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Dr. Bob Doebele from the University of Colorado offers his perspective on whether targeted therapies will be able to applied to broader populations of patients with advanced NSCLC than those primarily with minimal smoking histories and an adenocarcinoma.
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Drs. Ross Camidge and Corey Langer discuss which patients with advanced NSCLC they would recommend should have a repeat biopsy if their initial tissue sample doesn't have sufficient tissue for molecular testing.
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Dr. Sarah Goldberg reviews how she discusses the potential advantages and disadvantages waiting on molecular marker results and sometimes seeking additional tissue in patients with advanced NSCLC.
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Dr. Karen Kelly describes her thought process on which molecular markers are those clearly indicated for patients with advanced NSCLC, as well as whether smoking status factors into her approach.
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Here's the next installment of the panel discussion on molecular markers from the webinar in Santa Monica with Drs. Charlie Rudin, Alice Shaw, David Spigel, and Glen Goss. We continued our animated discussion on the promise as well as the pitfalls of broadening the use of molecular markers in routine practice of managing patients with advanced NSCLC.
The question of "who should be tested?" for an epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) mutation and potentially other molecular markers is among the most timely questions in lung cancer management today. The field has changed dramatically since the initial description of the mutation, associated with a high probability of an impressive and often prolonged response to EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) therapy, back in 2004.
The following is the edited transcript and figures from a webinar presentation made by Dr. Heather Wakelee, medical oncologist and Associate Professor at Stanford Cancer Center, on Never-Smokers and Gender Differences in Lung Cancer.
The third and final part of my conversation with Drs. Tom Hensing from North Shore Health System in Chicago and David Jackman from Dana Farber Cancer Institute in Boston covered a presentation of an Asian never-smoking woman with an advanced lung adenocarcinoma, the demographic picture most closely associated with potentially but not necessarily having an EGFR mutation or ALK rearrangement.
Welcome to the new CancerGRACE.org! Explore our fresh look and improved features—take a quick tour to see what’s new.