Videos

A panelist discusses how strategies such as clear patient education, simplified skin care regimens, personalized recommendations, and regular follow-ups, along with family involvement and addressing barriers to adherence, can significantly improve patient adherence to prophylactic dermatologic care, leading to better management of dermatologic adverse events (DAEs) in cancer treatment.

A panelist discusses how proactive management of dermatologic adverse events (DAEs) in cancer treatment, through early detection, tailored interventions, and collaboration with specialists such as dermatologic oncologists, advanced practice providers (APPs), and pharmacists, significantly enhances patient comfort, treatment adherence, and overall outcomes.

1 expert is featured in this series.

A panelist discusses how the treatment landscape for chronic graft-vs-host disease (cGVHD) has evolved significantly in recent years, with several pivotal clinical trials beyond REACH3 informing our approach, including the REACH1 and REACH2 trials for acute GVHD; the ROCKstar trial supporting belumosudil approval; and studies evaluating ibrutinib, axatilimab, and extracorporeal photopheresis.

3 experts are featured in this series.

Panelists discuss how clinical trial data from the COMFORT studies supports using Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors such as ruxolitinib for myelofibrosis patients beyond the original high-risk study population, with experts noting they often treat intermediate-1-risk patients based on symptomatic burden and splenomegaly rather than risk stratification alone to achieve meaningful spleen volume reduction and symptom improvement.

3 experts are featured in this series.

Panelists discuss how treatment goals for intermediate-risk myelofibrosis patients focus on achieving meaningful clinical outcomes including relieving symptoms, preventing worsening of anemia, maintaining transfusion independence, reducing symptomatic splenomegaly, and ultimately improving survival while considering patient-specific factors like age and transplant eligibility.

A panelist discusses how the COCOON study's findings will lead to the integration of enhanced dermatologic management into clinical practice for patients receiving amivantamab and lazertinib, focusing on proactive care to reduce dermatologic adverse events (DAEs), improve patient comfort, and increase treatment adherence, ultimately optimizing patient outcomes.