logo
ASCO 2025: Previewing Therapeutic Updates in Advanced NSCLC

ASCO 2025: Previewing Therapeutic Updates in Advanced NSCLC

Medscape19-05-2025

Isabel Preeshagul, DO, is eagerly anticipating ASCO 2025, especially the progress being made in advanced NSCLC within the targeted therapy space. Promising developments include treatments for KRAS G12C alterations, particularly the LOXO-RAS-20001 phase 1/2 study combining olomorasib with immunotherapy, and for EGFR exon 20 insertions, where zipalertinib is showing potential after frontline therapy.
In the HER2 space, new small-molecule tyrosine kinase inhibitors such as zongertinib, BAY 2927088, and NVL-330 are generating excitement, especially regarding their central nervous system penetration. Beyond targeted therapies, there's strong interest in antibody-drug conjugates, notably the TROPION-Lung02 study evaluating datopotamab deruxtecan in combination with pembrolizumab and chemotherapy.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

LSU picks search committee members to find its next president
LSU picks search committee members to find its next president

Yahoo

time39 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

LSU picks search committee members to find its next president

LSU's Memorial Tower on Monday, March 20, 2023, on Tower Drive in Baton Rouge. (Matthew Perschall for Louisiana Illuminator) A search committee has been assembled to find LSU's next president. LSU is searching for a replacement for William Tate, who led both its Baton Rouge flagship campus and the LSU System that also includes medical schools in New Orleans and Shreveport, a New Orleans dental school and satellite institutions in Shreveport, Alexandria and Eunice. Tate departed Baton Rouge to become the leader of Rutgers University in New Jersey. Earlier this year, two board members confirmed to the Illuminator there is ongoing discussion over whether LSU will hire a system president and a separate chancellor for the its main campus. The school's news release announcing search committee members did not indicate whether there would be a separate search for a chancellor. LSU combined the two roles in 2012. Matt Lee, the dean of LSU's College of Agriculture, is serving as interim president. LSU Board of Supervisors chairman Scott Ballard announced the following list of individuals have been appointed to the 2025 LSU Presidential Search Committee, including himself as a member: Lee Mallett, LSU Board of Supervisors vice chairman Valencia Sarpy Jones, LSU Board of Supervisors past chair Rémy Voisin Starns, LSU Board of Supervisors past chair James Williams, LSU Board of Supervisors past chair John Carmouche, LSU Board of Supervisors Blaise Zuschlag, LSU Board of Supervisors Ben Bordelon, Bollinger Shipyards president and CEO Clarence Cazalot, LSU Foundation Board of Directors Paul Coreil, LSU Alexandria chancellor Greg Feirn, LCMC Health CEO E.J. Kuiper, Franciscan Missionaries of Our Lady Health System president & CEO Pete November, Ochsner Health CEO Roger Odgen, LSU Foundation Board of Directors Emily Otken, LSU Health Sciences Center Shreveport student, former LSU Board of Supervisors student member Kenneth Schafer, LSU Boyd professor and Ball Family distinguished professor Ryan Theriot, Former LSU baseball player Daniel Tirone, LSU A&M Faculty Senate president, associate professor Bill Windham, Shreveport-Bossier businessman Ballard told the Illuminator recently the board he predicts would work over the next six months or so to conduct a nationwide search for Tate's replacement. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

Meyer signs executive order shielding patients and providers of gender-affirming care
Meyer signs executive order shielding patients and providers of gender-affirming care

Yahoo

time39 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Meyer signs executive order shielding patients and providers of gender-affirming care

A newly signed executive order makes information on gender-affirming care more secure. Executive Order 11 was signed on June 10 in Rehoboth Beach. The order protects patients and providers from being forced to hand over information about gender-affirming care given in Delaware in most civil and criminal investigations and professional disciplinary actions. Medical records, data and billing information are included in the executive order. The executive order defines gender-affirming care as "any medically necessary healthcare or treatment consistent with current clinical standards of care prescribed by a licensed healthcare provider for the treatment of a condition related to the individual's gender identity and that is legal under Delaware law." The order forbids state agencies from supplying information on patients and providers of gender-affirming care in a civil or criminal investigation that is solely initiated on people providing, receiving, inquiring about, or responding to an inquiry regarding gender-affirming care or people traveling to Delaware to receive it. It also protects from out-of-state subpoenas. There are exceptions, like if there is a final and non-appealable court order or if required by federal or state law. The order also does not allow any medical boards in the state to bar or discipline providers of gender-affirming care on that lone basis. 'You can never erase us': Delaware bill to ban transgender care stalls, climate remains The order is designed to secure providers and patients from "hostile laws" in states that restrict gender-affirming care, a release from the governor's office said. 'Across the country, people are being punished for seeking or providing gender-affirming care,' said Gov. Matt Meyer in a statement on June 20. 'In Delaware, we cherish privacy, dignity and the right to make personal medical decisions. Everyone deserves the freedom to access healthcare rooted in science and compassion.' These restrictions are not unheard of. Delaware neighbors New Jersey and Maryland have very similar protections on the books. Shane Brennan covers Wilmington and other Delaware issues. Reach out with ideas, tips or feedback at slbrennan@ This article originally appeared on Delaware News Journal: DE executive order shields gender-affirming care patients, providers

DARPA smashes wireless power record, beaming energy more than 5 miles away — and uses it to make popcorn
DARPA smashes wireless power record, beaming energy more than 5 miles away — and uses it to make popcorn

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

DARPA smashes wireless power record, beaming energy more than 5 miles away — and uses it to make popcorn

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. The U.S. military has set a new record for wireless power transmission, beaming a laser carrying more than 800 watts of power across a distance of 5.3 miles (8.6 kilometers). The test, performed by the U.S. military's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) as part of its Persistent Optical Wireless Energy Relay (POWER) program, is a key step toward unlocking the near-instant beaming of power. It also smashes previous records set by the POWER program, which previously beamed 230 watts across 1 mile (1.7 km) for 25 seconds, and a smaller, undisclosed amount of power as far as 2.3 miles (3.7 km). "It is beyond a doubt that we absolutely obliterated all previously reported optical power beaming demonstrations for power and distance," Paul Jaffe, the POWER program manager, said in a statement. The concept of wireless power transmission (WPT) has been a popular goal since the days of Nikola Tesla, who in 1901 began constructing the Wardenclyffe Tower on Long Island, New York — a 187-foot (57 meters) structure intended to be the first node in a "World Wireless System" that would beam power around the globe. Yet technical challenges meant that funding for the project, initially provided by the financier J.P. Morgan, dried up, leaving Tesla's vision unrealized. Related: NASA's 1st successful 2-way laser experiment is a giant leap for moon and Mars communications Nonetheless, interest in the concept has recently increased, both for military applications and space-based solar power, a nascent technology that would collect and transmit energy from sunlight in space, where it is 10 times more intense than at Earth's surface. Energy is essential for military operations, and getting that energy to the battlefields and disaster areas where it's needed is slow, risky, and resource intensive, often using up a lot of fuel, DARPA representatives wrote in the statement. RELATED STORIES —World's most powerful X-ray laser set for massive upgrade that will help us better understand the atomic world —DARPA's military-grade 'quantum laser' will use entangled photons to outshine conventional laser beams—Scientists uncover the secret to building Star Wars-style laser weapons — but don't worry, we won't have a Death Star anytime soon "These tests, referred to as PRAD (POWER Receiver Array Demo), mark an important step toward the POWER program's long-term goal of being able to instantly beam power from a location where it can be easily generated to wherever it's needed," the agency added. In the latest experiment, conducted at the U.S. Army's White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico, the power was beamed over the 5.3-mile distance in a 30-second pulse. The laser beam arrived at the receiver before passing through a small aperture, bouncing off a parabolic mirror onto solar cells within. The pulse was transmitted with an approximate 20% efficiency, and some of the power it transmitted was used to make popcorn. The researchers have bigger ambitions for the system's use in the field, however, suggesting that it could be used to power unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). They will now move on to testing power beaming both across multiple connected relays and vertically, where the atmosphere is thinner and transmission more efficient.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store