metastatic to the early-stage setting and transforming the multimodal management of resectable stage I-III NSCLC. While remarkable data have emerged from several trials assessing ICIs and rational combinations in neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant settings, many questions remain. What are the pros/cons of neoadjuvant versus adjuvant immunotherapy, and how should the best approach be determined for each patient? What is the optimal timing and duration of therapy, and how should responses be assessed? What adverse events should be anticipated, and are perioperative complications higher? These and other essential topics are addressed by two leading experts in thoracic surgery in this PeerView Live Seminar and Case Forum. Watch this stimulating discussion of practice-changing data on perioperative immunotherapy, surgical implications and applicability to practice, and how to make the most of ICIs as part of multimodal management of resectable NSCLC to reduce the risk of recurrence and improve cure rates. You will also be able to watch an intriguing debate of real cases selected to highlight the practicalities and challenges of integrating perioperative immunotherapy into practice. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Review the mechanistic aspects of immune checkpoint inhibition, rationale for their use as a component of multimodal therapy in earlier stages of lung cancer, and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapies in these settings, Describe the latest evidence on surrogate endpoints, such as pathologic response criteria, to assess treatment response and gain perspective on the prognosis of patients with resectable lung cancer receiving immunotherapy, Select appropriate resectable NSCLC patients for perioperative immunotherapy, weighing the benefits/limitations and surgical implications based on critical analysis of clinical trial findings and persisting misperceptions, Implement best practices for multidisciplinary communication and collaboration to ensure integration of immunotherapies into multimodal treatment plans for appropriate patients with stage I-III resectable NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/CRA860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are swiftly transitioning from the metastatic to the early-stage setting and transforming the multimodal management of resectable stage I-III NSCLC. While remarkable data have emerged from several trials assessing ICIs and rational combinations in neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant settings, many questions remain. What are the pros/cons of neoadjuvant versus adjuvant immunotherapy, and how should the best approach be determined for each patient? What is the optimal timing and duration of therapy, and how should responses be assessed? What adverse events should be anticipated, and are perioperative complications higher? These and other essential topics are addressed by two leading experts in thoracic surgery in this PeerView Live Seminar and Case Forum. Watch this stimulating discussion of practice-changing data on perioperative immunotherapy, surgical implications and applicability to practice, and how to make the most of ICIs as part of multimodal management of resectable NSCLC to reduce the risk of recurrence and improve cure rates. You will also be able to watch an intriguing debate of real cases selected to highlight the practicalities and challenges of integrating perioperative immunotherapy into practice. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Review the mechanistic aspects of immune checkpoint inhibition, rationale for their use as a component of multimodal therapy in earlier stages of lung cancer, and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapies in these settings, Describe the latest evidence on surrogate endpoints, such as pathologic response criteria, to assess treatment response and gain perspective on the prognosis of patients with resectable lung cancer receiving immunotherapy, Select appropriate resectable NSCLC patients for perioperative immunotherapy, weighing the benefits/limitations and surgical implications based on critical analysis of clinical trial findings and persisting misperceptions, Implement best practices for multidisciplinary communication and collaboration to ensure integration of immunotherapies into multimodal treatment plans for appropriate patients with stage I-III resectable NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/CRA860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are swiftly transitioning from the metastatic to the early-stage setting and transforming the multimodal management of resectable stage I-III NSCLC. While remarkable data have emerged from several trials assessing ICIs and rational combinations in neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant settings, many questions remain. What are the pros/cons of neoadjuvant versus adjuvant immunotherapy, and how should the best approach be determined for each patient? What is the optimal timing and duration of therapy, and how should responses be assessed? What adverse events should be anticipated, and are perioperative complications higher? These and other essential topics are addressed by two leading experts in thoracic surgery in this PeerView Live Seminar and Case Forum. Watch this stimulating discussion of practice-changing data on perioperative immunotherapy, surgical implications and applicability to practice, and how to make the most of ICIs as part of multimodal management of resectable NSCLC to reduce the risk of recurrence and improve cure rates. You will also be able to watch an intriguing debate of real cases selected to highlight the practicalities and challenges of integrating perioperative immunotherapy into practice. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Review the mechanistic aspects of immune checkpoint inhibition, rationale for their use as a component of multimodal therapy in earlier stages of lung cancer, and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapies in these settings, Describe the latest evidence on surrogate endpoints, such as pathologic response criteria, to assess treatment response and gain perspective on the prognosis of patients with resectable lung cancer receiving immunotherapy, Select appropriate resectable NSCLC patients for perioperative immunotherapy, weighing the benefits/limitations and surgical implications based on critical analysis of clinical trial findings and persisting misperceptions, Implement best practices for multidisciplinary communication and collaboration to ensure integration of immunotherapies into multimodal treatment plans for appropriate patients with stage I-III resectable NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/CRA860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are swiftly transitioning from the metastatic to the early-stage setting and transforming the multimodal management of resectable stage I-III NSCLC. While remarkable data have emerged from several trials assessing ICIs and rational combinations in neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant settings, many questions remain. What are the pros/cons of neoadjuvant versus adjuvant immunotherapy, and how should the best approach be determined for each patient? What is the optimal timing and duration of therapy, and how should responses be assessed? What adverse events should be anticipated, and are perioperative complications higher? These and other essential topics are addressed by two leading experts in thoracic surgery in this PeerView Live Seminar and Case Forum. Watch this stimulating discussion of practice-changing data on perioperative immunotherapy, surgical implications and applicability to practice, and how to make the most of ICIs as part of multimodal management of resectable NSCLC to reduce the risk of recurrence and improve cure rates. You will also be able to watch an intriguing debate of real cases selected to highlight the practicalities and challenges of integrating perioperative immunotherapy into practice. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Review the mechanistic aspects of immune checkpoint inhibition, rationale for their use as a component of multimodal therapy in earlier stages of lung cancer, and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapies in these settings, Describe the latest evidence on surrogate endpoints, such as pathologic response criteria, to assess treatment response and gain perspective on the prognosis of patients with resectable lung cancer receiving immunotherapy, Select appropriate resectable NSCLC patients for perioperative immunotherapy, weighing the benefits/limitations and surgical implications based on critical analysis of clinical trial findings and persisting misperceptions, Implement best practices for multidisciplinary communication and collaboration to ensure integration of immunotherapies into multimodal treatment plans for appropriate patients with stage I-III resectable NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/CRA860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are swiftly transitioning from the metastatic to the early-stage setting and transforming the multimodal management of resectable stage I-III NSCLC. While remarkable data have emerged from several trials assessing ICIs and rational combinations in neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant settings, many questions remain. What are the pros/cons of neoadjuvant versus adjuvant immunotherapy, and how should the best approach be determined for each patient? What is the optimal timing and duration of therapy, and how should responses be assessed? What adverse events should be anticipated, and are perioperative complications higher? These and other essential topics are addressed by two leading experts in thoracic surgery in this PeerView Live Seminar and Case Forum. Watch this stimulating discussion of practice-changing data on perioperative immunotherapy, surgical implications and applicability to practice, and how to make the most of ICIs as part of multimodal management of resectable NSCLC to reduce the risk of recurrence and improve cure rates. You will also be able to watch an intriguing debate of real cases selected to highlight the practicalities and challenges of integrating perioperative immunotherapy into practice. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Review the mechanistic aspects of immune checkpoint inhibition, rationale for their use as a component of multimodal therapy in earlier stages of lung cancer, and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapies in these settings, Describe the latest evidence on surrogate endpoints, such as pathologic response criteria, to assess treatment response and gain perspective on the prognosis of patients with resectable lung cancer receiving immunotherapy, Select appropriate resectable NSCLC patients for perioperative immunotherapy, weighing the benefits/limitations and surgical implications based on critical analysis of clinical trial findings and persisting misperceptions, Implement best practices for multidisciplinary communication and collaboration to ensure integration of immunotherapies into multimodal treatment plans for appropriate patients with stage I-III resectable NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/CRA860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are swiftly transitioning from the metastatic to the early-stage setting and transforming the multimodal management of resectable stage I-III NSCLC. While remarkable data have emerged from several trials assessing ICIs and rational combinations in neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant settings, many questions remain. What are the pros/cons of neoadjuvant versus adjuvant immunotherapy, and how should the best approach be determined for each patient? What is the optimal timing and duration of therapy, and how should responses be assessed? What adverse events should be anticipated, and are perioperative complications higher? These and other essential topics are addressed by two leading experts in thoracic surgery in this PeerView Live Seminar and Case Forum. Watch this stimulating discussion of practice-changing data on perioperative immunotherapy, surgical implications and applicability to practice, and how to make the most of ICIs as part of multimodal management of resectable NSCLC to reduce the risk of recurrence and improve cure rates. You will also be able to watch an intriguing debate of real cases selected to highlight the practicalities and challenges of integrating perioperative immunotherapy into practice. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Review the mechanistic aspects of immune checkpoint inhibition, rationale for their use as a component of multimodal therapy in earlier stages of lung cancer, and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapies in these settings, Describe the latest evidence on surrogate endpoints, such as pathologic response criteria, to assess treatment response and gain perspective on the prognosis of patients with resectable lung cancer receiving immunotherapy, Select appropriate resectable NSCLC patients for perioperative immunotherapy, weighing the benefits/limitations and surgical implications based on critical analysis of clinical trial findings and persisting misperceptions, Implement best practices for multidisciplinary communication and collaboration to ensure integration of immunotherapies into multimodal treatment plans for appropriate patients with stage I-III resectable NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/CRA860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are swiftly transitioning from the metastatic to the early-stage setting and transforming the multimodal management of resectable stage I-III NSCLC. While remarkable data have emerged from several trials assessing ICIs and rational combinations in neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant settings, many questions remain. What are the pros/cons of neoadjuvant versus adjuvant immunotherapy, and how should the best approach be determined for each patient? What is the optimal timing and duration of therapy, and how should responses be assessed? What adverse events should be anticipated, and are perioperative complications higher? These and other essential topics are addressed by two leading experts in thoracic surgery in this PeerView Live Seminar and Case Forum. Watch this stimulating discussion of practice-changing data on perioperative immunotherapy, surgical implications and applicability to practice, and how to make the most of ICIs as part of multimodal management of resectable NSCLC to reduce the risk of recurrence and improve cure rates. You will also be able to watch an intriguing debate of real cases selected to highlight the practicalities and challenges of integrating perioperative immunotherapy into practice. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Review the mechanistic aspects of immune checkpoint inhibition, rationale for their use as a component of multimodal therapy in earlier stages of lung cancer, and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapies in these settings, Describe the latest evidence on surrogate endpoints, such as pathologic response criteria, to assess treatment response and gain perspective on the prognosis of patients with resectable lung cancer receiving immunotherapy, Select appropriate resectable NSCLC patients for perioperative immunotherapy, weighing the benefits/limitations and surgical implications based on critical analysis of clinical trial findings and persisting misperceptions, Implement best practices for multidisciplinary communication and collaboration to ensure integration of immunotherapies into multimodal treatment plans for appropriate patients with stage I-III resectable NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/CRA860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are swiftly transitioning from the metastatic to the early-stage setting and transforming the multimodal management of resectable stage I-III NSCLC. While remarkable data have emerged from several trials assessing ICIs and rational combinations in neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant settings, many questions remain. What are the pros/cons of neoadjuvant versus adjuvant immunotherapy, and how should the best approach be determined for each patient? What is the optimal timing and duration of therapy, and how should responses be assessed? What adverse events should be anticipated, and are perioperative complications higher? These and other essential topics are addressed by two leading experts in thoracic surgery in this PeerView Live Seminar and Case Forum. Watch this stimulating discussion of practice-changing data on perioperative immunotherapy, surgical implications and applicability to practice, and how to make the most of ICIs as part of multimodal management of resectable NSCLC to reduce the risk of recurrence and improve cure rates. You will also be able to watch an intriguing debate of real cases selected to highlight the practicalities and challenges of integrating perioperative immunotherapy into practice. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Review the mechanistic aspects of immune checkpoint inhibition, rationale for their use as a component of multimodal therapy in earlier stages of lung cancer, and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapies in these settings, Describe the latest evidence on surrogate endpoints, such as pathologic response criteria, to assess treatment response and gain perspective on the prognosis of patients with resectable lung cancer receiving immunotherapy, Select appropriate resectable NSCLC patients for perioperative immunotherapy, weighing the benefits/limitations and surgical implications based on critical analysis of clinical trial findings and persisting misperceptions, Implement best practices for multidisciplinary communication and collaboration to ensure integration of immunotherapies into multimodal treatment plans for appropriate patients with stage I-III resectable NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/FYQ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. How have the best practices for multidisciplinary management of patients with stage I-III lung cancer changed now that adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy has become the new standard of care in resected early-stage EGFR-mutated NSCLC, and what are the implications for thoracic surgeons and other key members of the lung cancer care team?, This PeerView Candid Conversations & Clinical Consults educational activity, based on a recent live broadcast, answers these and other burning questions. Experts in thoracic surgery and medical oncology come together to discuss recent advances and provide practical, case-based guidance on the importance of biomarker testing in early-stage settings. In addition, they provide direction on how to determine which patients are appropriate candidates for adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy, if adjuvant chemotherapy is still needed, which considerations should be discussed with patients, and how thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, pathologists, and other relevant specialists can effectively work together to determine the best multimodal treatment approach for each patient with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Discuss the role of EGFR mutations in NSCLC, importance of identifying patients with EGFR mutations in earlier disease settings, and role of thoracic surgeons in biomarker testing and treatment selection in the era of precision oncology, Apply the latest evidence and recommendations to identify patients with early-stage NSCLC who would benefit from adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy, Implement multidisciplinary strategies and shared decision-making to optimize biomarker testing and integration of adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy into multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with early-stage NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/FYQ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. How have the best practices for multidisciplinary management of patients with stage I-III lung cancer changed now that adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy has become the new standard of care in resected early-stage EGFR-mutated NSCLC, and what are the implications for thoracic surgeons and other key members of the lung cancer care team?, This PeerView Candid Conversations & Clinical Consults educational activity, based on a recent live broadcast, answers these and other burning questions. Experts in thoracic surgery and medical oncology come together to discuss recent advances and provide practical, case-based guidance on the importance of biomarker testing in early-stage settings. In addition, they provide direction on how to determine which patients are appropriate candidates for adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy, if adjuvant chemotherapy is still needed, which considerations should be discussed with patients, and how thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, pathologists, and other relevant specialists can effectively work together to determine the best multimodal treatment approach for each patient with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Discuss the role of EGFR mutations in NSCLC, importance of identifying patients with EGFR mutations in earlier disease settings, and role of thoracic surgeons in biomarker testing and treatment selection in the era of precision oncology, Apply the latest evidence and recommendations to identify patients with early-stage NSCLC who would benefit from adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy, Implement multidisciplinary strategies and shared decision-making to optimize biomarker testing and integration of adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy into multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with early-stage NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/FYQ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. How have the best practices for multidisciplinary management of patients with stage I-III lung cancer changed now that adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy has become the new standard of care in resected early-stage EGFR-mutated NSCLC, and what are the implications for thoracic surgeons and other key members of the lung cancer care team?, This PeerView Candid Conversations & Clinical Consults educational activity, based on a recent live broadcast, answers these and other burning questions. Experts in thoracic surgery and medical oncology come together to discuss recent advances and provide practical, case-based guidance on the importance of biomarker testing in early-stage settings. In addition, they provide direction on how to determine which patients are appropriate candidates for adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy, if adjuvant chemotherapy is still needed, which considerations should be discussed with patients, and how thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, pathologists, and other relevant specialists can effectively work together to determine the best multimodal treatment approach for each patient with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Discuss the role of EGFR mutations in NSCLC, importance of identifying patients with EGFR mutations in earlier disease settings, and role of thoracic surgeons in biomarker testing and treatment selection in the era of precision oncology, Apply the latest evidence and recommendations to identify patients with early-stage NSCLC who would benefit from adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy, Implement multidisciplinary strategies and shared decision-making to optimize biomarker testing and integration of adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy into multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with early-stage NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/FYQ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. How have the best practices for multidisciplinary management of patients with stage I-III lung cancer changed now that adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy has become the new standard of care in resected early-stage EGFR-mutated NSCLC, and what are the implications for thoracic surgeons and other key members of the lung cancer care team?, This PeerView Candid Conversations & Clinical Consults educational activity, based on a recent live broadcast, answers these and other burning questions. Experts in thoracic surgery and medical oncology come together to discuss recent advances and provide practical, case-based guidance on the importance of biomarker testing in early-stage settings. In addition, they provide direction on how to determine which patients are appropriate candidates for adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy, if adjuvant chemotherapy is still needed, which considerations should be discussed with patients, and how thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, pathologists, and other relevant specialists can effectively work together to determine the best multimodal treatment approach for each patient with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Discuss the role of EGFR mutations in NSCLC, importance of identifying patients with EGFR mutations in earlier disease settings, and role of thoracic surgeons in biomarker testing and treatment selection in the era of precision oncology, Apply the latest evidence and recommendations to identify patients with early-stage NSCLC who would benefit from adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy, Implement multidisciplinary strategies and shared decision-making to optimize biomarker testing and integration of adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy into multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with early-stage NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/FYQ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. How have the best practices for multidisciplinary management of patients with stage I-III lung cancer changed now that adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy has become the new standard of care in resected early-stage EGFR-mutated NSCLC, and what are the implications for thoracic surgeons and other key members of the lung cancer care team?, This PeerView Candid Conversations & Clinical Consults educational activity, based on a recent live broadcast, answers these and other burning questions. Experts in thoracic surgery and medical oncology come together to discuss recent advances and provide practical, case-based guidance on the importance of biomarker testing in early-stage settings. In addition, they provide direction on how to determine which patients are appropriate candidates for adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy, if adjuvant chemotherapy is still needed, which considerations should be discussed with patients, and how thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, pathologists, and other relevant specialists can effectively work together to determine the best multimodal treatment approach for each patient with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Discuss the role of EGFR mutations in NSCLC, importance of identifying patients with EGFR mutations in earlier disease settings, and role of thoracic surgeons in biomarker testing and treatment selection in the era of precision oncology, Apply the latest evidence and recommendations to identify patients with early-stage NSCLC who would benefit from adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy, Implement multidisciplinary strategies and shared decision-making to optimize biomarker testing and integration of adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy into multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with early-stage NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/FYQ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. How have the best practices for multidisciplinary management of patients with stage I-III lung cancer changed now that adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy has become the new standard of care in resected early-stage EGFR-mutated NSCLC, and what are the implications for thoracic surgeons and other key members of the lung cancer care team?, This PeerView Candid Conversations & Clinical Consults educational activity, based on a recent live broadcast, answers these and other burning questions. Experts in thoracic surgery and medical oncology come together to discuss recent advances and provide practical, case-based guidance on the importance of biomarker testing in early-stage settings. In addition, they provide direction on how to determine which patients are appropriate candidates for adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy, if adjuvant chemotherapy is still needed, which considerations should be discussed with patients, and how thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, pathologists, and other relevant specialists can effectively work together to determine the best multimodal treatment approach for each patient with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Discuss the role of EGFR mutations in NSCLC, importance of identifying patients with EGFR mutations in earlier disease settings, and role of thoracic surgeons in biomarker testing and treatment selection in the era of precision oncology, Apply the latest evidence and recommendations to identify patients with early-stage NSCLC who would benefit from adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy, Implement multidisciplinary strategies and shared decision-making to optimize biomarker testing and integration of adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy into multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with early-stage NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/FYQ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. How have the best practices for multidisciplinary management of patients with stage I-III lung cancer changed now that adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy has become the new standard of care in resected early-stage EGFR-mutated NSCLC, and what are the implications for thoracic surgeons and other key members of the lung cancer care team?, This PeerView Candid Conversations & Clinical Consults educational activity, based on a recent live broadcast, answers these and other burning questions. Experts in thoracic surgery and medical oncology come together to discuss recent advances and provide practical, case-based guidance on the importance of biomarker testing in early-stage settings. In addition, they provide direction on how to determine which patients are appropriate candidates for adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy, if adjuvant chemotherapy is still needed, which considerations should be discussed with patients, and how thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, pathologists, and other relevant specialists can effectively work together to determine the best multimodal treatment approach for each patient with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Discuss the role of EGFR mutations in NSCLC, importance of identifying patients with EGFR mutations in earlier disease settings, and role of thoracic surgeons in biomarker testing and treatment selection in the era of precision oncology, Apply the latest evidence and recommendations to identify patients with early-stage NSCLC who would benefit from adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy, Implement multidisciplinary strategies and shared decision-making to optimize biomarker testing and integration of adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy into multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with early-stage NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/FYQ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. How have the best practices for multidisciplinary management of patients with stage I-III lung cancer changed now that adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy has become the new standard of care in resected early-stage EGFR-mutated NSCLC, and what are the implications for thoracic surgeons and other key members of the lung cancer care team?, This PeerView Candid Conversations & Clinical Consults educational activity, based on a recent live broadcast, answers these and other burning questions. Experts in thoracic surgery and medical oncology come together to discuss recent advances and provide practical, case-based guidance on the importance of biomarker testing in early-stage settings. In addition, they provide direction on how to determine which patients are appropriate candidates for adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy, if adjuvant chemotherapy is still needed, which considerations should be discussed with patients, and how thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, pathologists, and other relevant specialists can effectively work together to determine the best multimodal treatment approach for each patient with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Discuss the role of EGFR mutations in NSCLC, importance of identifying patients with EGFR mutations in earlier disease settings, and role of thoracic surgeons in biomarker testing and treatment selection in the era of precision oncology, Apply the latest evidence and recommendations to identify patients with early-stage NSCLC who would benefit from adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy, Implement multidisciplinary strategies and shared decision-making to optimize biomarker testing and integration of adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy into multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with early-stage NSCLC.
Go online to PeerView.com/HSD860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are swiftly transitioning from the metastatic to early-stage settings and are expected to transform the multimodal management of patients with resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Remarkable data have emerged from several trials assessing ICIs and rational combinations as neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant therapies, but many questions remain and misperceptions persist. What are the pros/cons of neoadjuvant versus adjuvant immunotherapy, and how should the best approach be determined for each patient? What is the optimal duration of therapy, and how should responses be assessed? What adverse events should be anticipated, and are perioperative complications higher? This PeerView MasterClass, based on a recent live web broadcast, addresses these and many other essential topics. Watch this engaging discussion about new, practice-changing evidence, debates about implications and applicability to practice, and demonstrations of how to achieve better surgeon–oncologist partnerships to facilitate appropriate incorporation of ICIs into multimodal treatment plans for patients with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Describe the mechanistic aspects of immune checkpoint inhibition, rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in earlier stages of lung cancer, and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapy in these settings, Assess the real evidence and misconceptions related to the safety and adverse effects of checkpoint inhibitors when used in the treatment of patients with locally advanced and early-stage lung cancer as well as potential implications for surgical outcomes in these patients, Apply the latest evidence and guidelines for integrating immunotherapy into multimodal treatment plans in locally advanced and earlier stages of NSCLC, Collaborate with the multidisciplinary team to develop evidence-based, individualized treatment approaches for patients with stage III or earlier lung cancer in the context of clinical practice or clinical trials.
Go online to PeerView.com/HSD860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are swiftly transitioning from the metastatic to early-stage settings and are expected to transform the multimodal management of patients with resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Remarkable data have emerged from several trials assessing ICIs and rational combinations as neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant therapies, but many questions remain and misperceptions persist. What are the pros/cons of neoadjuvant versus adjuvant immunotherapy, and how should the best approach be determined for each patient? What is the optimal duration of therapy, and how should responses be assessed? What adverse events should be anticipated, and are perioperative complications higher? This PeerView MasterClass, based on a recent live web broadcast, addresses these and many other essential topics. Watch this engaging discussion about new, practice-changing evidence, debates about implications and applicability to practice, and demonstrations of how to achieve better surgeon–oncologist partnerships to facilitate appropriate incorporation of ICIs into multimodal treatment plans for patients with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Describe the mechanistic aspects of immune checkpoint inhibition, rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in earlier stages of lung cancer, and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapy in these settings, Assess the real evidence and misconceptions related to the safety and adverse effects of checkpoint inhibitors when used in the treatment of patients with locally advanced and early-stage lung cancer as well as potential implications for surgical outcomes in these patients, Apply the latest evidence and guidelines for integrating immunotherapy into multimodal treatment plans in locally advanced and earlier stages of NSCLC, Collaborate with the multidisciplinary team to develop evidence-based, individualized treatment approaches for patients with stage III or earlier lung cancer in the context of clinical practice or clinical trials.
Go online to PeerView.com/HSD860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are swiftly transitioning from the metastatic to early-stage settings and are expected to transform the multimodal management of patients with resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Remarkable data have emerged from several trials assessing ICIs and rational combinations as neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant therapies, but many questions remain and misperceptions persist. What are the pros/cons of neoadjuvant versus adjuvant immunotherapy, and how should the best approach be determined for each patient? What is the optimal duration of therapy, and how should responses be assessed? What adverse events should be anticipated, and are perioperative complications higher? This PeerView MasterClass, based on a recent live web broadcast, addresses these and many other essential topics. Watch this engaging discussion about new, practice-changing evidence, debates about implications and applicability to practice, and demonstrations of how to achieve better surgeon–oncologist partnerships to facilitate appropriate incorporation of ICIs into multimodal treatment plans for patients with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Describe the mechanistic aspects of immune checkpoint inhibition, rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in earlier stages of lung cancer, and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapy in these settings, Assess the real evidence and misconceptions related to the safety and adverse effects of checkpoint inhibitors when used in the treatment of patients with locally advanced and early-stage lung cancer as well as potential implications for surgical outcomes in these patients, Apply the latest evidence and guidelines for integrating immunotherapy into multimodal treatment plans in locally advanced and earlier stages of NSCLC, Collaborate with the multidisciplinary team to develop evidence-based, individualized treatment approaches for patients with stage III or earlier lung cancer in the context of clinical practice or clinical trials.
Go online to PeerView.com/HSD860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are swiftly transitioning from the metastatic to early-stage settings and are expected to transform the multimodal management of patients with resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Remarkable data have emerged from several trials assessing ICIs and rational combinations as neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant therapies, but many questions remain and misperceptions persist. What are the pros/cons of neoadjuvant versus adjuvant immunotherapy, and how should the best approach be determined for each patient? What is the optimal duration of therapy, and how should responses be assessed? What adverse events should be anticipated, and are perioperative complications higher? This PeerView MasterClass, based on a recent live web broadcast, addresses these and many other essential topics. Watch this engaging discussion about new, practice-changing evidence, debates about implications and applicability to practice, and demonstrations of how to achieve better surgeon–oncologist partnerships to facilitate appropriate incorporation of ICIs into multimodal treatment plans for patients with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Describe the mechanistic aspects of immune checkpoint inhibition, rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in earlier stages of lung cancer, and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapy in these settings, Assess the real evidence and misconceptions related to the safety and adverse effects of checkpoint inhibitors when used in the treatment of patients with locally advanced and early-stage lung cancer as well as potential implications for surgical outcomes in these patients, Apply the latest evidence and guidelines for integrating immunotherapy into multimodal treatment plans in locally advanced and earlier stages of NSCLC, Collaborate with the multidisciplinary team to develop evidence-based, individualized treatment approaches for patients with stage III or earlier lung cancer in the context of clinical practice or clinical trials.
Go online to PeerView.com/HSD860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are swiftly transitioning from the metastatic to early-stage settings and are expected to transform the multimodal management of patients with resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Remarkable data have emerged from several trials assessing ICIs and rational combinations as neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant therapies, but many questions remain and misperceptions persist. What are the pros/cons of neoadjuvant versus adjuvant immunotherapy, and how should the best approach be determined for each patient? What is the optimal duration of therapy, and how should responses be assessed? What adverse events should be anticipated, and are perioperative complications higher? This PeerView MasterClass, based on a recent live web broadcast, addresses these and many other essential topics. Watch this engaging discussion about new, practice-changing evidence, debates about implications and applicability to practice, and demonstrations of how to achieve better surgeon–oncologist partnerships to facilitate appropriate incorporation of ICIs into multimodal treatment plans for patients with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Describe the mechanistic aspects of immune checkpoint inhibition, rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in earlier stages of lung cancer, and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapy in these settings, Assess the real evidence and misconceptions related to the safety and adverse effects of checkpoint inhibitors when used in the treatment of patients with locally advanced and early-stage lung cancer as well as potential implications for surgical outcomes in these patients, Apply the latest evidence and guidelines for integrating immunotherapy into multimodal treatment plans in locally advanced and earlier stages of NSCLC, Collaborate with the multidisciplinary team to develop evidence-based, individualized treatment approaches for patients with stage III or earlier lung cancer in the context of clinical practice or clinical trials.
Go online to PeerView.com/HSD860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are swiftly transitioning from the metastatic to early-stage settings and are expected to transform the multimodal management of patients with resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Remarkable data have emerged from several trials assessing ICIs and rational combinations as neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant therapies, but many questions remain and misperceptions persist. What are the pros/cons of neoadjuvant versus adjuvant immunotherapy, and how should the best approach be determined for each patient? What is the optimal duration of therapy, and how should responses be assessed? What adverse events should be anticipated, and are perioperative complications higher? This PeerView MasterClass, based on a recent live web broadcast, addresses these and many other essential topics. Watch this engaging discussion about new, practice-changing evidence, debates about implications and applicability to practice, and demonstrations of how to achieve better surgeon–oncologist partnerships to facilitate appropriate incorporation of ICIs into multimodal treatment plans for patients with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Describe the mechanistic aspects of immune checkpoint inhibition, rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in earlier stages of lung cancer, and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapy in these settings, Assess the real evidence and misconceptions related to the safety and adverse effects of checkpoint inhibitors when used in the treatment of patients with locally advanced and early-stage lung cancer as well as potential implications for surgical outcomes in these patients, Apply the latest evidence and guidelines for integrating immunotherapy into multimodal treatment plans in locally advanced and earlier stages of NSCLC, Collaborate with the multidisciplinary team to develop evidence-based, individualized treatment approaches for patients with stage III or earlier lung cancer in the context of clinical practice or clinical trials.
Go online to PeerView.com/HSD860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are swiftly transitioning from the metastatic to early-stage settings and are expected to transform the multimodal management of patients with resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Remarkable data have emerged from several trials assessing ICIs and rational combinations as neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant therapies, but many questions remain and misperceptions persist. What are the pros/cons of neoadjuvant versus adjuvant immunotherapy, and how should the best approach be determined for each patient? What is the optimal duration of therapy, and how should responses be assessed? What adverse events should be anticipated, and are perioperative complications higher? This PeerView MasterClass, based on a recent live web broadcast, addresses these and many other essential topics. Watch this engaging discussion about new, practice-changing evidence, debates about implications and applicability to practice, and demonstrations of how to achieve better surgeon–oncologist partnerships to facilitate appropriate incorporation of ICIs into multimodal treatment plans for patients with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Describe the mechanistic aspects of immune checkpoint inhibition, rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in earlier stages of lung cancer, and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapy in these settings, Assess the real evidence and misconceptions related to the safety and adverse effects of checkpoint inhibitors when used in the treatment of patients with locally advanced and early-stage lung cancer as well as potential implications for surgical outcomes in these patients, Apply the latest evidence and guidelines for integrating immunotherapy into multimodal treatment plans in locally advanced and earlier stages of NSCLC, Collaborate with the multidisciplinary team to develop evidence-based, individualized treatment approaches for patients with stage III or earlier lung cancer in the context of clinical practice or clinical trials.
Go online to PeerView.com/HSD860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are swiftly transitioning from the metastatic to early-stage settings and are expected to transform the multimodal management of patients with resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Remarkable data have emerged from several trials assessing ICIs and rational combinations as neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant therapies, but many questions remain and misperceptions persist. What are the pros/cons of neoadjuvant versus adjuvant immunotherapy, and how should the best approach be determined for each patient? What is the optimal duration of therapy, and how should responses be assessed? What adverse events should be anticipated, and are perioperative complications higher? This PeerView MasterClass, based on a recent live web broadcast, addresses these and many other essential topics. Watch this engaging discussion about new, practice-changing evidence, debates about implications and applicability to practice, and demonstrations of how to achieve better surgeon–oncologist partnerships to facilitate appropriate incorporation of ICIs into multimodal treatment plans for patients with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Describe the mechanistic aspects of immune checkpoint inhibition, rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in earlier stages of lung cancer, and key clinical trials evaluating immunotherapy in these settings, Assess the real evidence and misconceptions related to the safety and adverse effects of checkpoint inhibitors when used in the treatment of patients with locally advanced and early-stage lung cancer as well as potential implications for surgical outcomes in these patients, Apply the latest evidence and guidelines for integrating immunotherapy into multimodal treatment plans in locally advanced and earlier stages of NSCLC, Collaborate with the multidisciplinary team to develop evidence-based, individualized treatment approaches for patients with stage III or earlier lung cancer in the context of clinical practice or clinical trials.
Go online to PeerView.com/CBB860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The immunotherapy revolution in lung cancer continues, as clinical practice and research build on achievements made in advanced NSCLC and aim to extend the benefits of immunotherapies to earlier stages. Immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapy is routinely used as consolidation following chemoradiation for patients with stage III unresectable NSCLC. Now, ICIs and rational combinations are starting to show promising activity as neoadjuvant and adjuvant therapies for patients with resectable stage I-III NSCLC as well. Optimal approaches are still being determined, and many questions and controversies remain, but it is essential for oncologists, thoracic surgeons, and other multidisciplinary specialists to work together to make these therapies available to patients with earlier stages of lung cancer. This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent web broadcast, provides essential updates on the evolving science supporting the use of ICIs in multimodal treatment of unresectable and resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Multidisciplinary perspectives on how to make the most of immunotherapies and rational combinations in curative-intent settings are shared as well. Upon completion of this accredited CE activity, participants should be better able to: Characterize the rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in locally advanced or earlier stages of non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), Review key clinical trials and available efficacy/safety data on immunotherapies and immune-based combinations in locally advanced and earlier stages of NSCLC, Determine the best assessment and treatment approaches for diverse populations of patients with stage I-III NSCLC as part of clinical practice or clinical trials based on the latest evidence and recommendations, effective multidisciplinary and interprofessional collaboration and care coordination, and patient needs, values, and preferences.
Go online to PeerView.com/CBB860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The immunotherapy revolution in lung cancer continues, as clinical practice and research build on achievements made in advanced NSCLC and aim to extend the benefits of immunotherapies to earlier stages. Immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapy is routinely used as consolidation following chemoradiation for patients with stage III unresectable NSCLC. Now, ICIs and rational combinations are starting to show promising activity as neoadjuvant and adjuvant therapies for patients with resectable stage I-III NSCLC as well. Optimal approaches are still being determined, and many questions and controversies remain, but it is essential for oncologists, thoracic surgeons, and other multidisciplinary specialists to work together to make these therapies available to patients with earlier stages of lung cancer. This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent web broadcast, provides essential updates on the evolving science supporting the use of ICIs in multimodal treatment of unresectable and resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Multidisciplinary perspectives on how to make the most of immunotherapies and rational combinations in curative-intent settings are shared as well. Upon completion of this accredited CE activity, participants should be better able to: Characterize the rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in locally advanced or earlier stages of non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), Review key clinical trials and available efficacy/safety data on immunotherapies and immune-based combinations in locally advanced and earlier stages of NSCLC, Determine the best assessment and treatment approaches for diverse populations of patients with stage I-III NSCLC as part of clinical practice or clinical trials based on the latest evidence and recommendations, effective multidisciplinary and interprofessional collaboration and care coordination, and patient needs, values, and preferences.
Go online to PeerView.com/CBB860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The immunotherapy revolution in lung cancer continues, as clinical practice and research build on achievements made in advanced NSCLC and aim to extend the benefits of immunotherapies to earlier stages. Immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapy is routinely used as consolidation following chemoradiation for patients with stage III unresectable NSCLC. Now, ICIs and rational combinations are starting to show promising activity as neoadjuvant and adjuvant therapies for patients with resectable stage I-III NSCLC as well. Optimal approaches are still being determined, and many questions and controversies remain, but it is essential for oncologists, thoracic surgeons, and other multidisciplinary specialists to work together to make these therapies available to patients with earlier stages of lung cancer. This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent web broadcast, provides essential updates on the evolving science supporting the use of ICIs in multimodal treatment of unresectable and resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Multidisciplinary perspectives on how to make the most of immunotherapies and rational combinations in curative-intent settings are shared as well. Upon completion of this accredited CE activity, participants should be better able to: Characterize the rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in locally advanced or earlier stages of non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), Review key clinical trials and available efficacy/safety data on immunotherapies and immune-based combinations in locally advanced and earlier stages of NSCLC, Determine the best assessment and treatment approaches for diverse populations of patients with stage I-III NSCLC as part of clinical practice or clinical trials based on the latest evidence and recommendations, effective multidisciplinary and interprofessional collaboration and care coordination, and patient needs, values, and preferences.
Go online to PeerView.com/CBB860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The immunotherapy revolution in lung cancer continues, as clinical practice and research build on achievements made in advanced NSCLC and aim to extend the benefits of immunotherapies to earlier stages. Immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapy is routinely used as consolidation following chemoradiation for patients with stage III unresectable NSCLC. Now, ICIs and rational combinations are starting to show promising activity as neoadjuvant and adjuvant therapies for patients with resectable stage I-III NSCLC as well. Optimal approaches are still being determined, and many questions and controversies remain, but it is essential for oncologists, thoracic surgeons, and other multidisciplinary specialists to work together to make these therapies available to patients with earlier stages of lung cancer. This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent web broadcast, provides essential updates on the evolving science supporting the use of ICIs in multimodal treatment of unresectable and resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Multidisciplinary perspectives on how to make the most of immunotherapies and rational combinations in curative-intent settings are shared as well. Upon completion of this accredited CE activity, participants should be better able to: Characterize the rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in locally advanced or earlier stages of non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), Review key clinical trials and available efficacy/safety data on immunotherapies and immune-based combinations in locally advanced and earlier stages of NSCLC, Determine the best assessment and treatment approaches for diverse populations of patients with stage I-III NSCLC as part of clinical practice or clinical trials based on the latest evidence and recommendations, effective multidisciplinary and interprofessional collaboration and care coordination, and patient needs, values, and preferences.
Go online to PeerView.com/CBB860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The immunotherapy revolution in lung cancer continues, as clinical practice and research build on achievements made in advanced NSCLC and aim to extend the benefits of immunotherapies to earlier stages. Immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapy is routinely used as consolidation following chemoradiation for patients with stage III unresectable NSCLC. Now, ICIs and rational combinations are starting to show promising activity as neoadjuvant and adjuvant therapies for patients with resectable stage I-III NSCLC as well. Optimal approaches are still being determined, and many questions and controversies remain, but it is essential for oncologists, thoracic surgeons, and other multidisciplinary specialists to work together to make these therapies available to patients with earlier stages of lung cancer. This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent web broadcast, provides essential updates on the evolving science supporting the use of ICIs in multimodal treatment of unresectable and resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Multidisciplinary perspectives on how to make the most of immunotherapies and rational combinations in curative-intent settings are shared as well. Upon completion of this accredited CE activity, participants should be better able to: Characterize the rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in locally advanced or earlier stages of non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), Review key clinical trials and available efficacy/safety data on immunotherapies and immune-based combinations in locally advanced and earlier stages of NSCLC, Determine the best assessment and treatment approaches for diverse populations of patients with stage I-III NSCLC as part of clinical practice or clinical trials based on the latest evidence and recommendations, effective multidisciplinary and interprofessional collaboration and care coordination, and patient needs, values, and preferences.
Go online to PeerView.com/CBB860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The immunotherapy revolution in lung cancer continues, as clinical practice and research build on achievements made in advanced NSCLC and aim to extend the benefits of immunotherapies to earlier stages. Immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapy is routinely used as consolidation following chemoradiation for patients with stage III unresectable NSCLC. Now, ICIs and rational combinations are starting to show promising activity as neoadjuvant and adjuvant therapies for patients with resectable stage I-III NSCLC as well. Optimal approaches are still being determined, and many questions and controversies remain, but it is essential for oncologists, thoracic surgeons, and other multidisciplinary specialists to work together to make these therapies available to patients with earlier stages of lung cancer. This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent web broadcast, provides essential updates on the evolving science supporting the use of ICIs in multimodal treatment of unresectable and resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Multidisciplinary perspectives on how to make the most of immunotherapies and rational combinations in curative-intent settings are shared as well. Upon completion of this accredited CE activity, participants should be better able to: Characterize the rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in locally advanced or earlier stages of non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), Review key clinical trials and available efficacy/safety data on immunotherapies and immune-based combinations in locally advanced and earlier stages of NSCLC, Determine the best assessment and treatment approaches for diverse populations of patients with stage I-III NSCLC as part of clinical practice or clinical trials based on the latest evidence and recommendations, effective multidisciplinary and interprofessional collaboration and care coordination, and patient needs, values, and preferences.
Go online to PeerView.com/CBB860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The immunotherapy revolution in lung cancer continues, as clinical practice and research build on achievements made in advanced NSCLC and aim to extend the benefits of immunotherapies to earlier stages. Immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapy is routinely used as consolidation following chemoradiation for patients with stage III unresectable NSCLC. Now, ICIs and rational combinations are starting to show promising activity as neoadjuvant and adjuvant therapies for patients with resectable stage I-III NSCLC as well. Optimal approaches are still being determined, and many questions and controversies remain, but it is essential for oncologists, thoracic surgeons, and other multidisciplinary specialists to work together to make these therapies available to patients with earlier stages of lung cancer. This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent web broadcast, provides essential updates on the evolving science supporting the use of ICIs in multimodal treatment of unresectable and resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Multidisciplinary perspectives on how to make the most of immunotherapies and rational combinations in curative-intent settings are shared as well. Upon completion of this accredited CE activity, participants should be better able to: Characterize the rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in locally advanced or earlier stages of non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), Review key clinical trials and available efficacy/safety data on immunotherapies and immune-based combinations in locally advanced and earlier stages of NSCLC, Determine the best assessment and treatment approaches for diverse populations of patients with stage I-III NSCLC as part of clinical practice or clinical trials based on the latest evidence and recommendations, effective multidisciplinary and interprofessional collaboration and care coordination, and patient needs, values, and preferences.
Go online to PeerView.com/CBB860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The immunotherapy revolution in lung cancer continues, as clinical practice and research build on achievements made in advanced NSCLC and aim to extend the benefits of immunotherapies to earlier stages. Immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapy is routinely used as consolidation following chemoradiation for patients with stage III unresectable NSCLC. Now, ICIs and rational combinations are starting to show promising activity as neoadjuvant and adjuvant therapies for patients with resectable stage I-III NSCLC as well. Optimal approaches are still being determined, and many questions and controversies remain, but it is essential for oncologists, thoracic surgeons, and other multidisciplinary specialists to work together to make these therapies available to patients with earlier stages of lung cancer. This PeerView educational activity, based on a recent web broadcast, provides essential updates on the evolving science supporting the use of ICIs in multimodal treatment of unresectable and resectable stage I-III NSCLC. Multidisciplinary perspectives on how to make the most of immunotherapies and rational combinations in curative-intent settings are shared as well. Upon completion of this accredited CE activity, participants should be better able to: Characterize the rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in locally advanced or earlier stages of non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), Review key clinical trials and available efficacy/safety data on immunotherapies and immune-based combinations in locally advanced and earlier stages of NSCLC, Determine the best assessment and treatment approaches for diverse populations of patients with stage I-III NSCLC as part of clinical practice or clinical trials based on the latest evidence and recommendations, effective multidisciplinary and interprofessional collaboration and care coordination, and patient needs, values, and preferences.
Go online to PeerView.com/NZQ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy currently has a role as consolidation therapy after chemoradiation for patients with stage III, locally advanced, unresectable non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Other agents and strategies are being explored in the locally advanced setting as well. Many clinical trials are also investigating the use of immune checkpoint inhibitors as neoadjuvant and adjuvant systemic therapies in earlier stages of NSCLC, and promising data have started to emerge, including from the first few phase 3 studies. With the continual expansion of immunotherapy into earlier disease settings, multidisciplinary collaboration among thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, radiation oncologists, and the greater lung cancer care team is paramount. This PeerView Live Seminar and Practicum based on a recent live web broadcast explores the latest advances and clinical trial findings with immunotherapies, analyzes implications for surgical management of patients, and provides case-based, practical guidance for integrating immunotherapies into multimodal management of stage I-III NSCLC in the context of multidisciplinary care. Upon completion of this accredited CE activity, participants should be better able to: Characterize the mechanisms of action of immune checkpoint inhibitors and other novel cancer immunotherapies, and the rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in earlier stages of lung cancer, Discuss the current and evolving immunotherapy landscape and state of the science in lung cancer, including in locally advanced and earlier stages of NSCLC, Review key clinical trials assessing immunotherapies and immune-based combinations in stage III and earlier stages of lung cancer, and available data from such trials, Assess the real evidence and misconceptions related to the safety and adverse effects of checkpoint inhibitors when used in the treatment of patients with locally advanced and early-stage lung cancer as well as potential implications for surgical outcomes in these patients, Determine the best treatment approaches for patients with stage III or earlier lung cancer as part of clinical practice or clinical trials based on the latest evidence, recommendations, patient needs and preferences, and effective multidisciplinary collaboration and coordination of care.
Go online to PeerView.com/NZQ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy currently has a role as consolidation therapy after chemoradiation for patients with stage III, locally advanced, unresectable non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Other agents and strategies are being explored in the locally advanced setting as well. Many clinical trials are also investigating the use of immune checkpoint inhibitors as neoadjuvant and adjuvant systemic therapies in earlier stages of NSCLC, and promising data have started to emerge, including from the first few phase 3 studies. With the continual expansion of immunotherapy into earlier disease settings, multidisciplinary collaboration among thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, radiation oncologists, and the greater lung cancer care team is paramount. This PeerView Live Seminar and Practicum based on a recent live web broadcast explores the latest advances and clinical trial findings with immunotherapies, analyzes implications for surgical management of patients, and provides case-based, practical guidance for integrating immunotherapies into multimodal management of stage I-III NSCLC in the context of multidisciplinary care. Upon completion of this accredited CE activity, participants should be better able to: Characterize the mechanisms of action of immune checkpoint inhibitors and other novel cancer immunotherapies, and the rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in earlier stages of lung cancer, Discuss the current and evolving immunotherapy landscape and state of the science in lung cancer, including in locally advanced and earlier stages of NSCLC, Review key clinical trials assessing immunotherapies and immune-based combinations in stage III and earlier stages of lung cancer, and available data from such trials, Assess the real evidence and misconceptions related to the safety and adverse effects of checkpoint inhibitors when used in the treatment of patients with locally advanced and early-stage lung cancer as well as potential implications for surgical outcomes in these patients, Determine the best treatment approaches for patients with stage III or earlier lung cancer as part of clinical practice or clinical trials based on the latest evidence, recommendations, patient needs and preferences, and effective multidisciplinary collaboration and coordination of care.
Go online to PeerView.com/NZQ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy currently has a role as consolidation therapy after chemoradiation for patients with stage III, locally advanced, unresectable non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Other agents and strategies are being explored in the locally advanced setting as well. Many clinical trials are also investigating the use of immune checkpoint inhibitors as neoadjuvant and adjuvant systemic therapies in earlier stages of NSCLC, and promising data have started to emerge, including from the first few phase 3 studies. With the continual expansion of immunotherapy into earlier disease settings, multidisciplinary collaboration among thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, radiation oncologists, and the greater lung cancer care team is paramount. This PeerView Live Seminar and Practicum based on a recent live web broadcast explores the latest advances and clinical trial findings with immunotherapies, analyzes implications for surgical management of patients, and provides case-based, practical guidance for integrating immunotherapies into multimodal management of stage I-III NSCLC in the context of multidisciplinary care. Upon completion of this accredited CE activity, participants should be better able to: Characterize the mechanisms of action of immune checkpoint inhibitors and other novel cancer immunotherapies, and the rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in earlier stages of lung cancer, Discuss the current and evolving immunotherapy landscape and state of the science in lung cancer, including in locally advanced and earlier stages of NSCLC, Review key clinical trials assessing immunotherapies and immune-based combinations in stage III and earlier stages of lung cancer, and available data from such trials, Assess the real evidence and misconceptions related to the safety and adverse effects of checkpoint inhibitors when used in the treatment of patients with locally advanced and early-stage lung cancer as well as potential implications for surgical outcomes in these patients, Determine the best treatment approaches for patients with stage III or earlier lung cancer as part of clinical practice or clinical trials based on the latest evidence, recommendations, patient needs and preferences, and effective multidisciplinary collaboration and coordination of care.
PeerView Immunology & Transplantation CME/CNE/CPE Video Podcast
Go online to PeerView.com/NZQ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy currently has a role as consolidation therapy after chemoradiation for patients with stage III, locally advanced, unresectable non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Other agents and strategies are being explored in the locally advanced setting as well. Many clinical trials are also investigating the use of immune checkpoint inhibitors as neoadjuvant and adjuvant systemic therapies in earlier stages of NSCLC, and promising data have started to emerge, including from the first few phase 3 studies. With the continual expansion of immunotherapy into earlier disease settings, multidisciplinary collaboration among thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, radiation oncologists, and the greater lung cancer care team is paramount. This PeerView Live Seminar and Practicum based on a recent live web broadcast explores the latest advances and clinical trial findings with immunotherapies, analyzes implications for surgical management of patients, and provides case-based, practical guidance for integrating immunotherapies into multimodal management of stage I-III NSCLC in the context of multidisciplinary care. Upon completion of this accredited CE activity, participants should be better able to: Characterize the mechanisms of action of immune checkpoint inhibitors and other novel cancer immunotherapies, and the rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in earlier stages of lung cancer, Discuss the current and evolving immunotherapy landscape and state of the science in lung cancer, including in locally advanced and earlier stages of NSCLC, Review key clinical trials assessing immunotherapies and immune-based combinations in stage III and earlier stages of lung cancer, and available data from such trials, Assess the real evidence and misconceptions related to the safety and adverse effects of checkpoint inhibitors when used in the treatment of patients with locally advanced and early-stage lung cancer as well as potential implications for surgical outcomes in these patients, Determine the best treatment approaches for patients with stage III or earlier lung cancer as part of clinical practice or clinical trials based on the latest evidence, recommendations, patient needs and preferences, and effective multidisciplinary collaboration and coordination of care.
PeerView Immunology & Transplantation CME/CNE/CPE Audio Podcast
Go online to PeerView.com/NZQ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy currently has a role as consolidation therapy after chemoradiation for patients with stage III, locally advanced, unresectable non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Other agents and strategies are being explored in the locally advanced setting as well. Many clinical trials are also investigating the use of immune checkpoint inhibitors as neoadjuvant and adjuvant systemic therapies in earlier stages of NSCLC, and promising data have started to emerge, including from the first few phase 3 studies. With the continual expansion of immunotherapy into earlier disease settings, multidisciplinary collaboration among thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, radiation oncologists, and the greater lung cancer care team is paramount. This PeerView Live Seminar and Practicum based on a recent live web broadcast explores the latest advances and clinical trial findings with immunotherapies, analyzes implications for surgical management of patients, and provides case-based, practical guidance for integrating immunotherapies into multimodal management of stage I-III NSCLC in the context of multidisciplinary care. Upon completion of this accredited CE activity, participants should be better able to: Characterize the mechanisms of action of immune checkpoint inhibitors and other novel cancer immunotherapies, and the rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in earlier stages of lung cancer, Discuss the current and evolving immunotherapy landscape and state of the science in lung cancer, including in locally advanced and earlier stages of NSCLC, Review key clinical trials assessing immunotherapies and immune-based combinations in stage III and earlier stages of lung cancer, and available data from such trials, Assess the real evidence and misconceptions related to the safety and adverse effects of checkpoint inhibitors when used in the treatment of patients with locally advanced and early-stage lung cancer as well as potential implications for surgical outcomes in these patients, Determine the best treatment approaches for patients with stage III or earlier lung cancer as part of clinical practice or clinical trials based on the latest evidence, recommendations, patient needs and preferences, and effective multidisciplinary collaboration and coordination of care.
Go online to PeerView.com/NZQ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy currently has a role as consolidation therapy after chemoradiation for patients with stage III, locally advanced, unresectable non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Other agents and strategies are being explored in the locally advanced setting as well. Many clinical trials are also investigating the use of immune checkpoint inhibitors as neoadjuvant and adjuvant systemic therapies in earlier stages of NSCLC, and promising data have started to emerge, including from the first few phase 3 studies. With the continual expansion of immunotherapy into earlier disease settings, multidisciplinary collaboration among thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, radiation oncologists, and the greater lung cancer care team is paramount. This PeerView Live Seminar and Practicum based on a recent live web broadcast explores the latest advances and clinical trial findings with immunotherapies, analyzes implications for surgical management of patients, and provides case-based, practical guidance for integrating immunotherapies into multimodal management of stage I-III NSCLC in the context of multidisciplinary care. Upon completion of this accredited CE activity, participants should be better able to: Characterize the mechanisms of action of immune checkpoint inhibitors and other novel cancer immunotherapies, and the rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in earlier stages of lung cancer, Discuss the current and evolving immunotherapy landscape and state of the science in lung cancer, including in locally advanced and earlier stages of NSCLC, Review key clinical trials assessing immunotherapies and immune-based combinations in stage III and earlier stages of lung cancer, and available data from such trials, Assess the real evidence and misconceptions related to the safety and adverse effects of checkpoint inhibitors when used in the treatment of patients with locally advanced and early-stage lung cancer as well as potential implications for surgical outcomes in these patients, Determine the best treatment approaches for patients with stage III or earlier lung cancer as part of clinical practice or clinical trials based on the latest evidence, recommendations, patient needs and preferences, and effective multidisciplinary collaboration and coordination of care.
Go online to PeerView.com/NZQ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy currently has a role as consolidation therapy after chemoradiation for patients with stage III, locally advanced, unresectable non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Other agents and strategies are being explored in the locally advanced setting as well. Many clinical trials are also investigating the use of immune checkpoint inhibitors as neoadjuvant and adjuvant systemic therapies in earlier stages of NSCLC, and promising data have started to emerge, including from the first few phase 3 studies. With the continual expansion of immunotherapy into earlier disease settings, multidisciplinary collaboration among thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, radiation oncologists, and the greater lung cancer care team is paramount. This PeerView Live Seminar and Practicum based on a recent live web broadcast explores the latest advances and clinical trial findings with immunotherapies, analyzes implications for surgical management of patients, and provides case-based, practical guidance for integrating immunotherapies into multimodal management of stage I-III NSCLC in the context of multidisciplinary care. Upon completion of this accredited CE activity, participants should be better able to: Characterize the mechanisms of action of immune checkpoint inhibitors and other novel cancer immunotherapies, and the rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in earlier stages of lung cancer, Discuss the current and evolving immunotherapy landscape and state of the science in lung cancer, including in locally advanced and earlier stages of NSCLC, Review key clinical trials assessing immunotherapies and immune-based combinations in stage III and earlier stages of lung cancer, and available data from such trials, Assess the real evidence and misconceptions related to the safety and adverse effects of checkpoint inhibitors when used in the treatment of patients with locally advanced and early-stage lung cancer as well as potential implications for surgical outcomes in these patients, Determine the best treatment approaches for patients with stage III or earlier lung cancer as part of clinical practice or clinical trials based on the latest evidence, recommendations, patient needs and preferences, and effective multidisciplinary collaboration and coordination of care.
Go online to PeerView.com/NZQ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy currently has a role as consolidation therapy after chemoradiation for patients with stage III, locally advanced, unresectable non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Other agents and strategies are being explored in the locally advanced setting as well. Many clinical trials are also investigating the use of immune checkpoint inhibitors as neoadjuvant and adjuvant systemic therapies in earlier stages of NSCLC, and promising data have started to emerge, including from the first few phase 3 studies. With the continual expansion of immunotherapy into earlier disease settings, multidisciplinary collaboration among thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, radiation oncologists, and the greater lung cancer care team is paramount. This PeerView Live Seminar and Practicum based on a recent live web broadcast explores the latest advances and clinical trial findings with immunotherapies, analyzes implications for surgical management of patients, and provides case-based, practical guidance for integrating immunotherapies into multimodal management of stage I-III NSCLC in the context of multidisciplinary care. Upon completion of this accredited CE activity, participants should be better able to: Characterize the mechanisms of action of immune checkpoint inhibitors and other novel cancer immunotherapies, and the rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in earlier stages of lung cancer, Discuss the current and evolving immunotherapy landscape and state of the science in lung cancer, including in locally advanced and earlier stages of NSCLC, Review key clinical trials assessing immunotherapies and immune-based combinations in stage III and earlier stages of lung cancer, and available data from such trials, Assess the real evidence and misconceptions related to the safety and adverse effects of checkpoint inhibitors when used in the treatment of patients with locally advanced and early-stage lung cancer as well as potential implications for surgical outcomes in these patients, Determine the best treatment approaches for patients with stage III or earlier lung cancer as part of clinical practice or clinical trials based on the latest evidence, recommendations, patient needs and preferences, and effective multidisciplinary collaboration and coordination of care.
Go online to PeerView.com/NZQ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy currently has a role as consolidation therapy after chemoradiation for patients with stage III, locally advanced, unresectable non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Other agents and strategies are being explored in the locally advanced setting as well. Many clinical trials are also investigating the use of immune checkpoint inhibitors as neoadjuvant and adjuvant systemic therapies in earlier stages of NSCLC, and promising data have started to emerge, including from the first few phase 3 studies. With the continual expansion of immunotherapy into earlier disease settings, multidisciplinary collaboration among thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, radiation oncologists, and the greater lung cancer care team is paramount. This PeerView Live Seminar and Practicum based on a recent live web broadcast explores the latest advances and clinical trial findings with immunotherapies, analyzes implications for surgical management of patients, and provides case-based, practical guidance for integrating immunotherapies into multimodal management of stage I-III NSCLC in the context of multidisciplinary care. Upon completion of this accredited CE activity, participants should be better able to: Characterize the mechanisms of action of immune checkpoint inhibitors and other novel cancer immunotherapies, and the rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in earlier stages of lung cancer, Discuss the current and evolving immunotherapy landscape and state of the science in lung cancer, including in locally advanced and earlier stages of NSCLC, Review key clinical trials assessing immunotherapies and immune-based combinations in stage III and earlier stages of lung cancer, and available data from such trials, Assess the real evidence and misconceptions related to the safety and adverse effects of checkpoint inhibitors when used in the treatment of patients with locally advanced and early-stage lung cancer as well as potential implications for surgical outcomes in these patients, Determine the best treatment approaches for patients with stage III or earlier lung cancer as part of clinical practice or clinical trials based on the latest evidence, recommendations, patient needs and preferences, and effective multidisciplinary collaboration and coordination of care.
Go online to PeerView.com/NZQ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. Immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy currently has a role as consolidation therapy after chemoradiation for patients with stage III, locally advanced, unresectable non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Other agents and strategies are being explored in the locally advanced setting as well. Many clinical trials are also investigating the use of immune checkpoint inhibitors as neoadjuvant and adjuvant systemic therapies in earlier stages of NSCLC, and promising data have started to emerge, including from the first few phase 3 studies. With the continual expansion of immunotherapy into earlier disease settings, multidisciplinary collaboration among thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, radiation oncologists, and the greater lung cancer care team is paramount. This PeerView Live Seminar and Practicum based on a recent live web broadcast explores the latest advances and clinical trial findings with immunotherapies, analyzes implications for surgical management of patients, and provides case-based, practical guidance for integrating immunotherapies into multimodal management of stage I-III NSCLC in the context of multidisciplinary care. Upon completion of this accredited CE activity, participants should be better able to: Characterize the mechanisms of action of immune checkpoint inhibitors and other novel cancer immunotherapies, and the rationale for using immunotherapy as a component of multimodal therapy in earlier stages of lung cancer, Discuss the current and evolving immunotherapy landscape and state of the science in lung cancer, including in locally advanced and earlier stages of NSCLC, Review key clinical trials assessing immunotherapies and immune-based combinations in stage III and earlier stages of lung cancer, and available data from such trials, Assess the real evidence and misconceptions related to the safety and adverse effects of checkpoint inhibitors when used in the treatment of patients with locally advanced and early-stage lung cancer as well as potential implications for surgical outcomes in these patients, Determine the best treatment approaches for patients with stage III or earlier lung cancer as part of clinical practice or clinical trials based on the latest evidence, recommendations, patient needs and preferences, and effective multidisciplinary collaboration and coordination of care.
Go online to PeerView.com/MHD860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. How have the best practices for multidisciplinary management of patients with stage I-III lung cancer changed now that adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy has become the new standard of care in resected early-stage EGFR-mutated NSCLC, and what are the implications for thoracic surgeons and other key members of the lung cancer care team? This PeerView Live Candid Conversations & Clinical Consults, based on a recent web broadcast, answers these and other burning questions. Experts in thoracic surgery and medical oncology come together to discuss recent advances, as well as provide practical, case-based guidance on the importance of biomarker testing in early-stage settings. In addition, they provide direction on how to determine which patients are appropriate candidates for adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy, if adjuvant chemotherapy is still needed, which considerations should be discussed with patients, and how thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, pathologists, and other relevant specialists can effectively work together to determine the best multimodal treatment approach for each patient with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Discuss the role of EGFR mutations in NSCLC, the importance of identifying patients with EGFR mutations in earlier disease settings, and the role of thoracic surgeons in biomarker testing and treatment selection in the era of precision oncology, Optimize sample collection and EGFR testing in early-stage NSCLC to identify patients with EGFR mutations who might benefit from EGFR-targeted therapy, Apply the latest evidence and guidelines on EGFR-targeted therapies to select optimal therapy for patients with early-stage EGFR-mutated NSCLC, Implement multidisciplinary strategies and shared decision-making to optimize biomarker testing and safely integrate adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy into multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with early-stage NSCLC in clinical practice or through clinical trial enrollment.
Go online to PeerView.com/MHD860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. How have the best practices for multidisciplinary management of patients with stage I-III lung cancer changed now that adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy has become the new standard of care in resected early-stage EGFR-mutated NSCLC, and what are the implications for thoracic surgeons and other key members of the lung cancer care team? This PeerView Live Candid Conversations & Clinical Consults, based on a recent web broadcast, answers these and other burning questions. Experts in thoracic surgery and medical oncology come together to discuss recent advances, as well as provide practical, case-based guidance on the importance of biomarker testing in early-stage settings. In addition, they provide direction on how to determine which patients are appropriate candidates for adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy, if adjuvant chemotherapy is still needed, which considerations should be discussed with patients, and how thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, pathologists, and other relevant specialists can effectively work together to determine the best multimodal treatment approach for each patient with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Discuss the role of EGFR mutations in NSCLC, the importance of identifying patients with EGFR mutations in earlier disease settings, and the role of thoracic surgeons in biomarker testing and treatment selection in the era of precision oncology, Optimize sample collection and EGFR testing in early-stage NSCLC to identify patients with EGFR mutations who might benefit from EGFR-targeted therapy, Apply the latest evidence and guidelines on EGFR-targeted therapies to select optimal therapy for patients with early-stage EGFR-mutated NSCLC, Implement multidisciplinary strategies and shared decision-making to optimize biomarker testing and safely integrate adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy into multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with early-stage NSCLC in clinical practice or through clinical trial enrollment.
Go online to PeerView.com/MHD860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. How have the best practices for multidisciplinary management of patients with stage I-III lung cancer changed now that adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy has become the new standard of care in resected early-stage EGFR-mutated NSCLC, and what are the implications for thoracic surgeons and other key members of the lung cancer care team? This PeerView Live Candid Conversations & Clinical Consults, based on a recent web broadcast, answers these and other burning questions. Experts in thoracic surgery and medical oncology come together to discuss recent advances, as well as provide practical, case-based guidance on the importance of biomarker testing in early-stage settings. In addition, they provide direction on how to determine which patients are appropriate candidates for adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy, if adjuvant chemotherapy is still needed, which considerations should be discussed with patients, and how thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, pathologists, and other relevant specialists can effectively work together to determine the best multimodal treatment approach for each patient with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Discuss the role of EGFR mutations in NSCLC, the importance of identifying patients with EGFR mutations in earlier disease settings, and the role of thoracic surgeons in biomarker testing and treatment selection in the era of precision oncology, Optimize sample collection and EGFR testing in early-stage NSCLC to identify patients with EGFR mutations who might benefit from EGFR-targeted therapy, Apply the latest evidence and guidelines on EGFR-targeted therapies to select optimal therapy for patients with early-stage EGFR-mutated NSCLC, Implement multidisciplinary strategies and shared decision-making to optimize biomarker testing and safely integrate adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy into multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with early-stage NSCLC in clinical practice or through clinical trial enrollment.
Go online to PeerView.com/MHD860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. How have the best practices for multidisciplinary management of patients with stage I-III lung cancer changed now that adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy has become the new standard of care in resected early-stage EGFR-mutated NSCLC, and what are the implications for thoracic surgeons and other key members of the lung cancer care team? This PeerView Live Candid Conversations & Clinical Consults, based on a recent web broadcast, answers these and other burning questions. Experts in thoracic surgery and medical oncology come together to discuss recent advances, as well as provide practical, case-based guidance on the importance of biomarker testing in early-stage settings. In addition, they provide direction on how to determine which patients are appropriate candidates for adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy, if adjuvant chemotherapy is still needed, which considerations should be discussed with patients, and how thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, pathologists, and other relevant specialists can effectively work together to determine the best multimodal treatment approach for each patient with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Discuss the role of EGFR mutations in NSCLC, the importance of identifying patients with EGFR mutations in earlier disease settings, and the role of thoracic surgeons in biomarker testing and treatment selection in the era of precision oncology, Optimize sample collection and EGFR testing in early-stage NSCLC to identify patients with EGFR mutations who might benefit from EGFR-targeted therapy, Apply the latest evidence and guidelines on EGFR-targeted therapies to select optimal therapy for patients with early-stage EGFR-mutated NSCLC, Implement multidisciplinary strategies and shared decision-making to optimize biomarker testing and safely integrate adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy into multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with early-stage NSCLC in clinical practice or through clinical trial enrollment.
Go online to PeerView.com/MHD860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. How have the best practices for multidisciplinary management of patients with stage I-III lung cancer changed now that adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy has become the new standard of care in resected early-stage EGFR-mutated NSCLC, and what are the implications for thoracic surgeons and other key members of the lung cancer care team? This PeerView Live Candid Conversations & Clinical Consults, based on a recent web broadcast, answers these and other burning questions. Experts in thoracic surgery and medical oncology come together to discuss recent advances, as well as provide practical, case-based guidance on the importance of biomarker testing in early-stage settings. In addition, they provide direction on how to determine which patients are appropriate candidates for adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy, if adjuvant chemotherapy is still needed, which considerations should be discussed with patients, and how thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, pathologists, and other relevant specialists can effectively work together to determine the best multimodal treatment approach for each patient with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Discuss the role of EGFR mutations in NSCLC, the importance of identifying patients with EGFR mutations in earlier disease settings, and the role of thoracic surgeons in biomarker testing and treatment selection in the era of precision oncology, Optimize sample collection and EGFR testing in early-stage NSCLC to identify patients with EGFR mutations who might benefit from EGFR-targeted therapy, Apply the latest evidence and guidelines on EGFR-targeted therapies to select optimal therapy for patients with early-stage EGFR-mutated NSCLC, Implement multidisciplinary strategies and shared decision-making to optimize biomarker testing and safely integrate adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy into multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with early-stage NSCLC in clinical practice or through clinical trial enrollment.
Go online to PeerView.com/MHD860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. How have the best practices for multidisciplinary management of patients with stage I-III lung cancer changed now that adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy has become the new standard of care in resected early-stage EGFR-mutated NSCLC, and what are the implications for thoracic surgeons and other key members of the lung cancer care team? This PeerView Live Candid Conversations & Clinical Consults, based on a recent web broadcast, answers these and other burning questions. Experts in thoracic surgery and medical oncology come together to discuss recent advances, as well as provide practical, case-based guidance on the importance of biomarker testing in early-stage settings. In addition, they provide direction on how to determine which patients are appropriate candidates for adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy, if adjuvant chemotherapy is still needed, which considerations should be discussed with patients, and how thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, pathologists, and other relevant specialists can effectively work together to determine the best multimodal treatment approach for each patient with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Discuss the role of EGFR mutations in NSCLC, the importance of identifying patients with EGFR mutations in earlier disease settings, and the role of thoracic surgeons in biomarker testing and treatment selection in the era of precision oncology, Optimize sample collection and EGFR testing in early-stage NSCLC to identify patients with EGFR mutations who might benefit from EGFR-targeted therapy, Apply the latest evidence and guidelines on EGFR-targeted therapies to select optimal therapy for patients with early-stage EGFR-mutated NSCLC, Implement multidisciplinary strategies and shared decision-making to optimize biomarker testing and safely integrate adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy into multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with early-stage NSCLC in clinical practice or through clinical trial enrollment.
Go online to PeerView.com/MHD860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. How have the best practices for multidisciplinary management of patients with stage I-III lung cancer changed now that adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy has become the new standard of care in resected early-stage EGFR-mutated NSCLC, and what are the implications for thoracic surgeons and other key members of the lung cancer care team? This PeerView Live Candid Conversations & Clinical Consults, based on a recent web broadcast, answers these and other burning questions. Experts in thoracic surgery and medical oncology come together to discuss recent advances, as well as provide practical, case-based guidance on the importance of biomarker testing in early-stage settings. In addition, they provide direction on how to determine which patients are appropriate candidates for adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy, if adjuvant chemotherapy is still needed, which considerations should be discussed with patients, and how thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, pathologists, and other relevant specialists can effectively work together to determine the best multimodal treatment approach for each patient with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Discuss the role of EGFR mutations in NSCLC, the importance of identifying patients with EGFR mutations in earlier disease settings, and the role of thoracic surgeons in biomarker testing and treatment selection in the era of precision oncology, Optimize sample collection and EGFR testing in early-stage NSCLC to identify patients with EGFR mutations who might benefit from EGFR-targeted therapy, Apply the latest evidence and guidelines on EGFR-targeted therapies to select optimal therapy for patients with early-stage EGFR-mutated NSCLC, Implement multidisciplinary strategies and shared decision-making to optimize biomarker testing and safely integrate adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy into multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with early-stage NSCLC in clinical practice or through clinical trial enrollment.
Go online to PeerView.com/MHD860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. How have the best practices for multidisciplinary management of patients with stage I-III lung cancer changed now that adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy has become the new standard of care in resected early-stage EGFR-mutated NSCLC, and what are the implications for thoracic surgeons and other key members of the lung cancer care team? This PeerView Live Candid Conversations & Clinical Consults, based on a recent web broadcast, answers these and other burning questions. Experts in thoracic surgery and medical oncology come together to discuss recent advances, as well as provide practical, case-based guidance on the importance of biomarker testing in early-stage settings. In addition, they provide direction on how to determine which patients are appropriate candidates for adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy, if adjuvant chemotherapy is still needed, which considerations should be discussed with patients, and how thoracic surgeons, medical oncologists, pathologists, and other relevant specialists can effectively work together to determine the best multimodal treatment approach for each patient with stage I-III NSCLC. Upon completion of this CE activity, participants will be able to: Discuss the role of EGFR mutations in NSCLC, the importance of identifying patients with EGFR mutations in earlier disease settings, and the role of thoracic surgeons in biomarker testing and treatment selection in the era of precision oncology, Optimize sample collection and EGFR testing in early-stage NSCLC to identify patients with EGFR mutations who might benefit from EGFR-targeted therapy, Apply the latest evidence and guidelines on EGFR-targeted therapies to select optimal therapy for patients with early-stage EGFR-mutated NSCLC, Implement multidisciplinary strategies and shared decision-making to optimize biomarker testing and safely integrate adjuvant EGFR-targeted therapy into multimodal treatment plans for eligible patients with early-stage NSCLC in clinical practice or through clinical trial enrollment.