THYROID CANCERS

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In an interview with&nbsp;<em>Targeted Oncology</em>, Raymond L. Chai, MD, discussed the latest treatment advancements for thyroid cancer that he has seen over the past few years and how he sees quality of life improving for patients with advanced subtypes of thyroid cancer. He also shared a personal message for oncologists in honor of Thyroid Cancer Awareness Month.

A neoadjuvant regimen of dabrafenib plus trametinib in patients with&nbsp;<em>BRAF&nbsp;</em>V600E&ndash;mutated anaplastic thyroid carcinoma offered a feasible way to prepare patients for life-extending and quality-of-life-enhancing surgical resection, according to the results of a case series report of patients with locoregionally advanced ATC at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center.

The initial pilot study of CTL019 in heavily pretreated CD19-positive hematologic malignancies demonstrated the feasibility of CAR T-cell therapy in patients with CLL. A presentation at the 2019 American Society of Gene &amp; Cell Therapy Annual Meeting reported 2 cases of chemotherapy-resistant CLL, with ongoing follow- up at 8 years showing persistence of CAR-engineered T cells and sustained remission, as determined by flow cytometry and deep sequencing of immunoglobulin H rearrangements.&nbsp;

A theranostic approach to radioactive iodine therapy in thyroid cancer has become the standard of care and represents a more precise means of managing patients based on disease-specific features, according to a presentation on differentiated thyroid cancer management at the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging 2019 Annual Meeting, held June 22-25, 2019, in Anaheim, California.

A combined regimen of pazopanib and trametinib was tolerable at full single-agent doses in patients with differentiated thyroid cancer according to the results of a multicenter phase I trial expansion cohort. The expansion cohort showed that the combination has clinical activity in DTC but did not achieve the pre-specified response rate, according to a new report in&nbsp;<em>Clinical Cancer Research</em>.