Expert review of anticancer therapy
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Expert Rev Anticancer Ther · Apr 2017
ReviewRadiosurgery/stereotactic radiotherapy in combination with immunotherapy and targeted agents for melanoma brain metastases.
The clinical landscape of advanced melanoma drastically changed after the introduction of both targeted therapies and immunotherapy. This rapid development in systemic therapies led to a change in the management of patients with brain metastases, with the subsequent need to re-assess the role of local therapies, in particular stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS). ⋯ A combination of targeted therapy and immunotherapy, in different sequences, has been shown to be feasible and well tolerable, on the basis of retrospective reports. Additional data from ongoing prospective trials are however needed to confirm or not these findings and better explore the efficacy of the combination.
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Expert Rev Anticancer Ther · Apr 2017
ReviewRadiosurgery/stereotactic radiotherapy in combination with immunotherapy and targeted agents for melanoma brain metastases.
The clinical landscape of advanced melanoma drastically changed after the introduction of both targeted therapies and immunotherapy. This rapid development in systemic therapies led to a change in the management of patients with brain metastases, with the subsequent need to re-assess the role of local therapies, in particular stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS). ⋯ A combination of targeted therapy and immunotherapy, in different sequences, has been shown to be feasible and well tolerable, on the basis of retrospective reports. Additional data from ongoing prospective trials are however needed to confirm or not these findings and better explore the efficacy of the combination.
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Expert Rev Anticancer Ther · Feb 2017
Review Comparative StudyAdvanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) with activating EGFR mutations: first-line treatment with afatinib and other EGFR TKIs.
Based on the results of several randomised controlled trials, epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) have now replaced platinum-based chemotherapy as first-line therapy for advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) harboring an activating EGFR mutation. Areas covered: This review describes the EGFR pathway and its abnormalities in NSCLC and discusses the differential molecular and clinical activity of first and next-generation EGFR TKIs in the first-line treatment of tumors with an activating EGFR mutation, with a special focus on the second-generation agent afatinib. A comprehensive literature search was conducted to identify all relevant clinical trials including abstracts from most recent meetings to provide up-to-date information on this topic. ⋯ In contrast, clinical trials of afatinib (LUX-Lung 3 and 6) demonstrated a significant OS advantage over a platinum doublet, particularly in patients whose tumors harbored the Del19 mutation. Moreover, in a head-to-head comparison afatinib improved efficacy versus gefitinib in patients with common EGFR mutations across a range of clinically relevant endpoints. Afatinib is therefore a promising first-line option in these patients.
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Expert Rev Anticancer Ther · Dec 2016
ReviewThe role of alectinib in the treatment of advanced ALK-rearranged non-small-cell lung cancer.
The identification of anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) gene rearrangements in subsets of non-small cell lung cancer patients has provided with unparalleled opportunities to hinder the progression of this disease through targeting the activity of these specific molecules. Unfortunately most patients develop disease progression in less than a year of treatment with crizotinib, the first-generation ALK-inhibitor. ⋯ Expert commentary: Second generation ALK inhibitors as alectinib and ceritinib can overcome crizotinib-resistant mutations and improve central nervous system control. Novel third-generation inhibitors and combination of agents give hope of achieving an even longer disease control in the next decade.
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The treatment of melanoma is evolving rapidly over the past few years. Areas covered: We conducted a comprehensive review of the literature on the role of nivolumab in melanoma Expert commentary: Nivolumab is approved by FDA and EMA for the treatment of patients with metastatic melanoma. Nivolumab is superior to chemotherapy and to ipilimumab in previously untreated patients and to chemotherapy in ipilimumab pre-treated patients. ⋯ Definitive survival data on this combination are pending and the selection of patients most likely to benefit from this combination and its pharmacoeconomics are to be elucidated. Prospectively validated predictive markers are lacking. Of particular interest are immune-related adverse events which should be managed according to published guidelines.