
Advances in perioperative targeted therapies may enable organ preservation and significantly enhance outcomes for patients with gastric cancers.

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Advances in perioperative targeted therapies may enable organ preservation and significantly enhance outcomes for patients with gastric cancers.

A lot of James B. Yu’s research begins with something as simple as a question from a patient regarding what aspects of treatment may be most beneficial.

Panelists discuss how next-generation sequencing is transforming precision oncology by enabling comprehensive genomic profiling that identifies actionable mutations, guides targeted therapy selection, and facilitates clinical trial enrollment while acknowledging challenges in data interpretation and implementation across diverse health care settings.

Panelists discuss how sequencing different therapies and personalizing care for their patients requires careful consideration of disease characteristics, prior treatment response, comorbidities, toxicity profiles, and patient preferences to optimize outcomes and quality of life.

Panelists discuss how recent clinical trials have shaped treatment algorithms for metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC) by establishing the superiority of immunotherapy–tyrosine kinase inhibitor combinations over single-agent therapies across various risk groups.

Panelists discuss how immunotherapy–tyrosine kinase inhibitor (IO-TKI) combination regimens have revolutionized the treatment landscape for metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC) by offering improved response rates, survival outcomes, and quality of life compared with traditional monotherapies.

Panelists discuss how multidisciplinary approaches involving surgical resection, active surveillance, and targeted therapies have evolved in managing localized renal cell carcinoma, with consideration of tumor size, patient comorbidities, and preservation of renal function guiding individualized treatment decisions.

Panelists discuss how recent data from the KEYNOTE-564 trial has changed their approaches to treating patients with renal cell carcinoma by implementing adjuvant pembrolizumab therapy for high-risk patients following nephrectomy, citing improved disease-free survival outcomes.

In radiation oncology, renal cancers are experiencing the greatest levels of change and growth, according to James B. Yu.

Panelists discuss key factors in chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CAR T) sequencing for relapsed diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, including manufacturing success rates, production turnaround time, and real-world efficacy data. Treatment decisions weigh bridging therapy needs, patient fitness, and center-specific experience with different CAR T products and their reliability.

Experts discuss the clinical implications from CLEAR post hoc analyses, focusing on IMDC risk assessments and sequencing strategies.

Experts discuss optimizing renal cell carcinoma treatment strategies across the care continuum, from initial response to long-term outcomes.

Panelists discuss the comparison between clinical trial results and real-world outcomes for chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CAR T) therapies like liso-cel and axi-cel. Clinical trials have shown promising efficacy and manageable safety profiles for both therapies in treating certain blood cancers. However, real-world evidence continues to emerge through ongoing clinical use and registry data collection.

Endocrine therapy as a treatment for breast cancer showed similar long-lasting physical health decline data as what was seen in women who did not have breast cancer.

“The better the systemic therapy, immunotherapy, or targeted therapy, the more important a non-invasive, local treatment will be,” James B. Yu stated.

Experts discuss clinical features and risk factors in navigating the decision between autologous stem cell transplant (ASCT) and chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CAR T) therapy for patients with relapsed/refractory large B-cell lymphoma (R/R LBCL).

Experts discuss how to approach prognosis and treatment goals with a patient, considering their family history of gastric cancer and advanced-stage disease.

Experts discuss how biomarker testing results should be reassessed or expanded upon disease progression and how they guide the selection of second-line therapies or clinical trial enrollment.

Experts discuss the impact of manufacturing and treatment timing on patient outcomes for chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CAR T) therapy in relapsed/refractory large B-cell lymphoma (R/R LBCL).

Key opinion leaders discuss patient experiences with an oral chemotherapy regimen, highlighting benefits like treatment autonomy, challenges such as pill burden and gastrointestinal toxicities, and the importance of proactive side effect management and patient education.

Experts discuss treatment options for HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer following progression on trastuzumab deruxtecan (T-DXd), weighing real-world data on tucatinib-capecitabine-trastuzumab versus T-DM1, considering factors such as resistance mechanisms, administration preferences, and side effect management.

As a radiation oncologist, James B. Yu, MD, MHS, FASTRO, works with urologists, medical oncologists, radiologists, pathologists, physicists, and health services researchers.

The Oncology Brothers, discuss how bladder cancer treatments commonly cause adverse effects, including frequent urination, painful urination, blood in urine, fatigue, nausea, hair loss, decreased immunity, diarrhea, skin irritation, and bladder inflammation. More severe effects may include organ damage, sexual dysfunction, and reduced fertility.

The Oncology Brothers, discuss how second-line treatment for bladder cancer typically involves immune checkpoint inhibitors (pembrolizumab, atezolizumab) after failure of platinum-based chemotherapy. For patients who are ineligible for immunotherapy, alternative chemotherapy regimens or targeted therapies may be used based on molecular profiling.

The Oncology Brothers, discuss how advances in bladder cancer management have demonstrated significant clinical benefits by strategically combining chemotherapy and immunotherapy, which leverages cytotoxic agents to directly target malignant cells while simultaneously activating immune-mediated tumor recognition, as well as checkpoint inhibitors that have shown promise in maintaining disease control after initial chemotherapy response, especially in metastatic settings.

The Oncology Brothers, discuss recent clinical trials for early muscle-invasive bladder cancer that have shown promising results with neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by radical cystectomy as standard of care, immunotherapy trials using checkpoint inhibitors that have demonstrated improved pathological complete response rates, and bladder-sparing approaches combining maximal TURBT with chemoradiation that have shown comparable outcomes to cystectomy in select patients.

The Oncology Brothers, discuss how the definition of muscle-invasive bladder cancer is defined as when the cancer has invaded the muscle. They also highlight recommended treatment methods, including chemotherapy, immunotherapy, and aggressive surgery.

Experts discuss the impact of tumor burden on postprogression survival, exploring strategies to optimize responses in renal cell carcinoma.

Experts discuss insights from the CLEAR trial on lenvatinib plus pembrolizumab, focusing on depth of response and clinical outcomes in advanced renal cell carcinoma.

Panelists discuss the efficacy and safety of chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CAR T) therapy in relapsed/refractory diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (R/R DLBCL) and compare the data collected from the TRANSFORM and ZUMA-7 trials, including information regarding the patient control group, patient population prior response, crossovers of both trials, and vein-to-vein time.