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Lowell B Anthony, MD, FACP

Articles by Lowell B Anthony, MD, FACP

Panelists discuss how the future of neuroendocrine tumor (NET) treatment looks promising with new agents in development including nonpeptide drug conjugates, immune therapies, chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T approaches, and improved tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs), emphasizing the importance of thoughtful sequencing, patient access, and maintaining focus on the individual patient experience.

Panelists discuss how the CABINET trial enrolled nearly 300 patients with well-differentiated neuroendocrine tumors (NETs) (mostly grade 1-2) who were heavily pretreated, demonstrating cabozantinib’s superiority over placebo with over 8 months progression-free survival vs 3 months, with manageable toxicity and effective dose reduction strategies.

Panelists discuss how the treatment landscape has been shaped by landmark trials including the RADIANT studies (everolimus for pancreatic and other neuroendocrine tumors [NETs]), sunitinib studies for pancreatic NETs, the NETTER-1 trial (lutetium-177 dotatate), and capecitabine/temozolomide data, providing multiple targeted therapy options that have dramatically improved patient outcomes.

Panelists discuss how treatment decisions after progression on first-line somatostatin analog therapy must consider disease location, symptom burden, quality of life impact, and patient comorbidities when choosing between options like peptide receptor radionuclide therapy (PRRT), targeted therapies (mTOR inhibitors, tyrosine kinase inhibitors), or local-regional treatments.

Panelists discuss how initial treatment recommendations require a comprehensive framework considering tumor site of origin, symptom burden, disease grade and distribution, somatostatin receptor status, and patient factors, with somatostatin analogs typically serving as first-line therapy for appropriate patients based on data from the PROMID and CLARINET trials.

Panelists discuss how the understanding and treatment of neuroendocrine tumors (NETs) has evolved dramatically over the past 3 to 4 decades, with incidence rising to nearly 200,000 in the population and survival extending from just a few years to 8 to 10-plus years through advances from single-agent somatostatin analogs to targeted therapies.

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