Dr. Gradishar on Enriching Targeted Therapy Trials

Video

William J. Gradishar, MD, from the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, describes the need to enrich the patient population in a clinical trial that is investigating a novel targeted therapy.

William J. Gradishar, MD, Director, Maggie Daley Center for Women's Cancer Care, Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, describes the need to enrich the patient population in a clinical trial that is investigating a novel targeted therapy.

Gradishar believes that trials investigating novel targeted therapies have the potential to have much higher success rates than traditional clinical trials. Enriching trials based on known driver mutations and pathways, which the treatment is meant to target, drives success and lowers the number of trials that fail.

As an example, Gradishar notes that examining a targeted therapy in 50 tumors with 30 different activated pathways may lower the perceived effectiveness of the targeted agent. However, if a trial is enriched based on a pathway or mutation, the agent will be far more likely to achieve its goal.

Related Videos
Jeremy M. Pantin, MD, clinical director, Adult Transplant and Cellular Therapy Program, TriStar Centennial Medical Center, bone marrow transplant physician, Sarah Cannon Research Institute
Maria Hafez, MD, assistant professor, breast and sarcoma medical oncologist, director, Clinical Breast Cancer Research, Sidney Kimmel Medical College, Thomas Jefferson University
Zeynep Eroglu, MD
Sundar Jagannath, MBBS, director, Center of Excellence for Multiple Myeloma, professor of medicine (hematology and medical oncology), The Tisch Cancer Institute, Mount Sinai
Akriti Jain, MD
Raj Singh, MD
Gottfried Konecny, MD
Karim Chamie, MD, associate professor, urology, the University of California, Los Angeles
Mike Lattanzi, MD, medical oncologist, Texas Oncology
Ramez N. Eskander, MD