POPULARITY
Featuring perspectives from Drs Ross Camidge, Alexander Drilon and Justin Gainor, including the following topics: Selection and Sequencing of Therapy for Patients with Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) with an ALK Rearrangement Introduction (0:00) Case: A woman in her mid 30s with newly diagnosed metastatic NSCLC with an ALK mutation — Nikesh Jasani, MD (5:58) Case: A woman in her early 50s with metastatic adenocarcinoma of the lung with an ALK rearrangement — Lowell L Hart, MD (10:03) Optimal Use of Recently Approved RET Inhibitors in the Care of Patients with NSCLC with RET Alterations Case: A woman in her early 60s with metastatic adenocarcinoma of the lung, PD-L1 0%, KIF5B-RET fusion — Mohamed K Mohamed, MD, PhD (15:02) Case: A man in his early 70s with metastatic adenocarcinoma of the lung, PD-L1 65%, KIF5B-RET fusion — Joshua Bauml, MD (18:08) Current and Future Directions in the Management of NSCLC with ROS1 Rearrangement Case: A man in his late 60s with metastatic adenosquamous carcinoma of the lung, PD-L1 >95%, ROS1 rearrangement — Margaret Deutsch, MD (25:24) Case: A woman in her late 50s with metastatic adenocarcinoma of the lung with a ROS1 fusion and severe rheumatoid arthritis — Gigi Chen, MD (29:49) Rational Approaches to Targeting BRAF in Patients with NSCLC Case: A man in his early 60s with metastatic adenocarcinoma of the lung with a BRAF V600E mutation, PD-L1 TPS 80% — Neil Morganstein, MD (38:04) Case: A man in his early 70s with metastatic NSCLC with a BRAF V600E mutation — KS Kumar, MD (42:59) Other Validated Targets Beyond EGFR (eg, MET, KRAS G12C) Case: A woman in her early 70s with metastatic adenocarcinoma of the lung with MET exon 14 skipping and MET amplification mutations, PD-L1 TPS 95% — Dr Mohamed (47:02) Case: A woman in her mid 40s with metastatic adenocarcinoma of the lung with a KRAS G12C mutation — Sulfi Ibrahim, MD (50:57) CME information and select publications
PeerView Immunology & Transplantation CME/CNE/CPE Audio Podcast
Go online to PeerView.com/KQZ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The management of patients with non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is exemplary of precision medicine. Extensive and nuanced genomic profiling of NSCLC is essential to inform individualized treatment plans to optimize patient outcomes. Currently, there are seven different molecular alterations for which FDA-approved targeted therapies are available: EGFR, ALK, ROS1, BRAF V600E, NTRK, MET exon 14, and RET. With the growing complexity of the targeted therapeutic landscape of lung cancer, it is imperative that members of the multidisciplinary care team maintain best practices regarding genomic testing to effectively incorporate targeted therapies into clinical practice. This PeerView educational activity based on a recent web broadcast provides practical guidance for navigating the continuing wave of predictive genomic alterations and related matched therapies, uniting pathologists with oncologists and other multidisciplinary specialists to ensure that patients with genomically altered NSCLC receive appropriate testing and therapy. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Discuss the expanding role and increasing importance of broad molecular testing for identifying patients with NSCLC who have therapeutically targetable molecular alterations, Describe the molecular alterations that are clinically relevant and therapeutically targetable in NSCLC, and the latest testing methods for identifying these alterations, Analyze data from clinical trials of precision therapies that target key molecular alterations in NSCLC, Implement best practices and collaborative strategies for integration of wide-spread molecular testing to ensure that patients with NSCLC receive the most appropriate therapies in the context of clinical practice or clinical trials.
Go online to PeerView.com/KQZ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The management of patients with non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is exemplary of precision medicine. Extensive and nuanced genomic profiling of NSCLC is essential to inform individualized treatment plans to optimize patient outcomes. Currently, there are seven different molecular alterations for which FDA-approved targeted therapies are available: EGFR, ALK, ROS1, BRAF V600E, NTRK, MET exon 14, and RET. With the growing complexity of the targeted therapeutic landscape of lung cancer, it is imperative that members of the multidisciplinary care team maintain best practices regarding genomic testing to effectively incorporate targeted therapies into clinical practice. This PeerView educational activity based on a recent web broadcast provides practical guidance for navigating the continuing wave of predictive genomic alterations and related matched therapies, uniting pathologists with oncologists and other multidisciplinary specialists to ensure that patients with genomically altered NSCLC receive appropriate testing and therapy. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Discuss the expanding role and increasing importance of broad molecular testing for identifying patients with NSCLC who have therapeutically targetable molecular alterations, Describe the molecular alterations that are clinically relevant and therapeutically targetable in NSCLC, and the latest testing methods for identifying these alterations, Analyze data from clinical trials of precision therapies that target key molecular alterations in NSCLC, Implement best practices and collaborative strategies for integration of wide-spread molecular testing to ensure that patients with NSCLC receive the most appropriate therapies in the context of clinical practice or clinical trials.
Go online to PeerView.com/KQZ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The management of patients with non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is exemplary of precision medicine. Extensive and nuanced genomic profiling of NSCLC is essential to inform individualized treatment plans to optimize patient outcomes. Currently, there are seven different molecular alterations for which FDA-approved targeted therapies are available: EGFR, ALK, ROS1, BRAF V600E, NTRK, MET exon 14, and RET. With the growing complexity of the targeted therapeutic landscape of lung cancer, it is imperative that members of the multidisciplinary care team maintain best practices regarding genomic testing to effectively incorporate targeted therapies into clinical practice. This PeerView educational activity based on a recent web broadcast provides practical guidance for navigating the continuing wave of predictive genomic alterations and related matched therapies, uniting pathologists with oncologists and other multidisciplinary specialists to ensure that patients with genomically altered NSCLC receive appropriate testing and therapy. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Discuss the expanding role and increasing importance of broad molecular testing for identifying patients with NSCLC who have therapeutically targetable molecular alterations, Describe the molecular alterations that are clinically relevant and therapeutically targetable in NSCLC, and the latest testing methods for identifying these alterations, Analyze data from clinical trials of precision therapies that target key molecular alterations in NSCLC, Implement best practices and collaborative strategies for integration of wide-spread molecular testing to ensure that patients with NSCLC receive the most appropriate therapies in the context of clinical practice or clinical trials.
Go online to PeerView.com/KQZ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The management of patients with non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is exemplary of precision medicine. Extensive and nuanced genomic profiling of NSCLC is essential to inform individualized treatment plans to optimize patient outcomes. Currently, there are seven different molecular alterations for which FDA-approved targeted therapies are available: EGFR, ALK, ROS1, BRAF V600E, NTRK, MET exon 14, and RET. With the growing complexity of the targeted therapeutic landscape of lung cancer, it is imperative that members of the multidisciplinary care team maintain best practices regarding genomic testing to effectively incorporate targeted therapies into clinical practice. This PeerView educational activity based on a recent web broadcast provides practical guidance for navigating the continuing wave of predictive genomic alterations and related matched therapies, uniting pathologists with oncologists and other multidisciplinary specialists to ensure that patients with genomically altered NSCLC receive appropriate testing and therapy. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Discuss the expanding role and increasing importance of broad molecular testing for identifying patients with NSCLC who have therapeutically targetable molecular alterations, Describe the molecular alterations that are clinically relevant and therapeutically targetable in NSCLC, and the latest testing methods for identifying these alterations, Analyze data from clinical trials of precision therapies that target key molecular alterations in NSCLC, Implement best practices and collaborative strategies for integration of wide-spread molecular testing to ensure that patients with NSCLC receive the most appropriate therapies in the context of clinical practice or clinical trials.
Go online to PeerView.com/KQZ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The management of patients with non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is exemplary of precision medicine. Extensive and nuanced genomic profiling of NSCLC is essential to inform individualized treatment plans to optimize patient outcomes. Currently, there are seven different molecular alterations for which FDA-approved targeted therapies are available: EGFR, ALK, ROS1, BRAF V600E, NTRK, MET exon 14, and RET. With the growing complexity of the targeted therapeutic landscape of lung cancer, it is imperative that members of the multidisciplinary care team maintain best practices regarding genomic testing to effectively incorporate targeted therapies into clinical practice. This PeerView educational activity based on a recent web broadcast provides practical guidance for navigating the continuing wave of predictive genomic alterations and related matched therapies, uniting pathologists with oncologists and other multidisciplinary specialists to ensure that patients with genomically altered NSCLC receive appropriate testing and therapy. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Discuss the expanding role and increasing importance of broad molecular testing for identifying patients with NSCLC who have therapeutically targetable molecular alterations, Describe the molecular alterations that are clinically relevant and therapeutically targetable in NSCLC, and the latest testing methods for identifying these alterations, Analyze data from clinical trials of precision therapies that target key molecular alterations in NSCLC, Implement best practices and collaborative strategies for integration of wide-spread molecular testing to ensure that patients with NSCLC receive the most appropriate therapies in the context of clinical practice or clinical trials.
PeerView Immunology & Transplantation CME/CNE/CPE Video Podcast
Go online to PeerView.com/KQZ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The management of patients with non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is exemplary of precision medicine. Extensive and nuanced genomic profiling of NSCLC is essential to inform individualized treatment plans to optimize patient outcomes. Currently, there are seven different molecular alterations for which FDA-approved targeted therapies are available: EGFR, ALK, ROS1, BRAF V600E, NTRK, MET exon 14, and RET. With the growing complexity of the targeted therapeutic landscape of lung cancer, it is imperative that members of the multidisciplinary care team maintain best practices regarding genomic testing to effectively incorporate targeted therapies into clinical practice. This PeerView educational activity based on a recent web broadcast provides practical guidance for navigating the continuing wave of predictive genomic alterations and related matched therapies, uniting pathologists with oncologists and other multidisciplinary specialists to ensure that patients with genomically altered NSCLC receive appropriate testing and therapy. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Discuss the expanding role and increasing importance of broad molecular testing for identifying patients with NSCLC who have therapeutically targetable molecular alterations, Describe the molecular alterations that are clinically relevant and therapeutically targetable in NSCLC, and the latest testing methods for identifying these alterations, Analyze data from clinical trials of precision therapies that target key molecular alterations in NSCLC, Implement best practices and collaborative strategies for integration of wide-spread molecular testing to ensure that patients with NSCLC receive the most appropriate therapies in the context of clinical practice or clinical trials.
Go online to PeerView.com/KQZ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The management of patients with non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is exemplary of precision medicine. Extensive and nuanced genomic profiling of NSCLC is essential to inform individualized treatment plans to optimize patient outcomes. Currently, there are seven different molecular alterations for which FDA-approved targeted therapies are available: EGFR, ALK, ROS1, BRAF V600E, NTRK, MET exon 14, and RET. With the growing complexity of the targeted therapeutic landscape of lung cancer, it is imperative that members of the multidisciplinary care team maintain best practices regarding genomic testing to effectively incorporate targeted therapies into clinical practice. This PeerView educational activity based on a recent web broadcast provides practical guidance for navigating the continuing wave of predictive genomic alterations and related matched therapies, uniting pathologists with oncologists and other multidisciplinary specialists to ensure that patients with genomically altered NSCLC receive appropriate testing and therapy. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Discuss the expanding role and increasing importance of broad molecular testing for identifying patients with NSCLC who have therapeutically targetable molecular alterations, Describe the molecular alterations that are clinically relevant and therapeutically targetable in NSCLC, and the latest testing methods for identifying these alterations, Analyze data from clinical trials of precision therapies that target key molecular alterations in NSCLC, Implement best practices and collaborative strategies for integration of wide-spread molecular testing to ensure that patients with NSCLC receive the most appropriate therapies in the context of clinical practice or clinical trials.
Go online to PeerView.com/KQZ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The management of patients with non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is exemplary of precision medicine. Extensive and nuanced genomic profiling of NSCLC is essential to inform individualized treatment plans to optimize patient outcomes. Currently, there are seven different molecular alterations for which FDA-approved targeted therapies are available: EGFR, ALK, ROS1, BRAF V600E, NTRK, MET exon 14, and RET. With the growing complexity of the targeted therapeutic landscape of lung cancer, it is imperative that members of the multidisciplinary care team maintain best practices regarding genomic testing to effectively incorporate targeted therapies into clinical practice. This PeerView educational activity based on a recent web broadcast provides practical guidance for navigating the continuing wave of predictive genomic alterations and related matched therapies, uniting pathologists with oncologists and other multidisciplinary specialists to ensure that patients with genomically altered NSCLC receive appropriate testing and therapy. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Discuss the expanding role and increasing importance of broad molecular testing for identifying patients with NSCLC who have therapeutically targetable molecular alterations, Describe the molecular alterations that are clinically relevant and therapeutically targetable in NSCLC, and the latest testing methods for identifying these alterations, Analyze data from clinical trials of precision therapies that target key molecular alterations in NSCLC, Implement best practices and collaborative strategies for integration of wide-spread molecular testing to ensure that patients with NSCLC receive the most appropriate therapies in the context of clinical practice or clinical trials.
Go online to PeerView.com/KQZ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The management of patients with non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is exemplary of precision medicine. Extensive and nuanced genomic profiling of NSCLC is essential to inform individualized treatment plans to optimize patient outcomes. Currently, there are seven different molecular alterations for which FDA-approved targeted therapies are available: EGFR, ALK, ROS1, BRAF V600E, NTRK, MET exon 14, and RET. With the growing complexity of the targeted therapeutic landscape of lung cancer, it is imperative that members of the multidisciplinary care team maintain best practices regarding genomic testing to effectively incorporate targeted therapies into clinical practice. This PeerView educational activity based on a recent web broadcast provides practical guidance for navigating the continuing wave of predictive genomic alterations and related matched therapies, uniting pathologists with oncologists and other multidisciplinary specialists to ensure that patients with genomically altered NSCLC receive appropriate testing and therapy. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Discuss the expanding role and increasing importance of broad molecular testing for identifying patients with NSCLC who have therapeutically targetable molecular alterations, Describe the molecular alterations that are clinically relevant and therapeutically targetable in NSCLC, and the latest testing methods for identifying these alterations, Analyze data from clinical trials of precision therapies that target key molecular alterations in NSCLC, Implement best practices and collaborative strategies for integration of wide-spread molecular testing to ensure that patients with NSCLC receive the most appropriate therapies in the context of clinical practice or clinical trials.
Go online to PeerView.com/KQZ860 to view the activity, download slides and practice aids, and complete the post-test to earn credit. The management of patients with non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is exemplary of precision medicine. Extensive and nuanced genomic profiling of NSCLC is essential to inform individualized treatment plans to optimize patient outcomes. Currently, there are seven different molecular alterations for which FDA-approved targeted therapies are available: EGFR, ALK, ROS1, BRAF V600E, NTRK, MET exon 14, and RET. With the growing complexity of the targeted therapeutic landscape of lung cancer, it is imperative that members of the multidisciplinary care team maintain best practices regarding genomic testing to effectively incorporate targeted therapies into clinical practice. This PeerView educational activity based on a recent web broadcast provides practical guidance for navigating the continuing wave of predictive genomic alterations and related matched therapies, uniting pathologists with oncologists and other multidisciplinary specialists to ensure that patients with genomically altered NSCLC receive appropriate testing and therapy. Upon completion of this activity, participants should be better able to: Discuss the expanding role and increasing importance of broad molecular testing for identifying patients with NSCLC who have therapeutically targetable molecular alterations, Describe the molecular alterations that are clinically relevant and therapeutically targetable in NSCLC, and the latest testing methods for identifying these alterations, Analyze data from clinical trials of precision therapies that target key molecular alterations in NSCLC, Implement best practices and collaborative strategies for integration of wide-spread molecular testing to ensure that patients with NSCLC receive the most appropriate therapies in the context of clinical practice or clinical trials.
In this podcast episode, listen to lung cancer experts Joshua Bauml, MD, a medical oncologist, and Dara L. Aisner, MD, PhD, a molecular pathologist, discuss clinical considerations for patients with RET fusion–positive NSCLC, with topics including:Optimal testing for RET fusionsDNA NGS vs RNA NGSMolecular testing workflowsUsing new selective RET inhibitors to treat patients with RET fusion–positive NSCLCCommon toxicities with new selective RET inhibitorsInterdisciplinary communication between medical oncologists and pathologistsPresenters:Dara L. Aisner, MD, PhDAssociate ProfessorDepartment of PathologyDirector, Molecular PathologyUniversity of ColoradoAurora, ColoradoJoshua Bauml, MDAssistant Professor of MedicineDivision of Hematology/OncologyPerelman School of Medicine at the University of PennsylvaniaPhiladelphia, PennsylvaniaLink to full program, including associated downloadable slidesets:https://bit.ly/2Fsq9Wv
Guest: Joshua Bauml, MD When a patient presents with non-small cell lung cancer, one question that comes up is: Could this patient have a RET fusion? Here to explore how we can answer that question is Dr. Joshua Bauml, medical oncologist and Assistant Professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman School of Medicine.
Guest: Joshua Bauml, MD Tune in to hear medical oncologist Dr. Joshua Bauml from the University of Pennsylvania explain the difference between RET fusions and RET point mutations and how they each affect our treatment approach.
Guest: Joshua Bauml, MD When a patient presents with non-small cell lung cancer, one question that comes up is: Could this patient have a RET fusion? Here to explore how we can answer that question is Dr. Joshua Bauml, medical oncologist and Assistant Professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman School of Medicine.
Guest: Joshua Bauml, MD Now that there are more targeted therapies available for metastatic non-small cell lung cancer, what are the best practices for evaluating our patients? Dr. Joshua Bauml elaborates on the opportunities and challenges faced when testing for oncogenic drivers in non-small cell lung cancer.
Guest: Joshua Bauml, MD When a patient with non-small cell lung cancer harboring a molecular driver alteration develops resistance to their therapy, it’s important that we identify what the source of that resistance is, as Dr. Joshua Bauml from the University of Pennsylvania explains.
Guest: Joshua Bauml, MD The COVID-19 pandemic has presented a unique and difficult problem for clinicians and patients alike. Here to share how he’s continuing treatment for his patients with non-small cell lung cancer in the era of COVID-19 is Dr. Joshua Bauml, a medical oncologist and Assistant Professor at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania.
Guest: Joshua Bauml, MD Tune in to hear medical oncologist Dr. Joshua Bauml from the University of Pennsylvania explain the difference between RET fusions and RET point mutations and how they each affect our treatment approach.
Guest: Joshua Bauml, MD Now that there are more targeted therapies available for metastatic non-small cell lung cancer, what are the best practices for evaluating our patients? Dr. Joshua Bauml elaborates on the opportunities and challenges faced when testing for oncogenic drivers in non-small cell lung cancer.
Guest: Joshua Bauml, MD The COVID-19 pandemic has presented a unique and difficult problem for clinicians and patients alike. Here to share how he’s continuing treatment for his patients with non-small cell lung cancer in the era of COVID-19 is Dr. Joshua Bauml, a medical oncologist and Assistant Professor at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania.
Guest: Joshua Bauml, MD When a patient with non-small cell lung cancer harboring a molecular driver alteration develops resistance to their therapy, it’s important that we identify what the source of that resistance is, as Dr. Joshua Bauml from the University of Pennsylvania explains.
Oncologists Dr. Andrew Robinson and Dr. Joshua Bauml, in conversation at the 2019 Eastern Canadian Oncology Opinion Series, discuss their experience with the changing landscapes in cancer care.
GRACE is happy to present the 9th video in our series ASCO 2016 Head and Neck Roundtable, Treating Head and Neck Cancer. Featuring Jared Weiss, MD, Joshua Bauml, MD, and Tanguy Seiwert, MD, this roundtable discussion, moderated by Dr. Weiss, highlights intriguing discussions regarding head and neck cancers from ASCO 2016. Drs. Weiss, Bauml and Seiwert discuss the topic of whether there are less toxic alternatives to the extreme regimen.
GRACE is happy to present the 8th video in our series ASCO 2016 Head and Neck Roundtable, Treating Head and Neck Cancer. Featuring Jared Weiss, MD, Joshua Bauml, MD, and Tanguy Seiwert, MD, this roundtable discussion, moderated by Dr. Weiss, highlights intriguing discussions regarding head and neck cancers from ASCO 2016. Drs. Weiss, Bauml and Seiwert discuss the promising early data for the oral inhibitor Buparlisib.
GRACE is happy to present the 8th video in our series ASCO 2016 Head and Neck Roundtable, Treating Head and Neck Cancer. Featuring Jared Weiss, MD, Joshua Bauml, MD, and Tanguy Seiwert, MD, this roundtable discussion, moderated by Dr. Weiss, highlights intriguing discussions regarding head and neck cancers from ASCO 2016. Drs. Weiss, Bauml and Seiwert discuss the promising early data for the oral inhibitor Buparlisib.
GRACE is happy to present the 9th video in our series ASCO 2016 Head and Neck Roundtable, Treating Head and Neck Cancer. Featuring Jared Weiss, MD, Joshua Bauml, MD, and Tanguy Seiwert, MD, this roundtable discussion, moderated by Dr. Weiss, highlights intriguing discussions regarding head and neck cancers from ASCO 2016. Drs. Weiss, Bauml and Seiwert discuss the topic of whether there are less toxic alternatives to the extreme regimen.
GRACE is happy to present the 8th video in our series ASCO 2016 Head and Neck Roundtable, Treating Head and Neck Cancer. Featuring Jared Weiss, MD, Joshua Bauml, MD, and Tanguy Seiwert, MD, this roundtable discussion, moderated by Dr. Weiss, highlights intriguing discussions regarding head and neck cancers from ASCO 2016. Drs. Weiss, Bauml and Seiwert discuss the promising early data for the oral inhibitor Buparlisib.
GRACE is happy to present the 9th video in our series ASCO 2016 Head and Neck Roundtable, Treating Head and Neck Cancer. Featuring Jared Weiss, MD, Joshua Bauml, MD, and Tanguy Seiwert, MD, this roundtable discussion, moderated by Dr. Weiss, highlights intriguing discussions regarding head and neck cancers from ASCO 2016. Drs. Weiss, Bauml and Seiwert discuss the topic of whether there are less toxic alternatives to the extreme regimen.
7th video in our series ASCO 2016 Head and Neck Roundtable, featuring Jared Weiss, MD, Joshua Bauml, MD, and Tanguy Seiwert, MD. Dr. Weiss moderates the discussion regarding ASCO 2016 HN RT-Using Immunotherapy as First-Line Treatment and in Combinations.
7th video in our series ASCO 2016 Head and Neck Roundtable, featuring Jared Weiss, MD, Joshua Bauml, MD, and Tanguy Seiwert, MD. Dr. Weiss moderates the discussion regarding ASCO 2016 HN RT-Using Immunotherapy as First-Line Treatment and in Combinations.
7th video in our series ASCO 2016 Head and Neck Roundtable, featuring Jared Weiss, MD, Joshua Bauml, MD, and Tanguy Seiwert, MD. Dr. Weiss moderates the discussion regarding ASCO 2016 HN RT-Using Immunotherapy as First-Line Treatment and in Combinations.
6th video in our series ASCO 2016 Head and Neck Roundtable, featuring Jared Weiss, MD, Joshua Bauml, MD, and Tanguy Seiwert, MD. Dr. Weiss moderates the discussion regarding keynote 55: Pembrolizumab for heavily pre-treated patients.
6th video in our series ASCO 2016 Head and Neck Roundtable, featuring Jared Weiss, MD, Joshua Bauml, MD, and Tanguy Seiwert, MD. Dr. Weiss moderates the discussion regarding keynote 55: Pembrolizumab for heavily pre-treated patients.
6th video in our series ASCO 2016 Head and Neck Roundtable, featuring Jared Weiss, MD, Joshua Bauml, MD, and Tanguy Seiwert, MD. Dr. Weiss moderates the discussion regarding keynote 55: Pembrolizumab for heavily pre-treated patients.
Dr Bauml speaks with ecancertv at ASCO 2016 to discuss the first findings of KEYNOTE 055, a trial for PD-L1/2 blocking pembrolizumab for patients with recurrent or metastatic head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (R/M HNSCC). Pembrolizumab showed promising anti-tumour activity in earlier KEYSTONE 012 results, which are confirmed in this setting with an overall recovery rate of 18% and a stable disease rate of 18%. Dr Bauml discusses the impact of these findings for those whom platinum and cetuximab therapy had failed, the wider aspects of checkpoint inhibitory therapy, and next steps for the trial.
GRACE is happy to present the 3rd video in our series ASCO 2016 Head and Neck Roundtable, Treating Head and Neck Cancer. Featuring Jared Weiss, MD, Joshua Bauml, MD, and Tanguy Seiwert, MD, this roundtable discussion, moderated by Dr. Weiss, highlights intriguing discussions regarding head and neck cancers from ASCO 2016. Drs. Weiss, Bauml and Seiwert discuss the using biomarkers in immunotherapy.
GRACE is happy to present the 3rd video in our series ASCO 2016 Head and Neck Roundtable, Treating Head and Neck Cancer. Featuring Jared Weiss, MD, Joshua Bauml, MD, and Tanguy Seiwert, MD, this roundtable discussion, moderated by Dr. Weiss, highlights intriguing discussions regarding head and neck cancers from ASCO 2016. Drs. Weiss, Bauml and Seiwert discuss the using biomarkers in immunotherapy.
GRACE is happy to present the 3rd video in our series ASCO 2016 Head and Neck Roundtable, Treating Head and Neck Cancer. Featuring Jared Weiss, MD, Joshua Bauml, MD, and Tanguy Seiwert, MD, this roundtable discussion, moderated by Dr. Weiss, highlights intriguing discussions regarding head and neck cancers from ASCO 2016. Drs. Weiss, Bauml and Seiwert discuss the using biomarkers in immunotherapy.