
The MAINTAIN trial was designed to assess endocrine therapy with or without ribociclib after progression on a CDK4/6 inhibitor in patients with unresectable or metastatic hormone receptor–positive, HER2-negative breast cancer.

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The MAINTAIN trial was designed to assess endocrine therapy with or without ribociclib after progression on a CDK4/6 inhibitor in patients with unresectable or metastatic hormone receptor–positive, HER2-negative breast cancer.

A breast cancer expert shares the current first-line standard of care for patients with HER2-positive breast cancer and presents scenarios where the standard treatment approach may not be appropriate.

Joyce O’Shaughnessy, MD shares an overview of the HER2-positive breast cancer landscape, focusing on prognosis and risk of recurrence for patients with early-stage and metastatic breast cancer.

Closing out their review of tazemetostat in R/R FL, participants consider its practical use in practice alongside other novel treatment modalities.

Dr Larry Anderson summarizes the study design and updated data of the MAIA trial, and Dr Rebecca Silbermann compares it against the SWOG 0777 trial.

Andrew Cowan, MD, presents the results of the ENDURANCE study comparing two triplet regimens in transplant-ineligible MM.

A brief review of both neoadjuvant and adjuvant treatment options available to patients with localized bladder cancer.

Opening their discussion on urothelial carcinoma management, panelists highlight risk factors, symptoms, and staging practices in this setting.

Tiffany Sia, MD, spoke about major takeaways from her study and how to implement procedural interventions for patients with gynecologic malignancies who have oligoprogression.

Two subject matter experts discuss keystone trials supporting the use of Selinexor in patients with R/R MM, each with unique dosing structures and different selinexor-based combinations.

Opening their discussion on relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma, Joshua Richter, MD and Peter Forsberg, MD review options for treatment sequencing, initiating treatment, and the mechanism of action for selinexor.

Data from the phase 3 ATHENA-MONO study indicated that maintenance rucaparib yielded progression-free survival benefit vs placebo across all subgroups in a population of patients newly diagnosed ovarian cancer, according to David O’Malley, MD.

At 2022 IGCS, Tiffany Sia, MD, spoke about using procedural interventions to treat patients with gynecologic malignancies who have oligoprogression on treatment with immune checkpoint inhibitors.

Caitlin Costello, MD, describes how to determine if a patient with MM is transplant-ineligible, and some factors to take into consideration when choosing a treatment regimen.

The panel explains their opinions on induction therapy approaches for high-risk and standard-risk patients with NDMM.

Drs Cheson and Park briefly review previous data from the E7438-G000-101 trial on tazemetostat in patients with wild-type or EZH2-mutant R/R FL, and then describe the findings of a more recent 2022 propensity score-matched analysis of the data that was intended to address baseline clinical differences between the two patient populations.

Drs Nooka and Pianko discuss how they measure a successful treatment response in patients with transplant-eligible multiple myeloma after induction therapy.

An oncologist muses on the potential of real-world data in evaluating the use of a quadruplet regimen for newly diagnosed transplant-eligible multiple myeloma.

In terms of tumor control, treatment with cabozantinib and atezolizumab led to an overall response rate of 19% among patients with advanced non–small cell lung cancer, according to Joel W. Neal, MD, PhD.

Jonathan S. Zager, MD, discussed the use of percutaneous hepatic perfusion vs best alternative care for patients with hepatic-dominant ocular melanoma analyzed in the phase 3 FOCUS trial.

In an interview, Kami J. Maddocks, MD, details therapies that may shake up the standard of care in lymphoma going forward.

At 2022 ASCO, Matthew Schabath, PhD, discussed the COLORS training designed to improve cultural sensitivity amongst oncologists treating patients within the LGBTQ+ community.

PARP inhibitors like rucaparib should be considered to treat all kinds of patients, including those who have deleterious mutations and HRD, according to Amit Oza, MD, MBBS, FRCPC.

Catherine A. Shu, MD, spoke about the most important findings from the phase 1 CHRYSALIS-2 trial for patients with previously treated EGFR-mutant non–small cell lung cancer who are administered amivantamab plus lazertinib.

PARP inhibitors such as rucaparib appear to garner the most benefit in the early maintenance setting in patients with ovarian cancer who have less advanced disease and less heterogeneity, according to Amit Oza, MD, MBBS, FRCPC.

Best treatment approaches for patients with advanced NSCLC in the context of individualized therapy and an evolving therapeutic landscape.

Experts comment on the future of CAR T-cell therapy development and the use of dual CAR-T and CAR-T retreatment.

Drs Goy, Ip, and Leslie close out their discussion with a look at the exciting developments and future of CAR T-cell therapies in lymphoma treatment.

Key opinion leaders describe when to refer a patient with lymphoma and at what point treatments should be switched, and the evolution of T-cell engaging therapies.

Abiraterone and olaparib continued to demonstrate a positive trend in overall survival (OS) in patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer, according to Fred Saad, MD, FRCS, though he stated that longer follow-up is needed to confirm the benefit.