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Dr. Suresh Ramalingam is a longtime friend of mine and a national leader in the field of lung cancer. He is the Director of the Lung Cancer Program at the Winship Cancer Institute at Emory University in Atlanta, and he was kind enough to sit down with me to talk about his perspective on the current optimal treatment for patients with stage III, or locally advanced, NSCLC. We also spoke about managing metastatic disease, which will be covered in a separate podcast. It's an audio interview, but if people watch the video version, there are some figures synchronized with the discussion.
I recently had the opportunity to sit down with Dr. Toni Wozniak, Moedical Oncologist and lung cancer expert at the Barbara A. Karmanos Cancer Center at Wayne State University in Detroit, MI. We covered several topics, including SCLC, the subject of this podcast. It is an audio interview but includes a few figures that are synchronized with the audio on the video version, or you can download the pdf of the figures and just follow along with the audio.
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I recently received a question on the Q&A Forum about the use of cisplatin vs. carboplatin in SCLC. In contrast to the smoldering debate about cisplatin vs. carboplatin in NSCLC that I described in a recent post, there's been very little study and not as much debate about SCLC.
The question of whether to use cisplatin or carboplatin in our "platinum-based chemotherapy doublets" that are the most common treatment for the first-line treatment of NSCLC has been a smoldering debate in lung cancer for more than a decade. Although at this point carboplatin is by far and away more commonly used than the generally less tolerable cisplatin, whether these are completely identical in their efficacy isn't entirely clear. Nobody questions that they're very close.
So far, I've only written a few introductory posts on mesothelioma, but there were some interesting presentations at ASCO 2007 about the topic. One described the results of an expanded access protocol (EAP), which is when a company gives free access to a drug that is not yet commercially available (generally in exchange for participation in a data-collection study).
Welcome to the new CancerGRACE.org! Explore our fresh look and improved features—take a quick tour to see what’s new.