
Gynecologic Oncology
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Frontline Maintenance Rucaparib Significantly Improves PFS in Ovarian Cancer Irrespective of Biomarker Status
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Durvalumab given concurrently with chemoradiation was not found to significantly improve progression-free survival vs chemoradiation alone in patients with locally advanced cervical cancer, missing the primary end point of the phase 3 CALLA trial.

Oncologists debate the proper treatment of a patient with a grade 2 endometrial carcinoma tumor.

Dr David O’Malley explains when to add and remove trastuzumab during endometrial carcinoma therapy.

An independent data monitoring committee has recommended that the phase 3 INNOVATE-3 trial exploring the safety and efficacy of tumor treating fields in combination with paclitaxel in patients with platinum-resistant ovarian cancer proceed to the final analysis.

Jyoti Mayadev, MD, discusses the phase 1 NRG-GY017 trial evaluating atezolizumab given as an immune primer or concurrently with extended field chemoradiation in patients with locally advanced, node-positive cervical cancer.

The combination of abemaciclib and letrozole produced encouraging responses with an acceptable toxicity profile in patients with estrogen receptor–positive, recurrent or metastatic endometrial cancer with endometrioid histology, according to data from a phase 2 trial.

Vicky Makker, MD, leads a discussion of efficacy data from the KEYNOTE-775 trial on combination lenvatinib/pembrolizumab in patients with endometrial cancer.

A comprehensive overview of first-line treatment options for patients with advanced endometrial cancer.

The FDA has approved pembrolizumab for use as a single agent in the treatment of patients with advanced endometrial carcinoma that is microsatellite instability–high or mismatch repair deficient, and who experienced disease progression following previous systemic therapy in any setting and are not candidates for curative surgery or radiation.

Ursula A. Matulonis, MD, discusses the results of the phase 3 SORAYA trial in platinum-resistant ovarian cancer.

Oliva Lara, MD, discusses the connection between molecular differences and disparities in cancer care in uterine serous carcinomas, as examined in a retrospective cohort study.

When maintenance niraparib was administered at an individualized starting dose, it resulted in a statistically significant and clinically meaningful improvement in progression-free survival vs placebo in patients with newly diagnosed ovarian cancer, irrespective of biomarker status.

Maintenance selinexor monotherapy was found to improve progression-free survival over placebo in patients with advanced or recurrent endometrial cancer.

The use of intraperitoneal carboplatin with paclitaxel improved progression-free survival, but not overall survival, vs intravenous chemotherapy in patients with epithelial ovarian, fallopian tube, or primary peritoneal cancer.

Mirvetuximab soravtansine was found to produce clinically meaningful antitumor activity with acceptable safety and tolerability in patients with platinum-resistant ovarian cancer and high folate receptor–alpha (FRα) expression.

Atezolizumab given as an immune primer or concurrently with extended field chemoradiation demonstrated favorable progression-free survival and few dose-limiting toxicities, with evidence of T-cell clonal expansion in the tumors and peripheral blood of patients with locally advanced, node-positive cervical cancer.

Neoadjuvant niraparib induced strong results for patients with BRCA-mutant, homologous repair deficient–positive advanced resectable ovarian cancer.

Niraparib in combination with bevacizumab was efficacious following 1 line of platinum-based chemotherapy among patients with newly diagnosed advanced ovarian cancer, regardless of biomarker status.

Intravenous chemotherapy plus bevacizumab did not demonstrate differences in progression-free and overall survival compared with intraperitoneal chemotherapy plus bevacizumab in patients with advanced ovarian cancer with no macroscopic disease.

Single-agent olaparib generated similar overall survival compared with non-platinum chemotherapy in heavily pretreated patients with platinum-sensitive, relapsed ovarian cancer with BRCA mutations, according to the final analysis of the phase 3 SOLO3 trial.

Patient-reported outcome data support a favorable benefit/risk profile for the combination of pembrolizumab plus chemotherapy, with or without bevacizumab, in patients with persistent, recurrent, or metastatic cervical cancer.

Mae Zakhour, MD, discusses the utilization of tisotumab vedotin-tftv in cervical cancer.

Marina Frimer, MD, FACOG, FACS, discusses the exploration of maintenance with niraparib in a phase 2 trial in patients with advanced or platinum-sensitive recurrent uterine serious carcinoma

Patients with platinum-sensitive relapsed ovarian cancer without a germline BRCA1 and/or BRCA2 mutation treated with maintenance olaparib who achieved long-term progression-free survival more often had homologous recombination deficiency-positive tumors compared with those who experienced a short-term PFS.

Maintenance therapy with olaparib will be examined in patients with BRCA1/2 wild-type advanced ovarian cancer who responded to first-line, platinum-based chemotherapy in the phase 3 MONO-OLA1 trial.













































