
|Articles|February 5, 2015 (Updated: April 18, 2020)
- Gastrointestinal Cancers (Issue 4)
- Volume 4
- Issue 1
Onartuzumab for Gastroesophageal Adenocarcinoma
Author(s)Manish Shah, MD
Manish A Shah, MD, talks about a recent phase II study of FOLFOX with or without onartuzumab, a MET inhibitor, for the treatment of metastatic gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma.
Manish A Shah, MD, director of gastrointestinal oncology at Weill Cornell Medical College/New York Presbyterian Hospital, talks about a recent phase II study of FOLFOX with or without onartuzumab, a MET inhibitor, for the treatment of metastatic gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma (GEC).
Clinical Pearls:
- The MET pathway is often overexpressed in gastric cancer. If there is a MET amplification in addition to the overexpression, the cancer can be more aggressive.
- The study found that the addition of onartuzumab to FOLFOX did not improve progression-free survival or overall survival in either an unselected population or in MET-positive patients.
- More research is needed to identify patients that benefit from MET inhibition
Articles in this issue
about 11 years ago
Expert Investigators Discuss Emerging Therapies for GI Cancersabout 11 years ago
Predictors of Toxicity in Colon Cancer Treatment Identifiedabout 11 years ago
Many Biliary Tract Cancers Harbor Actionable Mutationsabout 11 years ago
Safety of Regorafenib Confirmed in Patients With mCRC and High PFSabout 11 years ago
Chemotherapy Treatment in Gastric Cancerabout 11 years ago
Pembrolizumab in Advanced Gastric Cancer Treatmentabout 11 years ago
FOLFOXIRI plus Bevacizumab for Metastatic Colorectal Cancer



























