University of Southern California USC

USC Norris clinicians discuss cancer research results

Posted on by shirless

Heinz-Josef Lenz of the Keck School of Medicine of USC

USC Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center physician-researchers collaborated on more than 70 research projects presented at the 2012 annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) this month.

Roughly 30,000 cancer specialists from around the world attend the annual meeting to discuss the latest techniques, drugs and research in cancer care. ASCO, founded in 1964, is an offshoot of the American Association for Cancer Research dedicated to clinical oncology.

Studies discussed at the meeting, held in Chicago from June 1 to June 5, included new advances in targeted therapy; clinical trial results for prostate, ovarian, breast, brain, colorectal and other cancers; and findings that are expected to lead to better patient experiences. This year, more than 4,500 abstracts were presented or published at the meeting.

Poster presentations led by USC investigators included studies that analyzed the ability to detect other occult cancers using MRI scanning in newly diagnosed breast cancer patients (Akshara Raghavendra); pinpointed genetic differences that may explain why bevacizumab is not as effective in treating Japanese patients with gastric cancer as it is in treating Caucasian and Hispanic patients (Takeru Wakatsuki); identified the first cancer stem cell signature that may predict recurrence of prostate cancer (Adrian Fairey); and examined whether particular obesity-related gene variants might predict tumor recurrence in colon cancer (Robert Ladner).

Heinz-Josef Lenz, associate director for clinical research and co-leader of the gastrointestinal cancers program at the Norris cancer center, participated in numerous studies presented at the meeting, including an international phase III trial that found experimental drug regorafenib significantly improving overall survival in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer who have not responded to other approved therapies. The trial results are expected to change the standard of care for those patients once the Food and Drug Administration approves the drug.

David Quinn, associate professor of medicine at the Keck School of Medicine of USC and medical director of the USC Norris Cancer Hospital, presented results from a national phase III study on the efficacy of adding the experimental drug atrasentan to the standard chemotherapy regimen for advanced prostate cancer. The trial found that patients who received the drug did not live any longer or experience longer bouts of remission than patients who received a placebo and the standard chemotherapy.

Quinn also participated in prostate cancer research featured at a plenary session of the meeting. That international phase III trial suggests that, for certain men with prostate cancer, intermittent hormonal therapy may shorten survival, even though it was associated with better quality of life. The study, sponsored by the National Cancer Institute, found that men with minimal disease on intermittent therapy had a median survival of 5.2 years, compared with 7.1 years for those receiving continuous therapy.

Comments are closed.