| Literature DB >> 27376139 |
Ashish M Kamat1, Piyush Agarwal2, Trinity Bivalacqua3, Stephanie Chisolm4, Sia Daneshmand5, James H Doroshow2, Jason A Efstathiou6, Matthew Galsky7, Gopa Iyer8, Wassim Kassouf9, Jay Shah1, John Taylor10, Stephen B Williams1, Diane Zipursky Quale4, Jonathan E Rosenberg8.
Abstract
The 10th Annual Bladder Cancer Think Tank was hosted by the Bladder Cancer Advocacy Network and brought together a multidisciplinary group of clinicians, researchers, representatives and Industry to advance bladder cancer research efforts. Think Tank expert panels, group discussions, and networking opportunities helped generate ideas and strengthen collaborations between researchers and physicians across disciplines and between institutions. Interactive panel discussions addressed a variety of timely issues: 1) data sharing, privacy and social media; 2) improving patient navigation through therapy; 3) promising developments in immunotherapy; 4) and moving bladder cancer research from bench to bedside. Lastly, early career researchers presented their bladder cancer studies and had opportunities to network with leading experts.Entities:
Keywords: Bladder cancer; diagnosis; multidisciplinary; treatment
Year: 2016 PMID: 27376139 PMCID: PMC4927866 DOI: 10.3233/BLC-169007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bladder Cancer
Key points
| 1. Data sharing, privacy issues and social media influence how research is disseminated and researchers should use caution in using and interpreting findings from ‘large data’. |
| 2. Analysis of patient experience and research regarding enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) program in bladder cancer is promising with further refinements balancing risks versus benefits implementing such protocols. |
| 3. The use of xenografts and other bench to bedside have expanded how bladder cancer modeling can be used to advance the field and lead to potential for improvements in patient care. |
| 4. The role of alterations within the DNA repair gene ERCC2 as a predictor of response to cisplatin sensitivity can be used to prospectively select those bladder cancer patients who are most likely to respond to cisplatin-based chemotherapy. |
| 5. The first trial exploring immune checkpoint blockade in bladder cancer involving the administration of two doses of the CTLA-4 inhibitor, ipilimumab, prior to cystectomy in patients with invasive bladder cancer which shows promise for future trials including recent phase I studies of pembrolizumab and atezolizumab. |
| 6. The increasing importance of radiation therapy as an immunomodulatory treatment modality provides a basis for combinatorial approaches involving radiation and immune checkpoint blockade which may be an “abscopal” effect |