Adjuvant Tarceva for Patients with Resected Early Stage EGFR Mutation-Positive NSCLC: Dr. Neal on the SELECT Trial
Our Collection of ASCO 2012 Lung Cancer Highlights Podcasts
Second Line Chemo or Tarceva: Which is Better for Advanced NSCLC Patients without an EGFR Mutation?
Re-Treatment After Discontinuing an EGFR Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor: Could this be Better than Retreating Beyond Progression?
In my last post, I described the concept of treating with a targeted therapy like an EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) or ALK inhibitor at the time of acquired resistance.
Radiation to Address Cells with Resistance to Targeted Therapies
Introduction
Thank you to member Craig for asking some excellent questions in response to my Highlights of 2011 webinar. Thank you also to Dr. West, who emailed me to comment more on the idea of radiation for cells with acquired resistance.
We’ve spoken at length about EGFR and related mutations such as EML4/ALK and ROS1 on GRACE. For those who are not familiar with these subjects, I will refer you to my webinar for a summary on the most recent data on EGFR, EML4/ALK and ROS1:
2011 Highlights in Lung Cancer, by Dr. Jared Weiss, Part 1: The EGFR Axis
Apologies for the long wait since our own Dr. Weiss's upbeat and thoughtful review of the leading stories about lung cancer in 2011. Dr. Weiss covered a lot of ground in his presentation that was followed by a Q&A session, so we've broken that up into several short pieces that cover a few highlights at a time.
DC: A Patient with EGFR Mutation, Leptomeningeal Disease, and Good Treatment Results with Pulse-Dose Tarceva
I met DC in April. He was 62 years old and was principal of a Montessori school. He had smoked a half pack a day for three years in college (which makes him a former/light smoker in my book) and was in fairly good health until the December before when he developed a cough. His cough didn't get better and thanks to all the talk about lung cancer screening, he requested a chest x-ray. The x-ray revealed a mass, which led to CT scanning.
Quick Update from ASCO
I apologize if it seems that the updates about ASCO have been slow in coming. This is mostly because the lung cancer program this year has most of the higher profile presentations occurring in the second half of the meeting, which we're just getting into. And, truth be told, this isn't going to be a blockbuster year for developments in lung cancer. But let's review what we've found out about thus far.