Ep 52: COLUMBUS 7-year follow-up
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Summary
In this episode of Melanoma Matters, James tells us about his path to oncology (thank you, Emma) via John Newsom-Davis, the Jeremy Bentham pub, and Hammersmith Hospital.
Later, hosts Sapna Patel and James Larkin discuss the COLUMBUS 7-year data of targeted therapy for metastatic melanoma - treatment efficacy, toxicity, and long-term patient management. They explore the nuances of treatment strategies, the importance of biomarkers, and the challenges of monitoring long-term patients on targeted therapies.
Takeaways
Time to next therapy is a valuable metric for assessing treatment success.
Long-term treatment decisions should consider patient quality of life.
Biomarkers are crucial for determining the duration of targeted therapy.
Compliance in clinical trials may not reflect real-world scenarios.
Monitoring for long-term toxicity is necessary for patients on extended therapy.
The combination of BRAF and MEK inhibitors may improve tolerability despite the COLUMBUS study showing a higher toxicity rate in the combination arm.
Congratulations to the European colleagues who led and executed this trial.
Keywords
BRAF MEK, targeted therapy, COLUMBUS study, melanoma, treatment efficacy, toxicity, long-term care, patient management
Titles
Exploring the COLUMBUS 7-Year Data
Oncology Journeys: Personal Stories and Insights
Sound Bites
"We need to know even the low-grade toxicities."
"There's nothing wrong with improving side effects."
"Kudos to our mainland European colleagues."
Chapters
00:00 Introduction
06:12 COLUMBUS 7-Year Overview
12:15 Historical context on study arms
17:55 Long-Term Treatment Considerations
21:29 Desperate... for a Biomarker
23:43 Any insights into development of CNS disease?
30:47 Fact Check for COLUMBUS 7-Year follow-up
32:50 Time to End of Next Line of Treatment in COLUMBUS (akin to PFS2)
35:32 Toxicity & Discontinuation Rate in COLUMBUS
75 episodes