EPISODE · Aug 26, 2025 · 26 MIN
What's New in Bladder, Prostate, and Kidney Cancer Treatment
from MD Newsline
In this episode of MD Newsline, Dr. Karine Tawagi, a genitourinary medical oncologist at the University of Illinois in Chicago, shares cutting-edge updates from ASCO 2024 related to bladder, prostate, and kidney cancers. Dr. Tawagi explores the clinical implications of circulating tumor DNA (CT DNA), discusses evolving bladder preservation strategies, and addresses the expanding role of PARP inhibitors in prostate cancer. She also emphasizes the importance of equitable access to new therapies and multidisciplinary collaboration in cancer care. Episode Highlights Advances in Bladder Cancer Management Dr. Tawagi reviews the Niagara study, which integrates dervalumab immunotherapy with standard cisplatin-based chemotherapy. This new regimen has become a standard of care for cisplatin-eligible patients with muscle-invasive bladder cancer. She also discusses ongoing trials and the promise of bladder preservation, especially for patients concerned about quality of life post-cystectomy. The Power of CT DNA in Personalizing Treatment CT DNA is emerging as a powerful prognostic tool in bladder cancer, with potential use in escalating or de-escalating treatments based on molecular response. Dr. Tawagi discusses its role in both neoadjuvant and metastatic settings, including trials like the MODERN study. PARP Inhibitors in Prostate Cancer For prostate cancer patients with homologous recombination repair mutations—especially BRCA1/2—Dr. Tawagi highlights the role of PARP inhibitors such as niraparib and the Amplitude trial's results in the castration-sensitive setting. She discusses the ongoing debate around sequencing, survival outcomes, and access. Kidney Cancer and Immunotherapy An update from the Keynote 564 trial shows continued benefit of adjuvant pembrolizumab for high-risk localized kidney cancer. Dr. Tawagi underscores the importance of patient counseling using risk calculators and timely referral to oncology after nephrectomy. The Importance of Multidisciplinary Care Dr. Tawagi emphasizes collaboration among urologists, radiation oncologists, medical oncologists, and other specialties to deliver optimal, patient-centered care. She calls for increased awareness of trial updates and improved access to novel therapies across diverse populations. Key Takeaway Dr. Tawagi emphasizes that the future of genitourinary oncology lies in individualized treatment informed by biomarkers like CT DNA, equitable access to novel therapies, and strong multidisciplinary collaboration to enhance outcomes and preserve quality of life. Resources Website: https://mdnewsline.com/ Newsletter: https://mdnewsline.com/subscribe/ Connect with Dr. Karine Tawagi: Here Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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What's New in Bladder, Prostate, and Kidney Cancer Treatment
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