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New treatment options for those with liver cancer
New treatment options for those with liver cancer administrator 3 Views • 2 years ago

Sharon Silverman loves to travel. But after doctors in her hometown of Pensacola, Florida, diagnosed her with hepatocellular carcinoma and told her there were no treatment options, Sharon knew she had to take one more trip. Her destination: Mayo Clinic — where a unique radiation procedure opened the door to future adventures.

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Treatment Options Evolve for Patients With Desmoid Fibromatosis
Treatment Options Evolve for Patients With Desmoid Fibromatosis administrator 3 Views • 2 years ago

Neeta Somaiah, MD, an assistant professor in the Department of Sarcoma Medical Oncology at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, discusses the evolution of treatment options for patients with a unique sarcoma.

Over the last year, there haven a number of advances for the unique sarcoma desmoid fibromatosis, says Somaiah. This disease is not actually a sarcoma because it is not considered malignant, but it falls under the sarcoma category. It’s a morbid disease because patients can have local progression, although these tumors do not metastasize. Patients are usually young and have an altered quality of life due to the morbidity of the disease.

Sorafenib (Nexavar) has shown efficacy in terms of an increased response rate in a phase III clinical trial against placebo. However, the placebo-treated patients did respond in a sense that you do have to understand the biology of disease. Most patients may not need treatment and can be followed, says Somaiah. Only patients who progress require therapy.

Nirogacestat (PF-03084014) is a newer drug, which is a gamma secretase inhibitor. It attacks the basis of these desmoid tumors in decreasing fibroblast deposition, says Somaiah. It shows responses and is well tolerated among these patients. β-catenin inhibitors are also available in this treatment landscape. β-catenin is over expressed in most of these tumors because of the mutation expressed. A β-catenin inhibitor is under evaluation in a phase I trial of desmoid tumors.

For more resources and information regarding anticancer targeted therapies in sarcoma:
https://www.targetedonc.com/clinical/sarcoma

SpringWorks Therapeutics - Desmoid Tumor Awareness
SpringWorks Therapeutics - Desmoid Tumor Awareness administrator 2 Views • 2 years ago

September is Desmoid Tumor Awareness Month, and given that nearly 30% to 40% of desmoid tumors are initially misdiagnosed, partly due to a lack of awareness, it is important to raise awareness among both patient and doctor communities to better support those who may be living with these devastating tumors. Dr. James (Jim) Cassidy, MD, PhD, Chief Medical Officer at SpringWorks Therapeutics discusses desmoid tumors, also called aggressive fibromatosis or desmoid-type fibromatosis, which are rare and often debilitating and disfiguring soft-tissue tumors with no FDA-approved treatment. He also talks about how SpringWorks is working to advance a potential new treatment option for people with desmoid tumors.

#SpringWorksTherapeutics #DesmoidTumorAwareness

Dr. James (Jim) Cassidy is Chief Medical Officer of SpringWorks. He has over 30 years of experience in oncology as an academic physician-scientist and a drug development leader in both biotechnology and pharmaceutical companies, with experience spanning from early-stage research to translational and clinical development to post-marketing medical affairs strategy and lifecycle management. Prior to joining SpringWorks, he was Vice President of Oncology Strategic Program Direction at Regeneron Pharmaceuticals. Prior to this role, Jim was Corporate Vice President of Translational Development at Celgene, where he oversaw translational science efforts for the company’s entire portfolio of programs addressing both hematological malignancies and solid tumors. Before that, he was Vice President of Oncology at Bristol-Myers Squibb, where he was responsible for all oncology assets from development candidate nomination through clinical proof-of-concept studies, including biomarkers and translational research, and was closely involved with late-stage development, commercial, and business development efforts as well. Prior to Bristol-Myers Squibb, Jim held several roles of increasing responsibility at Hoffmann La-Roche, including Global Head of Translational Research for Oncology and Acting Head of the Oncology Therapy Area. Before joining Roche, Jim had been a leading academic physician-scientist, most recently having served as Professor of Oncology, Head of the Department of Cancer Research and Head of the Division of Cancer Sciences and Molecular Pathology at the University of Glasgow in Scotland. Jim received his medical degree and doctorate from the University of Glasgow.

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