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INFORMATION FOR

    Progress and Hope

    November 19, 2025
    ID
    13636

    Transcript

    • 00:04Good evening, everyone.
    • 00:05It's so wonderful to see
    • 00:07you all here today. Thank
    • 00:08you so much for coming
    • 00:09out.
    • 00:10You know, today, we're we're
    • 00:12all here because,
    • 00:14we all have some,
    • 00:17connection to,
    • 00:18interest in,
    • 00:20or some other relationship with
    • 00:22lung cancer.
    • 00:23I think many I know
    • 00:24many of you in the
    • 00:25audience, and it's really so
    • 00:27fantastic to to have you
    • 00:28here. We don't have a
    • 00:29Zoom component, so we don't
    • 00:31have virtual people listening in,
    • 00:33but we are recording this
    • 00:35so that we can
    • 00:36you all can watch it
    • 00:37again if you just thought
    • 00:38it was so fantastic. You
    • 00:39wanna see it a second
    • 00:40time around, or, of course,
    • 00:41other people can can watch
    • 00:43it later on.
    • 00:45So I'm Sarah Goldberg. For
    • 00:46those of you who don't
    • 00:47know me,
    • 00:48I'm one of the co
    • 00:49directors for the Center for
    • 00:50Thoracic Cancers here at Yale.
    • 00:52I'm a medical oncologist.
    • 00:55I've been here for almost
    • 00:56fourteen years. We've done this
    • 00:58program for many years
    • 01:00now, and I think it's
    • 01:02probably one of the highlights
    • 01:04of the year for many
    • 01:05of us.
    • 01:07I think it's just so
    • 01:08special to be able to
    • 01:09see all of you in
    • 01:10this setting,
    • 01:11and to share the excitement
    • 01:13that we have over what's
    • 01:15been happening
    • 01:16in research in for lung
    • 01:18cancer and in the advances
    • 01:20in so many ways and
    • 01:22and to just to to
    • 01:23be able to,
    • 01:25to show you what we
    • 01:26work on kind of behind
    • 01:27the scenes when we're not
    • 01:28in the office with you
    • 01:29all.
    • 01:30We we do a lot
    • 01:31of work here and lots
    • 01:32of other places do too
    • 01:34to try to make lung
    • 01:35cancer
    • 01:36better, to try to understand
    • 01:37it better, to try to
    • 01:38figure out better treatments and
    • 01:39better ways to take care
    • 01:40of of our patients and
    • 01:42their families. So we're really
    • 01:43excited to be able to
    • 01:44share all of that with
    • 01:45you.
    • 01:46I wanted to introduce two
    • 01:47other people. One person is
    • 01:49standing right next to me.
    • 01:50This is doctor Katie Politti.
    • 01:52She is a cancer biologist.
    • 01:54We work very closely together
    • 01:56in all those behind the
    • 01:57scenes things, so trying to
    • 01:58understand lung cancer better and
    • 01:59figure out better treatments. Katie
    • 02:01is the scientific director for
    • 02:03the Center for the Rest
    • 02:04of Cancers,
    • 02:05and she's you're gonna hear
    • 02:06from her in a minute.
    • 02:07I will also introduce someone
    • 02:08who's not here right now.
    • 02:10He will be shortly.
    • 02:11Doctor Justin Blasberg. He's a
    • 02:13thoracic surgeon, another one of
    • 02:14the directors of the center.
    • 02:16And, again, we all work
    • 02:17together to,
    • 02:18to take better care of
    • 02:19our patients and to advance
    • 02:21our scientific mission,
    • 02:22help educate our trainees, and
    • 02:24and do all sorts of
    • 02:25things to to make things
    • 02:26better for for this disease.
    • 02:29So
    • 02:30look at my notes to
    • 02:31make sure I'm not missing
    • 02:32anything. I think that was
    • 02:33all that I was supposed
    • 02:34to say.
    • 02:34I will just briefly show
    • 02:36you what we're gonna be
    • 02:37talking about this evening. This
    • 02:39is our agenda. You might
    • 02:40have seen it hanging up
    • 02:41on the walls in the
    • 02:42clinic or gotten an email
    • 02:43to you.
    • 02:44Our our goal is to
    • 02:45focus on exactly what this
    • 02:47title is, progress and hope,
    • 02:48to show you how far
    • 02:50we've come and what we're
    • 02:51hoping for in the future.
    • 02:53And so
    • 02:54we will be first hearing
    • 02:56from doctor Roy Harps. Katie's
    • 02:57gonna introduce him, so I
    • 02:58won't go into details, but
    • 02:59he's gonna, I think, give
    • 03:00you a great talk. Unfortunately,
    • 03:01he's not here tonight, but
    • 03:02he's gonna join us virtually.
    • 03:04Then a lot of people
    • 03:06last year told me they
    • 03:06wanted to hear more about
    • 03:07what's coming next. What are
    • 03:08the really exciting drugs coming?
    • 03:10And so we're gonna take
    • 03:11a little bit of a
    • 03:12closer look at some emerging
    • 03:14therapies, and we have some
    • 03:15great speakers there,
    • 03:17to get you excited about
    • 03:18what's coming,
    • 03:19in the next couple of
    • 03:20years, what's in trials now.
    • 03:22And then we we always
    • 03:23think it's so important to
    • 03:24talk about screening, lung cancer
    • 03:26screening, because
    • 03:27as the title says, early
    • 03:28detection saves lives. So, we're
    • 03:29gonna have a panel about
    • 03:30that. You'll hear from some
    • 03:31people about that. I'll moderate
    • 03:33a panel on lung cancer
    • 03:35clinical trials and why they're
    • 03:36so important in our progress.
    • 03:38And then we're gonna talk
    • 03:39about bridging expertise, so bringing
    • 03:41it all together, all the
    • 03:42different disciplines and people that
    • 03:43help to take care of,
    • 03:45people who in their fam
    • 03:46people who have lung cancer
    • 03:46in their family. So you'll
    • 03:47hear from lots of different
    • 03:48people about that.
    • 03:49So I think that was
    • 03:51all I wanted to say.
    • 03:51I will turn it over
    • 03:52to Katie to say hello
    • 03:53and introduce
    • 03:55our first speaker. Thank you
    • 03:57all so much again for
    • 03:57being here.
    • 04:03Thank you very much,
    • 04:05Sarah.
    • 04:07It really is a pleasure
    • 04:08to be here tonight, and
    • 04:09thank you very much to
    • 04:10all of you for coming
    • 04:11and participating
    • 04:12in this event.
    • 04:14Before I introduce our first
    • 04:16speaker, I'd,
    • 04:17really like to thank Emily
    • 04:20Montemerlo
    • 04:21and Renee Gaudette
    • 04:23who helped put this together
    • 04:25and everybody who's also
    • 04:28at the tables to give
    • 04:29you information on lung cancer,
    • 04:31lung cancer screening, smoking cessation.
    • 04:33So thank you,
    • 04:35to everybody.
    • 04:37So, it really is my
    • 04:39pleasure to introduce our first
    • 04:41speaker who's gonna be speaking,
    • 04:43virtually. Doctor Roy Herbst is
    • 04:45the deputy director at the
    • 04:47Yale Cancer Center. He's an
    • 04:49Ensign professor of medicine and
    • 04:51the chief of medical oncology
    • 04:53and hematology
    • 04:54here.
    • 04:55Doctor Herbst is a pioneer
    • 04:57in lung cancer care and
    • 04:59treatment,
    • 05:00and really has advanced our
    • 05:02knowledge of lung cancer over
    • 05:04the years, running clinical trials,
    • 05:06innovative
    • 05:07science, and really leading the
    • 05:09field. And we're so lucky
    • 05:10that he's been here at
    • 05:11the Yale Cancer Center,
    • 05:13for many years and all
    • 05:15have had the opportunity
    • 05:16to to to work with
    • 05:17him. So,
    • 05:19tonight, he's going to tell
    • 05:20you about advances in
    • 05:22cancer immunotherapy and the things
    • 05:24that have happened over the
    • 05:25past decade
    • 05:27in, in lung cancer immunotherapy,
    • 05:30in the the lung cancer
    • 05:32immunotherapy field. So thank you
    • 05:34very much, doctor Herbst.
    • 05:36I'll turn it over to
    • 05:37you.
    • 05:39Thanks, and welcome to everyone.
    • 05:41I'm really sorry that I'm,
    • 05:43not with you tonight. If
    • 05:44we could have the first
    • 05:45slide, please.
    • 05:47A little well, you're a
    • 05:49little bit quiet. I'm just
    • 05:50maybe give us one second
    • 05:51to see if we can
    • 05:51make you louder.
    • 05:53Sure.
    • 05:58I can go get some
    • 05:59earbuds too.
    • 06:01I'm not sure. What do
    • 06:02you all think? Can you
    • 06:02hear them okay, or should
    • 06:03we work on the volume?
    • 06:05Up. They're saying up. Let's
    • 06:07see.
    • 06:11How's this now?
    • 06:14About the same.
    • 06:16Well,
    • 06:18what to do?
    • 06:19We're working on it from
    • 06:21our end, seeing if we
    • 06:21can make you louder. Should
    • 06:22I do someone here, you
    • 06:23think?
    • 06:24I think my data Oh,
    • 06:25here we go. Do you
    • 06:26wanna go ahead to the
    • 06:27next session?
    • 06:29Oh, I think this might
    • 06:30work. Hold on. Try now.
    • 06:32Hello?
    • 06:34I like that. Thank you.
    • 06:36Okay. I they're trying to
    • 06:38mute me. Well, listen. If
    • 06:39we can have the first
    • 06:39slide, I'm so honored to
    • 06:41be,
    • 06:41joining. I've I've been to
    • 06:43this event
    • 06:44pretty much every year since
    • 06:45I've been here, which is
    • 06:46almost fifteen years. And if
    • 06:47we can have the first
    • 06:48slide
    • 06:49Working on
    • 06:51it. Technology.
    • 06:53Okay.
    • 06:54Okay.
    • 06:55So, what I thought I'd
    • 06:56do is talk about advancements
    • 06:58in immunotherapy. I bet there
    • 06:59are some people in the
    • 07:00audience who are on immunotherapy,
    • 07:02who know someone who's on
    • 07:03immunotherapy,
    • 07:04who have seen immunotherapy
    • 07:06on TV. So I just
    • 07:07talk a little bit about
    • 07:08what it is and why
    • 07:10it's important to get us
    • 07:11started tonight and and to
    • 07:13show you that we are
    • 07:14making progress. The next slide,
    • 07:15please.
    • 07:16So the reason I'm not
    • 07:17there is I'm actually in,
    • 07:19New Mexico, Albuquerque
    • 07:21at at a conference that
    • 07:22I'm coleading,
    • 07:24which is, used to be
    • 07:25called diversity in clinical trials.
    • 07:27Now if you hit it
    • 07:27again, please,
    • 07:29Sarah, now it's called excellence
    • 07:30in clinical trials given the
    • 07:31current,
    • 07:32you know, climate in the
    • 07:33United States, but still the
    • 07:35same thing. We're teaching eighty
    • 07:37students,
    • 07:38young faculty, how to do
    • 07:40clinical trials in the community.
    • 07:42And, actually, we have five
    • 07:43people from Yale here with
    • 07:44me, including Soyeon Kim, who
    • 07:46I'll be seeing in a
    • 07:47few minutes, one of our
    • 07:48lung cancer doctors. Next slide.
    • 07:51So
    • 07:52what Katie, myself, Sarah, and
    • 07:54all the people here really
    • 07:55do is translational research.
    • 07:57What we're trying to do
    • 07:58is take
    • 07:59discoveries from the bedside on
    • 08:01the left
    • 08:02and and and and understand
    • 08:04what we need and then
    • 08:05go to the bench, the
    • 08:06lab bench. Doctor Paletti has
    • 08:08a lab where she's studying
    • 08:09different models of lung cancer
    • 08:10and then finding new therapies,
    • 08:12and then we bring them
    • 08:13back to the bedside so
    • 08:14that we can help patients
    • 08:15with this disease.
    • 08:17The next slide.
    • 08:20So what about immunotherapy?
    • 08:22Next slide.
    • 08:23So immunotherapy, if we click
    • 08:25this twice,
    • 08:26began over a hundred years
    • 08:28ago,
    • 08:29by a doctor Coley,
    • 08:31in New York. What he
    • 08:32used to do is he
    • 08:32used to put bacteria
    • 08:34and actually inject them into,
    • 08:36tumors, and that would create
    • 08:38an inflammation.
    • 08:39And that inflammation brought in
    • 08:41immune cells, and that was
    • 08:42actually the first immunotherapy.
    • 08:44But immunotherapy at Yale, if
    • 08:46we can click again, began
    • 08:47with actually doctor Mario Snow
    • 08:49and, Mario who's actually leaving
    • 08:51us and retiring this year.
    • 08:53But Mario,
    • 08:56sixteen, seventeen years ago, recognized
    • 08:58that immune therapy was something
    • 08:59that would help lung cancer,
    • 09:01melanoma, a type of skin
    • 09:03cancer, kidney cancer, and he
    • 09:05brought some of the earliest
    • 09:05trials to Yale. On the
    • 09:07next slide.
    • 09:09And then it's really been
    • 09:10a team, and
    • 09:11I'm sure doctor Gettinger is
    • 09:13there, and he looks the
    • 09:14same now as he did
    • 09:15in this picture ten years
    • 09:16ago. There's doctor Gettinger, doctor
    • 09:18Snow, doctor Kluger, and then
    • 09:20Liping Shen. These are really
    • 09:22the pioneers here who who
    • 09:23started working with immunotherapy at
    • 09:25Yale in early phase trials,
    • 09:27and some of you may
    • 09:28have even been on them.
    • 09:29Next slide.
    • 09:30And Li Ping, who's highly
    • 09:32honored scientist in all the
    • 09:33national societies,
    • 09:35really was one of the
    • 09:36first people,
    • 09:37top four or five in
    • 09:38the world, who discovered what's
    • 09:40called PD L1, which is
    • 09:42what makes immunotherapy possible. And
    • 09:44I'm gonna show you now
    • 09:45on the next few slides
    • 09:45what that is.
    • 09:47So many of you have
    • 09:48seen
    • 09:49immunotherapy, but what is it?
    • 09:51Well, the immune system is
    • 09:52very special.
    • 09:54It's specific. You know, you
    • 09:55don't wanna make
    • 09:57a reaction against something that's
    • 09:58normal. Otherwise, you'll have something
    • 10:00like poison ivy. You'll have
    • 10:01a very bad problem.
    • 10:02The immune system has memory,
    • 10:04meaning once you have a
    • 10:06reaction, once you have antibodies,
    • 10:07they stay around, and it
    • 10:09can be adaptive. It can
    • 10:10change depending on the circumstance.
    • 10:12So what you see here
    • 10:13is you see the tumor
    • 10:13cell. And see that little
    • 10:15red dot? That's the abnormal
    • 10:17tumor protein on the tumor
    • 10:18cell. So So what happens
    • 10:19is, if you click click
    • 10:21again, please,
    • 10:22the immune system, the t
    • 10:24cell, can recognize through a
    • 10:26very specific mechanism.
    • 10:27It can recognize that that
    • 10:29tumor cell,
    • 10:30and you would want that
    • 10:32to to kill it. But
    • 10:33that doesn't happen because if
    • 10:34you look at the next
    • 10:35click,
    • 10:37there's there's a loop. There's
    • 10:39a feedback loop that protects
    • 10:41the immune system from killing
    • 10:42that tumor. And see that
    • 10:44little red line? That's an
    • 10:45inhibition that occurs through something
    • 10:47called PD one.
    • 10:50So the bottom line, when
    • 10:51you hear about a PD
    • 10:52one inhibitor or a PD
    • 10:53l one inhibitor, what it's
    • 10:55trying to do, if you
    • 10:55click again, please,
    • 10:57it's trying to block that
    • 10:58interaction.
    • 10:59These drugs that one gives
    • 11:00to a patient that some
    • 11:01of you might take, that
    • 11:02your friend or family member
    • 11:04takes, it blocks that interaction.
    • 11:06And what that does is
    • 11:07it allows the immune system
    • 11:08to do its thing against
    • 11:09the tumor. It recognizes the
    • 11:11tumor as a foreign invader.
    • 11:12And if you click again,
    • 11:13you'll see that, it can
    • 11:15have amazing results.
    • 11:17So Maureen shown here, and
    • 11:18she might even be in
    • 11:19the audience,
    • 11:21was one of the first
    • 11:22patients who was treated. And
    • 11:24you can see that, you
    • 11:25know, she's now fifteen, fourteen
    • 11:27years in, and she received
    • 11:29a phase one trial. So
    • 11:30that's the beauty of a
    • 11:31place like ours at Yale,
    • 11:33the top clinic at Smilow,
    • 11:35is we have drugs that
    • 11:36are early drugs that were
    • 11:38clinical trials. Now they're the
    • 11:40standard of care.
    • 11:41Twenty, thirty million people have
    • 11:43been treated worldwide with these
    • 11:44drugs. But the first trials
    • 11:46were done here at Yale
    • 11:47with great effect.
    • 11:48That's the good news. The
    • 11:49bad news is they don't
    • 11:50always work quite as well
    • 11:51as we want. Like any
    • 11:53process in nature,
    • 11:54tumors learn how to become
    • 11:55resistant, and that's why we're
    • 11:57continuing to fight find cancers
    • 11:59earlier and use these drugs.
    • 12:01Next slide.
    • 12:03This is actually another drug.
    • 12:05It was originally a phase
    • 12:06one trial, MPDL thirty two
    • 12:08eighty. Now the drug is
    • 12:09known as atezolab. Atezolizumab,
    • 12:12we did some of the
    • 12:13earliest studies with this drug
    • 12:14at Yale. You can see
    • 12:15on the top someone with
    • 12:16lung cancer. See those red
    • 12:17lines? Those are lung tumors.
    • 12:19And look look how well
    • 12:20they responded
    • 12:21just after eight to ten
    • 12:22weeks on the drug. You
    • 12:23don't see there's nothing where
    • 12:24those arrows are on the
    • 12:25right.
    • 12:26If you look at the
    • 12:27lower left, what you can
    • 12:28see is CD eight cells,
    • 12:29which are the killer T
    • 12:30cells, the ones we want
    • 12:31to upregulate.
    • 12:33You can see they're very
    • 12:34low pretreatment,
    • 12:35but posttreatment, there are a
    • 12:36lot of them. So this
    • 12:38is what we can do.
    • 12:39We can reactivate the immune
    • 12:40system
    • 12:41with these, checkpoint inhibitors. It's
    • 12:44really fantastic.
    • 12:45I've never seen anything like
    • 12:46that. In fact, I'm gonna
    • 12:47be talking to the students
    • 12:48here at at this course
    • 12:50tonight in my opening lecture
    • 12:52about the progress we've made
    • 12:53in lung cancer, and this
    • 12:54is just part of it.
    • 12:55And you're gonna hear a
    • 12:55lot tonight. You're gonna hear
    • 12:57about what we're doing, and
    • 12:58and you're gonna hear about
    • 13:00advanced disease, early disease, and
    • 13:02about screening and prevention. On
    • 13:04the next slide.
    • 13:06And then this is just,
    • 13:07doctor Goldberg, you know, who,
    • 13:09you know, professor Goldberg now.
    • 13:12Doctor Goldberg, actually, when she
    • 13:13came here, in her early
    • 13:15career working with doctor Kluger,
    • 13:16the melanoma,
    • 13:17leader, and doctor Chang, who's
    • 13:19our neurosurgeon, some of you
    • 13:20might know her. She does
    • 13:21all the the the radiation
    • 13:22to the brain. They did
    • 13:23a study where they actually
    • 13:25took a drug, pembrolizumab.
    • 13:27Some of you might know
    • 13:27it as Keytruda, and did
    • 13:29the very, very first study
    • 13:30where they took patients that
    • 13:32had brain disease,
    • 13:33cancer in the brain, and
    • 13:34they didn't radiate those patients.
    • 13:36But they gave those patients
    • 13:37this drug, Keytruda. And you
    • 13:39can see, those two red
    • 13:40lines that tumors in the
    • 13:42brain responded. This was phenomenal
    • 13:44because why take radiation when
    • 13:46the immune therapy will do
    • 13:47it? And I can tell
    • 13:48you that I remember when
    • 13:49they called Sarah and and
    • 13:50Harriet about president Carter, you
    • 13:52know, who had melanoma. For
    • 13:53ten years, he lived with
    • 13:54brain metastases because he got
    • 13:56Keytruda pembrolizumab
    • 13:58as per the routine developed
    • 13:59here at Yale. Next slide.
    • 14:01I'm just about done. So,
    • 14:04we already saw this. Next
    • 14:05slide. I should should have
    • 14:06removed that. So we have
    • 14:07a spore. Katie and I,
    • 14:09lead a lead a a
    • 14:10large grant here at Yale,
    • 14:12so we're constantly trying to
    • 14:13raise the bar. And if
    • 14:14we just click quickly because
    • 14:15my time is running out,
    • 14:16we're studying
    • 14:18on the first project, how
    • 14:19how to work and and
    • 14:21and do even better with
    • 14:22immune therapy because we know
    • 14:23sometimes the immune cells can't
    • 14:24get to the tumor. There
    • 14:25there's a force field, so
    • 14:27we're figuring that out. We're
    • 14:28also figuring out how to
    • 14:29deal with targeted therapy that
    • 14:31you'll hear about from Scott
    • 14:32next. And next slide.
    • 14:35Here's the group. This is
    • 14:36my last slide. It's a
    • 14:37team. I'm just so proud
    • 14:39to have been a member
    • 14:40of this team and being
    • 14:41a member of this team.
    • 14:42This is why, even though
    • 14:43it's it's still pretty early
    • 14:45here, I I wanted to
    • 14:46make sure that I could
    • 14:47get on, the call today
    • 14:48to tell you how excited
    • 14:49I have been am about
    • 14:50this wonderful team that you're
    • 14:52gonna hear from tonight. Thank
    • 14:53you all for having your
    • 14:54trust in us, and I
    • 14:55look forward. I'm gonna watch
    • 14:56the program for the next
    • 14:57hour myself. So thank you.
    • 15:04Thank you very much, Roy.
    • 15:06And we have time for
    • 15:07a couple of questions.
    • 15:10Are there any questions? And,
    • 15:12Katie, you might wanna tell
    • 15:13them what this picture is.
    • 15:15Oh, sure. This is a
    • 15:17picture
    • 15:18from,
    • 15:19one of our lung spore
    • 15:20meetings that we hosted here
    • 15:23in June of twenty twenty
    • 15:25four at Yale. So this
    • 15:27is a specialized program of
    • 15:28research excellence, and we hold
    • 15:30one, a grant on this
    • 15:32in lung cancer. And so
    • 15:33we hosted all the other,
    • 15:35lung spores from across the
    • 15:37nation.
    • 15:38And we took the opportunity
    • 15:40in twenty twenty four to
    • 15:42really recognize the anniversary
    • 15:44of the of the discovery
    • 15:46of eGFR mutations in lung
    • 15:48cancer. They were discovered in
    • 15:49two thousand and four, so
    • 15:50it was the twentieth anniversary.
    • 15:52And we hosted this event
    • 15:54here and had all of
    • 15:55the people who discovered the
    • 15:57mutations and the people who
    • 15:58developed the therapies,
    • 16:00that are used now to
    • 16:01treat EGFR driven lung cancer.
    • 16:03So it was very a
    • 16:04very special,
    • 16:05occasion.
    • 16:06It was quite a powerhouse
    • 16:07of lung cancer experts. And,
    • 16:09you know, whenever we take
    • 16:10care of you, we're always
    • 16:11asking others, you know, what's
    • 16:12going on in other places.
    • 16:14Look in the very upper
    • 16:15left. That's Tom Lynch looking
    • 16:16a little askance there. Top
    • 16:18left, you know, our former
    • 16:19director, but everyone came for
    • 16:21this because they were so
    • 16:22excited about the collaborations.
    • 16:25So any questions?
    • 16:27If not, I'm gonna ask,
    • 16:29you a question, Roy.
    • 16:31What are some of the
    • 16:33other immunotherapeutic
    • 16:34approaches that are being developed
    • 16:36now? So what are some
    • 16:37of the things on the
    • 16:38horizon in terms of immunotherapies
    • 16:40that we should be thinking
    • 16:41about and keeping an eye
    • 16:43out in lung cancer
    • 16:44beyond immune checkpoint inhibitors?
    • 16:47Right. So that's a great
    • 16:48question. So the immune checkpoint
    • 16:49inhibitors relieve the block. So
    • 16:52that's the first step because,
    • 16:53you know, in order to
    • 16:55get the water in yet,
    • 16:56you have to relieve the
    • 16:57block. But then we need
    • 16:59ways to bring more immune
    • 17:00cells into the tumor. And
    • 17:02now we have this whole
    • 17:03field of what's called T
    • 17:05cell engagers.
    • 17:06They're they're molecules that actually
    • 17:08go to the tumor, to
    • 17:09the to the,
    • 17:11the cells around the tumor.
    • 17:12We call that the stroma,
    • 17:13the microenvironment,
    • 17:15and they actually attract T
    • 17:16cells. We call them t
    • 17:17cell engagers.
    • 17:18You might hear them called
    • 17:19bispecific antibodies.
    • 17:21In small cell lung cancer,
    • 17:22there's a drug that Anne
    • 17:23Cheng is studying called tarlatinib.
    • 17:25So those are very exciting,
    • 17:27and keep your eye out
    • 17:28for those.
    • 17:29The other thing that we
    • 17:30have are vaccines.
    • 17:31Vaccines, I'm a strong believer
    • 17:33in vaccine. I've had all
    • 17:34my vaccines, but vaccines will
    • 17:36work in cancer. The problem
    • 17:37is we have to figure
    • 17:38out first, you know, what
    • 17:40the, what the protein is
    • 17:42to target, and that requires
    • 17:44a great deal of study
    • 17:45and work. We're doing that
    • 17:46here. But we're actually studying
    • 17:47vaccines where you actually get
    • 17:48a vaccine that stimulates
    • 17:51the the right immune cells
    • 17:52to go after the the
    • 17:53the cancer. So that's ongoing
    • 17:55right now as well.
    • 17:56And then we're combining things.
    • 17:57You know? It looks like
    • 17:59we're gonna have to combine
    • 18:00some chemotherapy with immunotherapy,
    • 18:02maybe some anti vascular agents
    • 18:04with chemotherapy.
    • 18:05We're trying everything, and we're
    • 18:06doing it in this in
    • 18:07that bed to bench bedside
    • 18:09way that I told you
    • 18:10about to try to figure
    • 18:11out what the best ways
    • 18:12are. These will be where
    • 18:13there might so many of
    • 18:14these will be protocols.
    • 18:15So be sure to ask
    • 18:16when you're in the clinic
    • 18:17if you need something else.
    • 18:19What are the protocols? What
    • 18:20are the studies? Because as
    • 18:21I showed you, everything I
    • 18:22showed you here, you you
    • 18:23could only get at Yale
    • 18:24ten years ago, and now
    • 18:25it's standard of care. So
    • 18:26now we're working on the
    • 18:27next generation of studies.
    • 18:30Thank you very much,
    • 18:32Roy, and,
    • 18:33enjoy the rest of your
    • 18:35time in Arizona. Thank you
    • 18:37very much. Thanks.
    • 18:39Oh, New Mexico. Why is
    • 18:40that thing Arizona?
    • 18:42I wasn't gonna correct you,
    • 18:43but they they look very
    • 18:44similar. But it's not an
    • 18:45accident. Correct. So, yeah, I
    • 18:46don't know. I was like
    • 18:47Yeah.
    • 18:48So we,
    • 18:50are going to move on
    • 18:51to the next session. So
    • 18:53we have, three talks that
    • 18:55are on some new emerging
    • 18:58therapies.
    • 19:00And so we're gonna go
    • 19:01through these three five minute
    • 19:03talks, and then we'll have
    • 19:04time for,
    • 19:05some questions if you have
    • 19:07questions for the speakers.
    • 19:09So, our first presenter is
    • 19:11doctor Rick Wilson.
    • 19:14Rick is, doctor Wilson is
    • 19:16a physician scientist.
    • 19:18And so he works in
    • 19:19the lab in addition
    • 19:21to, practicing as a thoracic
    • 19:23oncologist. And so he's gonna
    • 19:25tell you about some of
    • 19:26the newer targeted therapies
    • 19:28that are emerging.
    • 19:30So I'm gonna turn it
    • 19:31over to Rick. Thank you.
    • 19:39Great. Thank you, Katie,
    • 19:41for the kind introduction, and
    • 19:42thank you all for being
    • 19:43here, this evening.
    • 19:45So,
    • 19:46I'm excited to have the
    • 19:48opportunity to provide,
    • 19:49a brief overview about recent
    • 19:51developments in targeted therapies in
    • 19:54lung cancer.
    • 19:55So, these are therapies that
    • 19:57are developed specifically
    • 19:58to target gene changes or
    • 20:00gene alterations
    • 20:02that we find in subsets
    • 20:03of lung cancers with the
    • 20:05goal being to try to,
    • 20:07stop those cancers from growing
    • 20:09and spreading.
    • 20:11And so, on the slide
    • 20:13here on the far left,
    • 20:14this is showing you some
    • 20:15of those gene targets.
    • 20:18And then to the right,
    • 20:19what is being shown is
    • 20:21a timeline showing you, the
    • 20:23development of specific therapies against
    • 20:26those gene targets.
    • 20:28And the purpose of the
    • 20:29slide is just to show
    • 20:30you that over the last
    • 20:31fifteen years,
    • 20:32we've actually seen the development
    • 20:34of many,
    • 20:35new targeted therapies in lung
    • 20:37cancer.
    • 20:38And, of course, this is
    • 20:39very exciting to us because
    • 20:40we always want to have
    • 20:41as many, treatment options as
    • 20:43possible to consider for our
    • 20:45patients.
    • 20:47And in fact, when we
    • 20:48meet new patients in the
    • 20:49clinic and in the outpatient
    • 20:51setting,
    • 20:52especially those with a diagnosis
    • 20:54of a specific type of
    • 20:55lung cancer called lung adenocarcinoma,
    • 20:59we're always thinking to ourselves,
    • 21:00you know, is this patient
    • 21:02potentially a candidate for one
    • 21:03of these, targeted therapies?
    • 21:07So, this is a pie
    • 21:08chart showing you the frequency
    • 21:10of some of these gene
    • 21:12changes in lung adenocarcinoma.
    • 21:15And you can see that,
    • 21:16some of these gene changes
    • 21:18are fairly common, such as
    • 21:20KRAS shown in green in
    • 21:22the upper right
    • 21:23or EGFR
    • 21:25shown in navy blue below
    • 21:26that.
    • 21:27Whereas there are other,
    • 21:29oncogenic
    • 21:30or the other gene changes,
    • 21:32that are less common.
    • 21:34One of these, less common
    • 21:35gene changes is called, HER2.
    • 21:38And we see gene changes
    • 21:40in HER2
    • 21:41in about
    • 21:42three percent of our patients
    • 21:44with lung adenocarcinoma.
    • 21:46And we've never had any
    • 21:48targeted therapies for our patients
    • 21:50with lung cancer that have
    • 21:52HER2 alterations.
    • 21:54But that's changed,
    • 21:55in just a few months
    • 21:57ago. The FDA recently approved
    • 21:59a new targeted therapy called
    • 22:01zongertinib
    • 22:03for patients with advanced lung
    • 22:04cancers with HER2 alterations.
    • 22:07And this is the first
    • 22:08approved,
    • 22:09oral targeted therapy, meaning pill,
    • 22:12that can be taken by
    • 22:13mouth,
    • 22:14for our patients, with lung
    • 22:16cancer with HER2 alterations.
    • 22:20There are and and we're
    • 22:21excited to be able to
    • 22:22now offer this to our
    • 22:23patients as part of standard,
    • 22:25standard of care.
    • 22:27But, there are actually,
    • 22:29other agents,
    • 22:30also in clinical development, and
    • 22:32here at Yale, we actually
    • 22:33have a clinical trial of
    • 22:34one of these, new targeted
    • 22:36therapies called ORIC one one
    • 22:38four.
    • 22:39This is being evaluated
    • 22:41both in patients whose lung
    • 22:43cancers have HER2 gene changes
    • 22:46but also,
    • 22:47in patients whose lung cancers
    • 22:49have certain EGFR
    • 22:51alterations
    • 22:52as well. Making this a
    • 22:53targeted therapy that is potentially
    • 22:55relevant
    • 22:56for two different, gene targets
    • 22:58in lung cancer.
    • 23:01I mentioned that one of
    • 23:02the more common gene changes
    • 23:04that we see
    • 23:05in lung adenocarcinoma
    • 23:07are KRAS gene changes. We
    • 23:09see these in about thirty
    • 23:11percent of our patients with
    • 23:12lung adenocarcinoma.
    • 23:15And this is a,
    • 23:17gene target that we have
    • 23:18known about for decades.
    • 23:20But for decades, we have
    • 23:22not had any targeted therapies
    • 23:24against KRAS.
    • 23:26That has recently changed in
    • 23:27the last couple of years,
    • 23:29with the development of an
    • 23:31FDA approval of two targeted
    • 23:34therapies.
    • 23:35One called sotorasib and one
    • 23:37called atagracib.
    • 23:39These are approved
    • 23:41for our patients with lung
    • 23:42cancers, advanced lung cancers having
    • 23:44a specific KRAS alteration
    • 23:47called,
    • 23:48G12C.
    • 23:49And as you can see
    • 23:50in the pie chart in
    • 23:51the middle, G12C
    • 23:53is the most common KRAS
    • 23:55gene change that we see,
    • 23:57in lung adenocarcinoma.
    • 23:59But we're always trying to
    • 24:01do better,
    • 24:02and there are newer,
    • 24:03targeted therapies,
    • 24:06directed against KRAS g twelve
    • 24:08c that are being evaluated
    • 24:09in clinical trials that may
    • 24:11work better, than these agents.
    • 24:14And we currently have a
    • 24:15couple of clinical trials looking
    • 24:17at
    • 24:17two different new targeted therapies
    • 24:20for KRAS g twelve c.
    • 24:22One called devarasib,
    • 24:24one called olamirasib.
    • 24:27Finally, if you look at
    • 24:28the pie chart, one thing
    • 24:29that you'll notice is that
    • 24:30there are a lot of
    • 24:32other KRAS gene changes in
    • 24:34lung cancer that are not,
    • 24:36g twelve c.
    • 24:37And we currently do not
    • 24:39have any FDA approved targeted
    • 24:41therapies for these patients.
    • 24:43But, again, there are new,
    • 24:45treatments,
    • 24:46in development that are being
    • 24:47looked at in clinical trials,
    • 24:49and we actually have a
    • 24:50clinical trial here looking at
    • 24:52one of these,
    • 24:53new targeted therapies called direct
    • 24:55sunrasib.
    • 24:57One of the things,
    • 24:58that is particularly
    • 25:00interesting about this targeted therapy
    • 25:03is that it can actually
    • 25:04target
    • 25:05multiple different KRAS gene changes,
    • 25:09which is a a really
    • 25:10innovative new development in KRAS
    • 25:13targeted therapies.
    • 25:14So this is just to
    • 25:15give you an overview of
    • 25:17some of the new, therapies
    • 25:18that are coming down the
    • 25:19pipeline, and we're excited,
    • 25:21to be able to offer
    • 25:22access to these therapies,
    • 25:24to eligible patients here at
    • 25:26Yale through our clinical trials.
    • 25:29Thanks.
    • 25:35Thank you very much,
    • 25:37for that. Our next speaker
    • 25:38is doctor Anne Chang.
    • 25:40Doctor Chang is a thoracic
    • 25:42oncologist
    • 25:43and an expert, especially,
    • 25:46amongst other things, on small
    • 25:47cell lung cancer. And she's
    • 25:49gonna be telling us about
    • 25:50bispecific
    • 25:51antibodies this evening. Doctor Chang?
    • 25:53Thank you.
    • 26:02Perfect. What a great turnout.
    • 26:03I I spoke this weekend
    • 26:05in New York at a
    • 26:06at a patient, the Cure
    • 26:07Lung Summit, and there's twice
    • 26:09as many people here. So
    • 26:10you guys turned out tonight.
    • 26:12Thank you so much for
    • 26:13coming.
    • 26:14I know it's, it's at
    • 26:15the end of a long
    • 26:16day, so really appreciate your
    • 26:18interest. And and, you know,
    • 26:20one of the questions at
    • 26:21that summit was, you know,
    • 26:22how
    • 26:23how how do we get
    • 26:24folks to ask more questions?
    • 26:25And and,
    • 26:27what I said is that
    • 26:28it's really important for us
    • 26:30as doctors and us as
    • 26:32nurses and your your care
    • 26:33team, the more questions you
    • 26:35you ask and the more
    • 26:36you understand about what's going
    • 26:38on, the easier it is
    • 26:40for us to for us
    • 26:41to do our job and
    • 26:42for and, actually, the the
    • 26:43better we can do our
    • 26:44job. So thanks for coming
    • 26:45tonight.
    • 26:46So I have, been given
    • 26:48the topic of bispecific antibodies
    • 26:50in lung cancer.
    • 26:51So I'll start with that.
    • 26:52What is a bispecific antibody?
    • 26:57So in in this
    • 27:00I don't know if I
    • 27:00can
    • 27:01point to it here.
    • 27:03Okay.
    • 27:04No. Okay. Well
    • 27:06oh, it was?
    • 27:07Okay. Can you have a
    • 27:08laser too on the Ah,
    • 27:10can you see my laser?
    • 27:12Yay.
    • 27:13Okay. So an antibody
    • 27:14so this antibody here recognizes
    • 27:17a protein called CD three
    • 27:19on the surface of the
    • 27:20white blood cell,
    • 27:22and this antibody in purple
    • 27:24or red
    • 27:25recognizes a protein called DLL
    • 27:27three on the tumor cell.
    • 27:29So bispecific
    • 27:30antibody basically
    • 27:31is an antibody that can
    • 27:33bind to two different proteins,
    • 27:35And here you see this
    • 27:36this drug tarlatanab,
    • 27:38an antibody
    • 27:39that has and it binds
    • 27:41both to,
    • 27:43CD three, that's in orange,
    • 27:44and in purple,
    • 27:45the d l l three.
    • 27:47On on so it brings
    • 27:49together here the the t
    • 27:51cell to the tumor cell,
    • 27:54and this activates the immune
    • 27:55system
    • 27:56to attack the cancer cells.
    • 27:58And this is so great
    • 27:59because you notice here, there's
    • 28:01no chemo involved.
    • 28:02You're actually just taking
    • 28:04your
    • 28:05immune system and bringing it
    • 28:07over to your tumor cells.
    • 28:08So,
    • 28:09so it's really exciting. You
    • 28:11can avoid a lot of
    • 28:12those toxicities that chemo has,
    • 28:14and, that's why we're actually
    • 28:16really excited about this.
    • 28:18So there are already FDA
    • 28:20approved bispecifics.
    • 28:22So I I these are
    • 28:23hard to say, but I'll
    • 28:24try. Blinatumumab
    • 28:26binds CD three t cells
    • 28:28to CD nineteen b cells,
    • 28:30and that's been approved for
    • 28:32leukemia.
    • 28:35Tembentafus
    • 28:36targets g p, one hundred
    • 28:39protein to anti CD three
    • 28:40on on t cells, and
    • 28:42that's approved for the use
    • 28:44of melanoma in the eye.
    • 28:46And then amivantamab
    • 28:48is another FDA approved,
    • 28:51non small cell lung cancer,
    • 28:53drug, and it binds to
    • 28:54EGFR
    • 28:55and MET,
    • 28:56and it's been approved for,
    • 28:58EGFR exon twenty insertion mutation.
    • 29:01So those patients. And and
    • 29:02this is a waterfall plot.
    • 29:03Each line
    • 29:05is a patient and how
    • 29:06much shrinkage
    • 29:08of their tumor,
    • 29:09has occurred. So we like
    • 29:11all that shrinkage to be
    • 29:12below the line. In this
    • 29:13case, you have some folks
    • 29:15who have a hundred percent
    • 29:16shrinkage, which is fantastic.
    • 29:19So this is a slide,
    • 29:20actually, I got from from
    • 29:21doctor Goldberg,
    • 29:23and it's a little complicated,
    • 29:24but basically, I'm gonna walk
    • 29:25you through it. So all
    • 29:26of these are different targets
    • 29:28on the surface of cells.
    • 29:30And so bispecific
    • 29:31antibodies
    • 29:33are are targeting any number
    • 29:34of these, including
    • 29:36ones that are associated with
    • 29:37tumor cells,
    • 29:39ones that are involved with
    • 29:40the immune cells, and ones
    • 29:41that also,
    • 29:43target
    • 29:44PD one, PD L one,
    • 29:46like doctor Herbst was mentioning,
    • 29:48etcetera.
    • 29:49And so these are the
    • 29:50number of antibodies that have
    • 29:52been developed. Each line is
    • 29:53a different antibody.
    • 29:55In this, this tells you
    • 29:56that in two thousand eleven,
    • 29:57there were twelve clinical trials
    • 29:59with bispecific antibodies.
    • 30:01In two thousand twenty three,
    • 30:03there were sixty two, and
    • 30:04now I think there's upwards
    • 30:06of a hundred and some.
    • 30:07And, these are all the
    • 30:09different tumor types. So lung
    • 30:11non small cell lung cancer
    • 30:12is at the top there
    • 30:13with sixty two trials.
    • 30:15So
    • 30:16very exciting area.
    • 30:18Okay. Now I'm gonna switch
    • 30:19for a moment to small
    • 30:20cell because this drug was
    • 30:22just approved last year. And
    • 30:24this bispecific, again, makes a
    • 30:25lot of sense here in
    • 30:26small cell because this slide
    • 30:29here
    • 30:29on the on the left,
    • 30:32the blue cells are tumor
    • 30:33cells, and this is a
    • 30:35baseline biopsy
    • 30:36before treatment. And what you
    • 30:38can see there, there are
    • 30:39a lot of tumor cells,
    • 30:40but there aren't pink or
    • 30:41yellow cells. Those are the
    • 30:43white blood cells.
    • 30:44And and then this is,
    • 30:47this is not specifically tarlatanab,
    • 30:49but the idea here is
    • 30:50you can see massive
    • 30:52infiltration of a lot of
    • 30:53different,
    • 30:54white blood cells, and that
    • 30:56we think is what is
    • 30:57helping to activate the immune
    • 30:59system to recognize cancer cells.
    • 31:01So
    • 31:03the the this drug in
    • 31:05small cell lung cancer, this
    • 31:06was the Delphi three zero
    • 31:07one trial that led to
    • 31:08FDA approval. Just pay attention
    • 31:10here. So in in
    • 31:13forty percent of the patients,
    • 31:14they had shrinkage of their
    • 31:15disease.
    • 31:17Another thirty percent had stable
    • 31:19disease, so that means about
    • 31:20seventy percent of the patients
    • 31:22were responding to this drug.
    • 31:24And all of those patients
    • 31:25had already been treated with
    • 31:27two different lines before that
    • 31:29of treatment. So this is,
    • 31:32on the basis of this,
    • 31:34this drug was approved by
    • 31:35the FDA last year, and
    • 31:37then another
    • 31:39trial
    • 31:41in June confirmed the results
    • 31:43and actually showed if you
    • 31:44compared
    • 31:45patients treated with tarlatanab
    • 31:47to patients with chemotherapy,
    • 31:49there was really a positive,
    • 31:52to extend the overall survival
    • 31:53by five months. So really
    • 31:55exciting.
    • 31:56And the other thing I
    • 31:57didn't mention is that those
    • 31:58those patients who are responding,
    • 32:00the median duration of response
    • 32:02is is almost ten months.
    • 32:04So you're not just saying,
    • 32:05let's just let's push it
    • 32:07out a couple couple months
    • 32:09before you have something that's
    • 32:10popping up. It's really ten
    • 32:12months, so that's really great.
    • 32:15So
    • 32:16briefly about some of the
    • 32:17side effects of these kinds
    • 32:18of drugs,
    • 32:19is is cytokine release syndrome.
    • 32:21So if you think about
    • 32:23activating your immune system, if
    • 32:24you get a vaccine shot,
    • 32:26flu, COVID,
    • 32:27sometimes you get,
    • 32:29some fever and chills that
    • 32:30night. You feel a little
    • 32:31achy, really tired,
    • 32:34you know, over the over
    • 32:35the course of the next
    • 32:36day. And so this is
    • 32:37similar, but so here,
    • 32:40over half the patients had
    • 32:41CRS,
    • 32:42mostly low grade one or
    • 32:44two, symptoms of fever, chills,
    • 32:46maybe the blood pressure was
    • 32:47a low a little low,
    • 32:48the the oxygen a little
    • 32:50low. These can these symptoms
    • 32:52can be treated with Tylenol,
    • 32:53IV fluids,
    • 32:55oxygen, and steroids.
    • 32:57Only one percent of those
    • 32:58patients had,
    • 32:59more severe grade of grade
    • 33:01three CRS that went into
    • 33:03the the ICU for monitoring
    • 33:05there. And this CRS usually
    • 33:07occurs,
    • 33:08again, like that flu vaccine,
    • 33:10within twenty four hours of
    • 33:12the first two infusions. So
    • 33:13week one and week two
    • 33:14right now, we admit patients
    • 33:16into the hospital for monitoring
    • 33:18overnight. They can go home
    • 33:19the next day, and then
    • 33:21the rest of the,
    • 33:23infusions can happen every two
    • 33:25weeks in in the outpatient
    • 33:27setting in the clinic.
    • 33:29And we're working on a
    • 33:30a pilot to do this
    • 33:32outpatient as well
    • 33:33safely. So what's next? Well,
    • 33:35you heard from Doctor Herbst.
    • 33:37When you have active drugs,
    • 33:39we want to try to
    • 33:40move them earlier in treatment,
    • 33:41either first line or in
    • 33:43maintenance or after you have
    • 33:49or in early stage. So
    • 33:51that those those trials are
    • 33:52happening now. There are also
    • 33:56lots of bispecifics and even
    • 33:57tri specifics,
    • 33:59and this shows you one
    • 34:00where not only is there
    • 34:02the CD three and, DLL
    • 34:04three, but but the antibody
    • 34:06also recognizes
    • 34:08albumin, which is basically protein
    • 34:10in your body, and it
    • 34:10helps to extend the half
    • 34:12life. So there's lots of
    • 34:13ways to augment this,
    • 34:15and, right now, they're being
    • 34:16used in combinations with standard
    • 34:18of care and other novel
    • 34:19drugs. Super exciting.
    • 34:22Keep your eyes out for
    • 34:23this. And again, I love
    • 34:24it because we're just avoiding
    • 34:26chemo altogether. So,
    • 34:28alright. Thanks. That's it for
    • 34:29me, and I'll I'll, and
    • 34:31thanks for your,
    • 34:32attention.
    • 34:36Thank you, doctor Chang. So
    • 34:38last but not least in
    • 34:39this session is doctor Scott
    • 34:41Gettinger. Doctor Gettinger is a
    • 34:42thoracic oncologist. And as you
    • 34:44heard from doctor Herbst, he
    • 34:46led,
    • 34:47some of the, early immunotherapy
    • 34:49trials here. So thank you
    • 34:51very much.
    • 34:54There we go. So I
    • 34:55can just advance it here.
    • 34:59Nice.
    • 35:00Hello, everybody.
    • 35:01It's great to see all
    • 35:02of you
    • 35:03here, and some of you
    • 35:05well, I met you over
    • 35:06ten years ago, so it's
    • 35:07really a different world in
    • 35:09lung cancer. So
    • 35:11I, welcome everybody.
    • 35:15So I was, asked to
    • 35:16discuss antibody drug conjugates, and,
    • 35:18initially, my plan was to
    • 35:20show you a video
    • 35:21that I think,
    • 35:23describes antibiotic conjugates very well.
    • 35:25But, my colleagues told me
    • 35:27you don't come here to
    • 35:28see a video. You come
    • 35:29here to see us talk.
    • 35:31So,
    • 35:33I'm I put some slides
    • 35:34together to to, to illustrate
    • 35:36this, but at the end,
    • 35:36I'm gonna show just a
    • 35:37truncated version of the video
    • 35:39and just to see how
    • 35:40I did.
    • 35:42Okay.
    • 35:43So on the right here,
    • 35:44you can see a tumor.
    • 35:45So what is a tumor?
    • 35:46So you have one cell
    • 35:48in an organ, let's say,
    • 35:49the lung. One cell that
    • 35:50does its business day by
    • 35:52day. And then for some
    • 35:53reason, that one cell becomes
    • 35:54two, becomes four, becomes a
    • 35:56million. And that happens because
    • 35:58of mutations in the DNA
    • 35:59of that cell.
    • 36:01The immune system
    • 36:03distinguishes
    • 36:04a tumor cell from a
    • 36:05normal cell based
    • 36:08upon proteins that are expressed
    • 36:09in the surface. We've heard
    • 36:10about this. We call them
    • 36:11antigens.
    • 36:12Okay? And that's how you
    • 36:14initiate an immune response to,
    • 36:17to different things, whether it's
    • 36:18tumor or viruses.
    • 36:20So
    • 36:21there are two types of
    • 36:22antigens,
    • 36:22tumor antigens. One is a
    • 36:24tumor specific antigen
    • 36:25which is different patient to
    • 36:27patient. So very hard to
    • 36:28target these antigens because we'd
    • 36:29have to figure out the
    • 36:31difference in each patients and
    • 36:32then would have to create
    • 36:33an antibody.
    • 36:34And then there are the
    • 36:35tumor associated antigens. These are
    • 36:36antigens that are preferentially
    • 36:38expressed on tumor cells,
    • 36:40and these might occur in
    • 36:42anywhere from ten to twenty
    • 36:43five percent of lung cancers.
    • 36:46So here on the left,
    • 36:47you see an antibody. And
    • 36:49what an antibody is supposed
    • 36:50to do,
    • 36:51let's just pretend this is
    • 36:52not a tumor cell. Let's
    • 36:53pretend pretend this is a
    • 36:54cell that's infected with COVID.
    • 36:56And let's say you've been
    • 36:57exposed to COVID before.
    • 36:59So when COVID infects a
    • 37:00cell, it takes over the
    • 37:01machinery of the cell, and
    • 37:03it starts making all sorts
    • 37:04of proteins. And some of
    • 37:05these proteins are
    • 37:07expressed. Let's see here.
    • 37:11Not sure how to show
    • 37:12it, but you see these
    • 37:13these bright
    • 37:15oh, yeah. So you can
    • 37:17see these. So one of
    • 37:18these might be a COVID
    • 37:19associated antigen.
    • 37:20And so
    • 37:21when that happens,
    • 37:23we have antibodies that are
    • 37:24made by our own immune
    • 37:26system, by our b cells,
    • 37:27and they come and they
    • 37:28recognize,
    • 37:30this infected cell and they,
    • 37:32they flag the immune system
    • 37:34to destroy the cell.
    • 37:36So you've heard a lot
    • 37:37about antibodies and the antibodies
    • 37:38that you heard about tonight
    • 37:39are ones that we create.
    • 37:41So in a case of
    • 37:42a tumor
    • 37:43associated antigen, we might not
    • 37:45have antibodies because these antigens
    • 37:47might have been expressed on
    • 37:48normal cells early in development
    • 37:50or on some rare normal
    • 37:52cells now in low degree.
    • 37:54So we have made antibodies,
    • 37:57against some of these antigens.
    • 37:58We initially just started making
    • 38:00antibodies and there's one for
    • 38:01example called Cetuximab.
    • 38:03Anyone remember Martha Stewart? She
    • 38:05went to jail because of
    • 38:06Erbitux. Okay. So that was
    • 38:07an antibody. It's one of
    • 38:08these, one of these antigens
    • 38:10and promise it doesn't it
    • 38:11didn't work that well. At
    • 38:12least in lung cancer, it
    • 38:13didn't work that well. So
    • 38:15we need to do better
    • 38:16and,
    • 38:17technology has allowed us to
    • 38:19modify antibodies in all sorts
    • 38:21of ways.
    • 38:22So these are the three
    • 38:23components of an antibody drug
    • 38:25conjugate.
    • 38:26K? You have the
    • 38:29you have the antibody, we
    • 38:30call it a monoclonal antibody
    • 38:32that's created,
    • 38:33and then we have a
    • 38:33linker
    • 38:34that links a warhead, in
    • 38:36this case, chemotherapy
    • 38:37to the antibody.
    • 38:39So now you can have
    • 38:39the antibody that's gonna circulate
    • 38:41around the body. It's gonna
    • 38:42find the the tumor cell,
    • 38:44and it's gonna bring this
    • 38:45chemotherapy
    • 38:46smart bomb along with it.
    • 38:48So blowing this up a
    • 38:49little bit, let's just start
    • 38:50here. So let's say,
    • 38:53you know, you know, in
    • 38:54clinic, I have a big
    • 38:55arrow so I can see
    • 38:56it. I can't see it
    • 38:57here. But anyway,
    • 38:59you probably see it.
    • 39:00It's they make fun of
    • 39:01me. But,
    • 39:02so so this is the
    • 39:03tumor. Right? And here are
    • 39:04some antigens on the tumor,
    • 39:05and this is the ADC
    • 39:07that you get through an
    • 39:08IV infusion. And let's say
    • 39:09this is an ADC that
    • 39:10recognizes something on a tumor
    • 39:12called TROPE two.
    • 39:13K? So here you see
    • 39:14in brown,
    • 39:15this is TROPE-two. So the
    • 39:17antibody drug conjugate
    • 39:19binds to this antibody,
    • 39:21binds this antigen,
    • 39:22and then this causes the
    • 39:23cell to take in the
    • 39:25antibody in a process called
    • 39:26endocytosis.
    • 39:27And once in the cell,
    • 39:30the
    • 39:31antibody inside an endosome,
    • 39:33merges with a lysosome which
    • 39:35allows cleavage
    • 39:36here of
    • 39:37the chemotherapy
    • 39:39from the antibody and now
    • 39:41the chemotherapy can do its
    • 39:42effect, can kill the cancer.
    • 39:44There is another potential effect
    • 39:46called the bystander effect. So
    • 39:48the once this, chemotherapy is
    • 39:50is
    • 39:51is released, it can permeate
    • 39:53into nearby cells regardless if
    • 39:55those cells
    • 39:56express that particular trop two
    • 39:57antigen or not and cause
    • 39:59cancer cell death.
    • 40:01So currently there there are
    • 40:03many of these antibody drug
    • 40:04conjugates in development
    • 40:06for non small cell lung
    • 40:07cancer on the left and
    • 40:08small cell lung cancer on
    • 40:09the right. Three of them
    • 40:11are currently FDA approved and
    • 40:14I can see one person
    • 40:15who's on one of them.
    • 40:17One is for a protein
    • 40:19called cMET and here you
    • 40:20can again see this is
    • 40:21the surface of the cell,
    • 40:23and here are the antigens
    • 40:24that are expressed. One is
    • 40:26for TROKE two, and then
    • 40:27one is for HER2.
    • 40:29So we here are
    • 40:31running several clinical trials looking
    • 40:33at new antibody drug conjugates.
    • 40:35And now that I've gotten
    • 40:36to this part, I'd like
    • 40:37to show two minutes of
    • 40:38a video. Is that okay?
    • 40:39Yeah. That's it. Because I
    • 40:40think it it if I
    • 40:41can figure out how to
    • 40:42do this.
    • 40:44Oh, boy.
    • 40:48Yeah. There we go. Antibody
    • 40:50drug conjugates or ADCs
    • 40:52are a kind of cancer
    • 40:53treatment approved to treat a
    • 40:55variety of cancers.
    • 40:57ADCs were created as a
    • 40:59way of delivering chemotherapy drugs
    • 41:01directly into cancer cells with
    • 41:03the goal of minimizing damage
    • 41:04to healthy cells.
    • 41:06You can think of them
    • 41:07as a kind of targeted
    • 41:08chemotherapy.
    • 41:09As their name suggests, each
    • 41:11antibody drug conjugate is comprised
    • 41:13of an antibody,
    • 41:15a drug,
    • 41:16and a linker that holds
    • 41:17them together.
    • 41:18Antibodies can precisely locate and
    • 41:21bind to specific proteins found
    • 41:23on the surface of cells.
    • 41:24So the antibody component of
    • 41:26an ADC is designed to
    • 41:28precisely locate and bind to
    • 41:30a specific protein found mainly
    • 41:32on whatever type of cancer
    • 41:33cell is being targeted.
    • 41:35This antibody serves as a
    • 41:37guided missile to deliver to
    • 41:38the inside of the cancer
    • 41:40cell tiny payloads in the
    • 41:42form of a potent chemotherapy
    • 41:44drug.
    • 41:45Because the chemo is being
    • 41:46delivered directly to the cancer
    • 41:48cells,
    • 41:49ADCs can use a very
    • 41:50low dose of a more
    • 41:51powerful type of chemotherapy than
    • 41:53the kind of chemo that
    • 41:54is delivered throughout the body.
    • 41:57Finally, the linker is designed
    • 41:59to help prevent the chemo
    • 42:00from releasing until it reaches
    • 42:02the target cells.
    • 42:04ADCs are delivered through an
    • 42:05IV.
    • 42:06The antibody component of the
    • 42:08ADC
    • 42:09seeks out cancer cells by
    • 42:11looking for the protein it
    • 42:12was designed to identify.
    • 42:14When the antibody binds to
    • 42:15this protein, the cell responds
    • 42:17by pulling the ADC
    • 42:19inside the cell.
    • 42:20Once inside the cancer cell,
    • 42:22the laker breaks down.
    • 42:24This releases the chemotherapy payload
    • 42:26so it can destroy the
    • 42:27cell.
    • 42:29Now within a tumor, there
    • 42:30may be cancer cells that
    • 42:32don't have the target protein.
    • 42:34Some ADCs are able to
    • 42:36destroy these cells too.
    • 42:38That's because their chemo payload
    • 42:39can seep out of the
    • 42:40targeted cells to reach neighboring
    • 42:42cells as well. This is
    • 42:44called the bystander effect.
    • 42:46There are more than a
    • 42:47dozen ADCs approved for
    • 42:50That's enough. I was gonna
    • 42:51show longer initially, but
    • 42:52alright. Thank you, guys.
    • 42:59Thank you all. So I'd
    • 43:01like to invite,
    • 43:02doctor Wilson, doctor Chang, and
    • 43:04doctor Goettinger to just come
    • 43:05up here,
    • 43:07so that we can they
    • 43:08can answer some questions.
    • 43:11Does anybody have a question?
    • 43:15Yes.
    • 43:17I don't know if I
    • 43:18need the microphone.
    • 43:19Well, I'm gonna I'll give
    • 43:20you the mic. I'll pass
    • 43:21it down. Yeah. My question
    • 43:22is, regarding,
    • 43:24heated heated chemotherapy.
    • 43:27I read something probably in
    • 43:28the Cure magazine that is
    • 43:30gonna be a game changer.
    • 43:31So is that something that
    • 43:32you folks are working on?
    • 43:34Or
    • 43:36Certain spaces we we have.
    • 43:44So there there's certain spaces
    • 43:45in the body, like the
    • 43:46pleural space, which is, you
    • 43:48know, a bag that's around
    • 43:49the lung. We have the
    • 43:50the peritoneum, which is sort
    • 43:51of a bag around all
    • 43:52the organs in the in
    • 43:53the abdomen.
    • 43:55And in those situations,
    • 43:56we sometimes
    • 43:58will will try to well,
    • 43:59we won't, but it's been
    • 44:01done where you heat a
    • 44:02chemotherapy and you put it
    • 44:03into that space
    • 44:04or you put some other
    • 44:05thing into that space, whether
    • 44:07it's another immunotherapy,
    • 44:08and that can cause cell
    • 44:10death, you know, within that
    • 44:11area.
    • 44:12It's particularly used for mesothelioma,
    • 44:15but we're beginning we have
    • 44:16a program here,
    • 44:17a guy who does mesothelioma
    • 44:19for the peritoneum, and he
    • 44:20wants us to do this
    • 44:21in the pleura. So we're
    • 44:22beginning to do this,
    • 44:24but it's really a local
    • 44:25effect. And there might be
    • 44:26some subsequent immune activation,
    • 44:29but it's it's more local
    • 44:30right now. So when you
    • 44:31say local, that means just
    • 44:33to
    • 44:34say per se, like, the
    • 44:35the log here. In that
    • 44:36cavity, you know, where the
    • 44:37cancer cells line that cavity
    • 44:39and often you have fluid
    • 44:40that's produced because that that
    • 44:41cavity, those lining has holes
    • 44:43in it and you get
    • 44:44pleural effusion. Some of you
    • 44:46might know what that is
    • 44:46where you get fluid around
    • 44:47the lung or fluid around
    • 44:49the abdomen ascites. It's really
    • 44:51supposed to treat local disease.
    • 44:53But once you get cell
    • 44:54death, you can have an
    • 44:55immune response, and that immune
    • 44:57response can extend beyond that
    • 44:58area.
    • 44:59Thank you. Can I ask
    • 45:01one more question?
    • 45:03AI.
    • 45:04Where are you folks at
    • 45:05in in that whole process
    • 45:06of getting that fully implemented
    • 45:08at Yale?
    • 45:10Are you at the beginning
    • 45:11stages? When do you expect
    • 45:12it to be fully functional?
    • 45:15It's not me.
    • 45:18So AI is super interesting
    • 45:20now, and there's so many
    • 45:21ways that it can be,
    • 45:23used. I think that right
    • 45:24now,
    • 45:26there are there's a lot
    • 45:27of interest, for example, in
    • 45:29pathology.
    • 45:30So,
    • 45:31there is work being done,
    • 45:33where you can you know,
    • 45:36we talk a lot about
    • 45:37mutation targets like eGFR,
    • 45:40and and how you can
    • 45:42sequence and look for that
    • 45:43DNA. There's work around looking
    • 45:45at the pathology slide, the
    • 45:47digital pathology slide, and being
    • 45:49able to determine whether or
    • 45:50not you have an EGFR
    • 45:52mutation
    • 45:53just from looking at the
    • 45:54slide
    • 45:54and teaching folks to do
    • 45:56that. And so you could
    • 45:57imagine that would be really
    • 45:58important in places where you
    • 46:00don't have access to the
    • 46:01pathologist or to the sequencing.
    • 46:04So that's one area where
    • 46:05it's really,
    • 46:06important and and active.
    • 46:08Another area is with radiology.
    • 46:10Right? So you have right
    • 46:12now, we have radiologists looking
    • 46:14at the scans,
    • 46:15but if there's a way
    • 46:16that we can help to
    • 46:17augment that by,
    • 46:19you know, training
    • 46:21training AI to look and
    • 46:22see if there are their
    • 46:23particular characteristic
    • 46:25patterns of cancer.
    • 46:27And especially if you're looking
    • 46:28at a scan maybe after
    • 46:29you have surgery or, you
    • 46:31know, could you look at
    • 46:32that and and have,
    • 46:35see a pattern that might
    • 46:37put you at more risk
    • 46:38of developing recurrence or less
    • 46:40risk. And then you could
    • 46:41dial you could, you know,
    • 46:44do more therapy or or
    • 46:46monitoring or in the high
    • 46:47risk patient or vice versa.
    • 46:49And that's something that was
    • 46:50just presented at
    • 46:53ESMO, recently. And so there's
    • 46:55a lot of activity, you
    • 46:56know, utilizing AI in all
    • 46:58sorts of the things that
    • 46:59we we do, and I
    • 47:00think it's it's sort of
    • 47:02rapid learning and,
    • 47:04you know, we're all trying
    • 47:05to put our heads around
    • 47:06that and see if it
    • 47:07can help us in our,
    • 47:09and help patients.
    • 47:11I think we have time
    • 47:12for one last question.
    • 47:14Yes.
    • 47:24Has immunotherapy,
    • 47:25reached the level where it's
    • 47:27used, only by itself and
    • 47:28not in conjunction with chemotherapy
    • 47:30as well?
    • 47:31Is it, always used with
    • 47:33chemotherapy?
    • 47:35Yeah. That's a great question.
    • 47:38There are some situations where
    • 47:39we might use,
    • 47:41immunotherapy
    • 47:42alone. We do use it
    • 47:43sometimes in combination,
    • 47:45with chemotherapy.
    • 47:47One of the, what we
    • 47:48call biomarkers that we use
    • 47:50to kinda help us to
    • 47:51determine what the likelihood
    • 47:53is of a patient with
    • 47:55a certain type of lung
    • 47:56cancer called non small cell
    • 47:57lung cancer
    • 47:59of benefiting from the immunotherapy
    • 48:01is looking at the tumor
    • 48:02PDL one expression. We've heard
    • 48:04about PDL one, tonight. And
    • 48:06sometimes that can give us
    • 48:08a sense of what the
    • 48:09likelihood of benefit is to
    • 48:11immunotherapy
    • 48:11alone.
    • 48:13It's not a perfect biomarker,
    • 48:15and there's a lot of
    • 48:16research
    • 48:17going on, not only looking
    • 48:18at PD L1, other biomarkers
    • 48:20as well, genetic
    • 48:22characteristics
    • 48:23of the cancer,
    • 48:24that can be important in
    • 48:26helping to kind of formulate
    • 48:28the optimal
    • 48:29treatment plan for a given
    • 48:30individual patient,
    • 48:32and that might involve immunotherapy
    • 48:34alone. It might involve,
    • 48:36immunotherapy
    • 48:37together with chemotherapy, and there
    • 48:39may be certain
    • 48:40contexts or situations where immunotherapy
    • 48:43isn't a good choice for
    • 48:44an individual,
    • 48:46patient.
    • 48:48Thank you very much. So
    • 48:49thank you very much for
    • 48:50the speakers in this session.
    • 48:52I think you heard about
    • 48:53some new emerging therapies that
    • 48:55are really exciting and things
    • 48:57for us to keep an
    • 48:58eye out. Thank you very
    • 49:01much.
    • 49:06Alright. Next, we have a
    • 49:07panel and,
    • 49:09that is going to be
    • 49:10moderated
    • 49:11by doctor Justin Blasberg
    • 49:13who
    • 49:14is right here.
    • 49:29How are you guys?
    • 49:30So, this is actually the
    • 49:31keynote part of the presentation,
    • 49:33so
    • 49:34welcome to,
    • 49:36our session. We're gonna,
    • 49:38talk about lung cancer screening,
    • 49:39early stage lung cancer, and
    • 49:40a few topics, and we'll
    • 49:42have the group introduce themselves,
    • 49:43and,
    • 49:44we'll run through some questions.
    • 49:46We surveyed
    • 49:47a thousand people to look
    • 49:48for the most important
    • 49:50questions that you guys wanna
    • 49:51know about, and we'll review
    • 49:52some of those things today.
    • 49:57Sure. Hi. Gavett Woodard. I'm
    • 49:59a thoracic surgeon here at
    • 50:00Yale, and we treat a
    • 50:01lot of lung cancer in
    • 50:02our practice.
    • 50:04Polly Sather. I'm a nurse
    • 50:06practitioner,
    • 50:07and I coordinate our lung
    • 50:08cancer screening program.
    • 50:11Hi. I'm Lynn Tonoye. I'm
    • 50:13a pulmonary critical care physician,
    • 50:15and I direct the lung
    • 50:16cancer screening program.
    • 50:18And I also see a
    • 50:19lot of patients with lung
    • 50:20cancer.
    • 50:22Good evening. I'm Christina Foos.
    • 50:24I'm a cardiothoracic
    • 50:25radiologist, and I read all
    • 50:27these lung cancer screening CDs.
    • 50:30So this is a modest
    • 50:31group. If you're having lung
    • 50:33cancer screening anywhere in our
    • 50:34system, probably this group touches
    • 50:36your scan in some form.
    • 50:38That's thousands of scans and
    • 50:40a pretty impressive encatchment. So,
    • 50:42we're fortunate to have this
    • 50:43group today. I wrote my
    • 50:44questions down,
    • 50:46so that we can be
    • 50:47timely. We're gonna start with
    • 50:49Polly. Polly is,
    • 50:52sort of the keeps the
    • 50:53wheels from falling off the
    • 50:54bus of the lung cancer
    • 50:55screening machine,
    • 50:57and,
    • 50:58we were gonna start with
    • 50:59some questions
    • 51:00mostly about, where we are
    • 51:02today with lung cancer screening.
    • 51:04Many of you may understand
    • 51:06may know who qualifies for
    • 51:07lung cancer screening, but we're
    • 51:08going to review that quickly
    • 51:09and then sort of talk
    • 51:10about where we are in
    • 51:11twenty twenty five with the
    • 51:12success of our program, which
    • 51:14has evolved over time,
    • 51:16and, what the future looks
    • 51:17like. So why don't we
    • 51:19just start with an update
    • 51:19on lung cancer screening and
    • 51:21and who qualifies?
    • 51:23Sure. So my job kind
    • 51:24of is to keep you
    • 51:25guys having a lot of
    • 51:27free time so we don't
    • 51:28have to talk about those
    • 51:29ADCs and give you guys
    • 51:31a lot of business. But,
    • 51:33so lung cancer screening,
    • 51:35we've had recommendations in the
    • 51:36United States since two thousand
    • 51:38fifteen. But really in March
    • 51:39of two thousand twenty one,
    • 51:41the recommendations
    • 51:42by the United States preventative
    • 51:44task force were updated
    • 51:45to broaden the eligibility criteria,
    • 51:48which right now includes anybody
    • 51:50fifty years to eighty who
    • 51:52smoked,
    • 51:53cigarettes a pack a day
    • 51:54for the equivalent of twenty
    • 51:56years still smoking or quit
    • 51:57within fifteen years.
    • 52:00So that's the current eligibility
    • 52:01criteria, and the way we
    • 52:03screen is with a low
    • 52:04dose CAT scan that your
    • 52:05group reads. And we're very
    • 52:07fortunate here at Smilow to
    • 52:08have a dedicated group of
    • 52:10chest radiologists
    • 52:11that,
    • 52:12read these scans. It's not
    • 52:14a general radiology group that
    • 52:15reads them. So that improves
    • 52:17our sensitivity and our specificity
    • 52:19of these tests.
    • 52:21Lung cancer screening, though, has
    • 52:23really been slow in the
    • 52:24uptake. Like, the current,
    • 52:27nationally, we're only screening about
    • 52:29eighteen percent of the eligible
    • 52:31population
    • 52:32unlike breast, which is about
    • 52:34eighty percent get mammograms.
    • 52:36For colorectal screening, it's closer
    • 52:38to, like, seventy percent. Prostate's
    • 52:40a little lower, about thirty
    • 52:42six percent.
    • 52:44But I'm really happy to
    • 52:45say that in Connecticut, we
    • 52:46are number two in the
    • 52:48country in terms of our
    • 52:49lung cancer screening rates. That
    • 52:51data just came out from
    • 52:52the American Lung Association.
    • 52:53We're just behind our small
    • 52:55little neighbor of Rhode Island
    • 52:57to the north.
    • 52:58And we do have scanners
    • 52:59from, like, Warwick all the
    • 53:01way down to Greenwich, and
    • 53:02we have coordinators,
    • 53:04at all those sites. Some
    • 53:05of them are here. Krista
    • 53:07from New Haven. Emily's here
    • 53:09from Greenwich. Stephanie from Bridgeport.
    • 53:12So we've come a long
    • 53:13way in terms of our
    • 53:14screening, and we're screening, you
    • 53:16know, about three thousand people
    • 53:17now a year.
    • 53:19And in,
    • 53:21the lung cancer screening trials
    • 53:23that we often,
    • 53:25think about, talk about, and
    • 53:26that have shown a benefit
    • 53:27to lung cancer screening. One
    • 53:28of the biggest
    • 53:29parts, the most important parts
    • 53:31is not just coming in
    • 53:32to get that initial scan,
    • 53:33but it's the follow-up. It's
    • 53:35getting patients to come back
    • 53:36for the second and third
    • 53:37scan so that we follow
    • 53:39nodules that may be growing
    • 53:40or changing and how have
    • 53:42we or what have we
    • 53:43been doing to help patients
    • 53:45with adherence for those recommendations
    • 53:47because those scans seem like
    • 53:48they're as important as that
    • 53:49initial scan.
    • 53:51Yeah. So adherence is really
    • 53:52worth talking about because in
    • 53:54the lung cancer screening trials,
    • 53:57the majority of the lung
    • 53:58cancers that were found were
    • 54:00not in the initial screen.
    • 54:01It was in the subsequent
    • 54:02screens. So people will have
    • 54:04a normal screen, and then
    • 54:06they do need to come
    • 54:06back every year.
    • 54:08So,
    • 54:09before their initial screen, all
    • 54:11the coordinators
    • 54:12and I, we call everybody,
    • 54:14and we do what's called
    • 54:15a shared decision making visit,
    • 54:16and we talk a lot
    • 54:17about adherence and the importance
    • 54:19of coming back.
    • 54:21We do also have a
    • 54:22pretty sophisticated
    • 54:23tracking system within our,
    • 54:26EMR, our epic system, where
    • 54:28we know when people are
    • 54:29late. We know if they
    • 54:30have critical findings, and we
    • 54:32are going to find you
    • 54:34and make sure you get
    • 54:35something done about it.
    • 54:37We also just set up,
    • 54:39a self scheduling option in
    • 54:41the MyChart if we have
    • 54:42MyChart users to help people
    • 54:44schedule their scans and to
    • 54:46improve our adherence rates.
    • 54:48Great. Thank you.
    • 54:50So, doctor Tanui, I'm hoping,
    • 54:52can help us with,
    • 54:54probably the most important
    • 54:56question tonight, which is, why
    • 54:58do you think it's important
    • 54:59that people
    • 55:00what's the most important reason
    • 55:02that people who are at
    • 55:03risk for lung cancer should
    • 55:04have lung cancer screening?
    • 55:06So I'm I wanna ask
    • 55:07the audience a question.
    • 55:09How many of you have
    • 55:09had breast, colon, or prostate
    • 55:12cancer screening in the past
    • 55:13five years?
    • 55:15Yeah. So you are motivated,
    • 55:18educated bunch,
    • 55:20and,
    • 55:22the whole point of screening
    • 55:23is to find a cancer
    • 55:24early.
    • 55:25Because if we can find
    • 55:26a cancer early before it's
    • 55:28causing any symptoms, so you
    • 55:30wouldn't know to go to
    • 55:31the doctor.
    • 55:32Right? You're healthy, feeling fine,
    • 55:34but you go for your
    • 55:35mammogram,
    • 55:36do your colon rec colon
    • 55:38screening. And PSA, the prostate
    • 55:40specific antigen has had some
    • 55:41controversy,
    • 55:42but most of you men
    • 55:44out there are having it
    • 55:46monitored.
    • 55:48If you had a cancer,
    • 55:49one of those three cancers,
    • 55:51the likelihood,
    • 55:52if it was detected by
    • 55:53screening, that you would be
    • 55:54alive in five years is
    • 55:56more than ninety percent.
    • 55:58And so early detection is
    • 55:59the reason we're doing screening.
    • 56:02Right now, all these fancy
    • 56:04drugs, these exciting science that's
    • 56:06going on is really
    • 56:07directed at advanced stage.
    • 56:10They're getting used more and
    • 56:11more in earlier stage,
    • 56:13but three quarters of people
    • 56:14with lung cancer
    • 56:15now are diagnosed at advanced
    • 56:18stage where surgery
    • 56:20or radiation
    • 56:22are not gonna be your
    • 56:23best options. You need systemic
    • 56:24therapy, and so we need
    • 56:26all these drugs that have
    • 56:28really revolutionized lung cancer care
    • 56:31for that seventy five percent
    • 56:32of people who have advanced
    • 56:34stage disease at the time
    • 56:35of diagnosis.
    • 56:37So if we can get
    • 56:38lung cancer
    • 56:39screening embedded in the community
    • 56:42so that instead of
    • 56:44being glad that it's twenty
    • 56:46percent now instead of zero,
    • 56:48what that means is eighty
    • 56:49percent of people still aren't
    • 56:50being screened.
    • 56:51We can shift the needle
    • 56:53to where breast is, for
    • 56:54instance, where,
    • 56:56I don't know, eighty percent
    • 56:57of people are diagnosed at
    • 56:58early eighty percent of women
    • 57:00are diagnosed at early stage.
    • 57:02And so breast cancer has
    • 57:03become a like, I'm a
    • 57:05survivor. It's a chronic disease.
    • 57:08I go get checked for
    • 57:09it every year or two,
    • 57:11but I'm not afraid that
    • 57:12I'm gonna die because I
    • 57:13know that if something happens,
    • 57:15I will be detected early
    • 57:16again. And we have to
    • 57:18shift the needle for lung
    • 57:19cancer
    • 57:20there because it right now
    • 57:22is the leading cause of
    • 57:23cancer death
    • 57:24in both women and men.
    • 57:26And I'm gonna say something,
    • 57:28which is a little shocking,
    • 57:29which is that in the
    • 57:30US, for the last two
    • 57:31to three years,
    • 57:33more women have been diagnosed
    • 57:34with lung cancer than men.
    • 57:36And that shift in the
    • 57:38curve is gonna keep getting
    • 57:39more pronounced.
    • 57:41And so all you women
    • 57:42out there and all you
    • 57:43men, if you have friends
    • 57:44who should be screened, please
    • 57:46tell them to go.
    • 57:49Awesome.
    • 57:51I think for our radiology
    • 57:53experts,
    • 57:54as a as a segue
    • 57:56to that,
    • 57:57patients are getting lung cancer
    • 57:58screening CTs. They're getting CT
    • 58:00scans
    • 58:01in the ER for shortness
    • 58:02of breath, they're getting calcium
    • 58:03scoring CT scans, their scans
    • 58:05happening all the time, information
    • 58:07is being released to patients
    • 58:07immediately, they see all sorts
    • 58:09of
    • 58:10findings on Epic on MyChart.
    • 58:11They don't really understand what
    • 58:13those things mean,
    • 58:14and that must be
    • 58:16equally a burden or a,
    • 58:19an extra amount of workload,
    • 58:21in reading these scans, for
    • 58:23our radiology colleagues.
    • 58:25How do you distinguish
    • 58:27incidental findings on lung cancer
    • 58:28screening, CT scans, low dose
    • 58:30CT scans? How do you
    • 58:31determine what's clinically meaningful? How
    • 58:33do you determine what's background
    • 58:34noise? How do we reassure
    • 58:36patients
    • 58:36that this little spot that
    • 58:38just popped up on the
    • 58:38scan is is actually okay
    • 58:40to watch?
    • 58:42You bring up an excellent
    • 58:43point. And to everybody who
    • 58:44ever had a CT
    • 58:46with a report that scared
    • 58:47you, I apologize
    • 58:49that this scared you.
    • 58:52And I would really encourage
    • 58:54you if this happens in
    • 58:55the future,
    • 58:56don't be scared and talk
    • 58:58to the ordering provider
    • 58:59before you go down the
    • 59:00rabbit hole of the Internet.
    • 59:02Please do that.
    • 59:04We are legally obliged to
    • 59:06put certain things in the
    • 59:07report because otherwise, they're considered
    • 59:09missing.
    • 59:10Having said that,
    • 59:12there are things that we
    • 59:13see on lung cancer screening
    • 59:15CTs that are not related
    • 59:16to lung cancer screening that
    • 59:18are important.
    • 59:19As we know,
    • 59:20smoking does not only affect
    • 59:22our lungs,
    • 59:23but it only also affects
    • 59:25our vessels.
    • 59:26All vessels in our chest
    • 59:28can be affected, particularly the
    • 59:30ones around the heart, the
    • 59:31coronary arteries.
    • 59:32And so if we read
    • 59:34lung cancer c cleaning CTs
    • 59:36and we see a lot
    • 59:37of coronary artery calcifications,
    • 59:40which is a marker for
    • 59:42coronary artery disease, we will
    • 59:43comment on that. And if
    • 59:45you haven't seen a cardiologist
    • 59:48in the past for that,
    • 59:49there will be a note
    • 59:50in the report saying,
    • 59:52maybe you should see a
    • 59:52cardiologist and be worked up
    • 59:54for that. So this is
    • 59:55something that we would not
    • 59:57just
    • 59:58forget.
    • 59:59The same is the large
    • 01:00:00vessel that comes out of
    • 01:00:02your heart, the aorta,
    • 01:00:03can be also affected and
    • 01:00:05it can get large. And
    • 01:00:06so we also comment on
    • 01:00:07that.
    • 01:00:08If it's over a certain
    • 01:00:10measurement,
    • 01:00:11you should probably be seen
    • 01:00:13by a vascular surgeon or
    • 01:00:15by also by a cardiologist.
    • 01:00:17Little things in the liver.
    • 01:00:18We usually try to say,
    • 01:00:20it's a little thing in
    • 01:00:21the liver. Don't worry about
    • 01:00:22it. And if we say
    • 01:00:23in the report, don't worry
    • 01:00:24about it, then please don't
    • 01:00:26worry about it. We have
    • 01:00:27to say that it's there.
    • 01:00:29But, again,
    • 01:00:30it has something to do
    • 01:00:31with that we have to
    • 01:00:32report these things.
    • 01:00:34So
    • 01:00:35in short,
    • 01:00:36if you're worried,
    • 01:00:38don't ask doctor Google.
    • 01:00:40Ask your ordering provider. Ask
    • 01:00:42your PCP.
    • 01:00:44Ask your pulmonologist.
    • 01:00:46Ask someone who knows,
    • 01:00:48and please don't be scared.
    • 01:00:51Thank you.
    • 01:00:52I'm wondering if we could
    • 01:00:53also just touch on emerging
    • 01:00:55technologies. Someone asked about, AI
    • 01:00:57and radiology and pathology and
    • 01:00:59other emerging technologies in
    • 01:01:01the radiology space that are
    • 01:01:03useful for lung cancer screening,
    • 01:01:05what we might expect on
    • 01:01:07the horizon.
    • 01:01:08Well, obviously, there's a lot
    • 01:01:10of technological
    • 01:01:11developments going on. One of
    • 01:01:12the things that many people
    • 01:01:14still fear is I'm doing
    • 01:01:16screening
    • 01:01:17with ionizing radiation. I'm exposing
    • 01:01:20myself to something that is
    • 01:01:21per se risky.
    • 01:01:22And one of the reason
    • 01:01:24why lung cancer screening actually
    • 01:01:25made it to where we
    • 01:01:27are today is because we
    • 01:01:28were able to show that
    • 01:01:29the risk from the radiation
    • 01:01:31outweighs
    • 01:01:32the risk or the benefit
    • 01:01:33from being screened. Having said
    • 01:01:35that, with our newer technologists,
    • 01:01:37we're now able to reduce
    • 01:01:39the radiation dose even further.
    • 01:01:42So it gets now into
    • 01:01:44the realm of maybe a
    • 01:01:45couple of a handful of
    • 01:01:46chest x rays,
    • 01:01:48which are unfortunately completely useless
    • 01:01:50to screen for lung cancer.
    • 01:01:52But the CT is useful,
    • 01:01:54yet the dose is
    • 01:01:56similar.
    • 01:01:57So that's significant change that
    • 01:01:59we have on we are
    • 01:02:01going to have that particular
    • 01:02:03scanner I'm talking about next
    • 01:02:05year. So I'm keeping my
    • 01:02:06fingers crossed.
    • 01:02:07I'm very excited about this.
    • 01:02:10AI was mentioned. AI is
    • 01:02:12ubiquitous.
    • 01:02:12We have it at our
    • 01:02:14discretion every day regardless where
    • 01:02:16you are.
    • 01:02:17We also have it in
    • 01:02:18the reading room. There are
    • 01:02:19some tools that look at
    • 01:02:22patterns in CTs and try
    • 01:02:24to recognize,
    • 01:02:25is this bad? Is this
    • 01:02:27good? Has this changed? Has
    • 01:02:29it grown?
    • 01:02:30Has it not? The challenge
    • 01:02:31with these is
    • 01:02:32that
    • 01:02:33the
    • 01:02:36no CT is the same.
    • 01:02:37So if if one of
    • 01:02:38you were to get their
    • 01:02:39CT
    • 01:02:41this year and then next
    • 01:02:42year, even if you go
    • 01:02:43to the exact same place,
    • 01:02:45it will not look entirely
    • 01:02:47hundred percent the same. And
    • 01:02:48so we have to
    • 01:02:50find ways
    • 01:02:52to assess for the minute
    • 01:02:53changes that are simply because
    • 01:02:55it's a different CT to
    • 01:02:56the changes that are actually
    • 01:02:58true growth
    • 01:03:00or true changes in what
    • 01:03:02we describe density.
    • 01:03:03That's a term that we
    • 01:03:04use when we describe things
    • 01:03:06in the lungs.
    • 01:03:08So I'm excited. There's a
    • 01:03:09lot of development at the
    • 01:03:10end of this month. There's
    • 01:03:11our big annual international meeting
    • 01:03:14in Chicago, and I'm sure
    • 01:03:15that the vendors are gonna
    • 01:03:16be full with this.
    • 01:03:17So I'll report back.
    • 01:03:19Thank you. And then for
    • 01:03:21doctor Woodard,
    • 01:03:22maybe our last question before
    • 01:03:23we ask the crowd if
    • 01:03:25they have questions.
    • 01:03:27Lung cancer screening, calcium scoring,
    • 01:03:29CT scans, all of this
    • 01:03:30imaging has generated a lot
    • 01:03:32of,
    • 01:03:33early stage business on the
    • 01:03:35surgery side. And I'm wondering
    • 01:03:36if you could tell us
    • 01:03:37about how that has changed
    • 01:03:39your practice in terms of
    • 01:03:41volume of cases, the type
    • 01:03:42of surgeries that you're doing,
    • 01:03:44and maybe touch on the
    • 01:03:45robotics program as we have
    • 01:03:46built that up quite a
    • 01:03:47bit with your help. Yeah.
    • 01:03:49Thank you.
    • 01:03:50As was mentioned previously by
    • 01:03:52doctor Tanui, the goal is
    • 01:03:53to shift a diagnosis
    • 01:03:55from a cancer that would
    • 01:03:56have been caught at a
    • 01:03:57very late stage where the
    • 01:03:59treatments are more challenging,
    • 01:04:01our likelihood of cure is
    • 01:04:02less, to a much earlier
    • 01:04:04stage where it's a lot
    • 01:04:06more easy for a patient
    • 01:04:07to undergo a lung cancer
    • 01:04:08treatment.
    • 01:04:09So I'm a surgeon. If
    • 01:04:10you're diagnosed with a stage
    • 01:04:11one lung cancer or found
    • 01:04:13to have a lung nodule
    • 01:04:14that we don't even know
    • 01:04:15what it is,
    • 01:04:16the treatment for that is
    • 01:04:17either going to be something
    • 01:04:19like an operation that we
    • 01:04:20would do, and I'll talk
    • 01:04:21about that, or radiation therapy
    • 01:04:23if you're not a surgical
    • 01:04:24candidate.
    • 01:04:25These are a lot easier
    • 01:04:26therapies to endure than having
    • 01:04:28systemic therapy. All the new
    • 01:04:30cool chemotherapy drugs
    • 01:04:32are great, but the ideal
    • 01:04:34treatment for a lung cancer
    • 01:04:35would be to catch it
    • 01:04:36in this very early stage
    • 01:04:38where we can take it
    • 01:04:39out with a lot
    • 01:04:41better health benefits to you,
    • 01:04:43more likelihood of a cure,
    • 01:04:45as well as, you know,
    • 01:04:46not putting you through the
    • 01:04:47systemic therapies.
    • 01:04:48So we do most of
    • 01:04:49our operations here with robotic
    • 01:04:51surgery as was mentioned by
    • 01:04:53doctor Blasberg who leads up
    • 01:04:54our robotics program.
    • 01:04:56And they're all small incisions
    • 01:04:58on the side. I like
    • 01:04:58to tell patients they're the
    • 01:04:59size of my finger, and
    • 01:05:00we basically put ports between
    • 01:05:02your ribs. We put cameras
    • 01:05:04and long instruments in between
    • 01:05:06your ribs, and we're able
    • 01:05:07to remove tumors that way.
    • 01:05:09We can remove lobes, and
    • 01:05:10most of our operations are
    • 01:05:12done this way. Patients leave
    • 01:05:13the hospital in a few
    • 01:05:14days. They don't have these
    • 01:05:16big incisions,
    • 01:05:17and they do really well
    • 01:05:18long term. And so the
    • 01:05:20earlier we catch a cancer,
    • 01:05:22the more likely it is
    • 01:05:23that we're able to treat
    • 01:05:24it with just these interventions
    • 01:05:26alone. And stage one cancers
    • 01:05:28at the moment are not
    • 01:05:29getting any more systemic therapies.
    • 01:05:30We're just treating you with
    • 01:05:31this, and then you're done.
    • 01:05:33And you go into a
    • 01:05:34surveillance mode where you're basically
    • 01:05:35getting your annual CT scan
    • 01:05:38eventually just every year to
    • 01:05:39monitor for any signs of
    • 01:05:40recurrence.
    • 01:05:41So it really does make
    • 01:05:42a dramatic difference in what
    • 01:05:43the treatments are like for
    • 01:05:45lung cancer if it is
    • 01:05:46caught at an earlier stage.
    • 01:05:48And so that's why we
    • 01:05:49we push these initiatives of
    • 01:05:51lung cancer screening because it
    • 01:05:52makes a difference in how
    • 01:05:53people do in terms of
    • 01:05:54outcomes, but it also makes
    • 01:05:56the treatment a lot easier
    • 01:05:57if you are found to
    • 01:05:58have a lung cancer.
    • 01:06:02Sounds great.
    • 01:06:04I think just for the
    • 01:06:05sake of time, does anybody
    • 01:06:06have questions for this panel,
    • 01:06:08this group?
    • 01:06:10Do you have some some
    • 01:06:12notion about the
    • 01:06:13people who are not in
    • 01:06:14the current,
    • 01:06:16recommended group, you know, the
    • 01:06:17fifty smokers,
    • 01:06:19the earlier ones,
    • 01:06:21and what the incidence is
    • 01:06:23of that that group, and
    • 01:06:25and is there any,
    • 01:06:27thought about or or movement
    • 01:06:29to expand that that pool?
    • 01:06:32I have a little personal
    • 01:06:33investment in that that my
    • 01:06:34wife was diagnosed with early
    • 01:06:36stage lung cancer because she
    • 01:06:37tripped at home and thought
    • 01:06:39she hurt her ribs, and
    • 01:06:40the imaging showed up at
    • 01:06:42early stage.
    • 01:06:44It's a fascinating question. I
    • 01:06:45think, maybe we'll ask doctor
    • 01:06:47Tanui to expand,
    • 01:06:49you know, the what about
    • 01:06:51family history? What about exposure
    • 01:06:53history, occupational exposure?
    • 01:06:55Those those questions are are
    • 01:06:57fascinating.
    • 01:06:58So
    • 01:07:00we,
    • 01:07:02are stuck right now with,
    • 01:07:04the criteria that Pali
    • 01:07:06outlined, but we know that
    • 01:07:08that's not gonna find about
    • 01:07:10half of the people who
    • 01:07:11will get lung cancer.
    • 01:07:13And so,
    • 01:07:15one thing is the American
    • 01:07:16population
    • 01:07:17is changing,
    • 01:07:19and there are a lot
    • 01:07:20more people who never smoked
    • 01:07:22in this country than there
    • 01:07:23were
    • 01:07:24ten, twenty, thirty, certainly fifty
    • 01:07:27years ago,
    • 01:07:28but we're not seeing the
    • 01:07:29lung cancer rates falling precipitously
    • 01:07:32because of that, although they're
    • 01:07:33coming down. So fewer people
    • 01:07:35are dying.
    • 01:07:36But because the population of
    • 01:07:38the United States has gotten
    • 01:07:39so much bigger,
    • 01:07:40there are actually still a
    • 01:07:41lot of people with lung
    • 01:07:42cancer.
    • 01:07:43And so there is a
    • 01:07:44lot of interest in defining
    • 01:07:46risk outside of cigarettes.
    • 01:07:48And there are now
    • 01:07:50really good models that can
    • 01:07:52incorporate things like besides age
    • 01:07:54and smoking,
    • 01:07:56are you male or female?
    • 01:07:57Do you have a family
    • 01:07:58history? Were you exposed to
    • 01:08:00asbestos or other carcinogens?
    • 01:08:03And the future of lung
    • 01:08:05cancer screening really is that
    • 01:08:06there should be a way
    • 01:08:07to combine all that patient
    • 01:08:09individual information
    • 01:08:11with blood tests.
    • 01:08:12And so if we could
    • 01:08:13find some of those
    • 01:08:15gene genetic mutations in blood,
    • 01:08:18and we know that somebody
    • 01:08:20maybe demographically
    • 01:08:21has more risk because they
    • 01:08:23have a primary relative of
    • 01:08:25lung cancer, that should then
    • 01:08:27expand the pool of people,
    • 01:08:29perhaps to the general population,
    • 01:08:31who would then have that
    • 01:08:32sort of
    • 01:08:33relatively noninvasive
    • 01:08:35testing. I mean, a PSA
    • 01:08:37is a blood test after
    • 01:08:38all. So this would be
    • 01:08:38blood test with patient characteristics.
    • 01:08:41And I think that is
    • 01:08:42the way that this is
    • 01:08:43headed, and hopefully, really within
    • 01:08:45the next decade,
    • 01:08:47your wife won't have to
    • 01:08:48be diagnosed by accident.
    • 01:08:52Any other questions?
    • 01:08:56Yeah. I have a question.
    • 01:08:57Just,
    • 01:08:59smoking.
    • 01:09:00I mean, what about toxics
    • 01:09:02and other, you know,
    • 01:09:04air stuff in the air
    • 01:09:06could could cause
    • 01:09:07tumors in the lungs as
    • 01:09:09well. And, that's one part.
    • 01:09:11And second is,
    • 01:09:12why don't,
    • 01:09:14medical doctors
    • 01:09:16in the beginning check for
    • 01:09:17this at a certain part?
    • 01:09:19I mean, why does there
    • 01:09:20have to be an incident
    • 01:09:21for them to check to
    • 01:09:22see if you have cancer?
    • 01:09:24I mean, it's, I mean,
    • 01:09:25in my case,
    • 01:09:26I was kinda lucky. I
    • 01:09:27just
    • 01:09:28it's really falling down. If
    • 01:09:30I didn't fall down, I
    • 01:09:31wouldn't have known what I
    • 01:09:32had. You know? Alright. Everybody
    • 01:09:33go out and fall down.
    • 01:09:34Alright?
    • 01:09:36Because we have two falls.
    • 01:09:38I I I think you're
    • 01:09:39touching on what is really
    • 01:09:40the challenge right now. We
    • 01:09:41wanna screen everyone.
    • 01:09:43But if we did we
    • 01:09:44if we did a CT
    • 01:09:45scan on everybody, then even
    • 01:09:47with the tiny dose of
    • 01:09:48radiation, we'd be exposing a
    • 01:09:50lot of people to
    • 01:09:52consecutive scans
    • 01:09:54who will never get cancer.
    • 01:09:56And so that these risk
    • 01:09:58models that I was talking
    • 01:09:59about do try to incorporate
    • 01:10:00things like exposures,
    • 01:10:02although it's really hard to
    • 01:10:03quantify,
    • 01:10:04to measure
    • 01:10:06how much exposure I may
    • 01:10:07have had from air pollution
    • 01:10:09versus somebody else who lives
    • 01:10:11in another city, for instance.
    • 01:10:13And so I I don't
    • 01:10:14I think we have to
    • 01:10:14get more sophisticated than that,
    • 01:10:16and that really is gonna
    • 01:10:17be a biomarker
    • 01:10:18blood test,
    • 01:10:20so that we can screen
    • 01:10:21the population.
    • 01:10:22Like, you know, blood test
    • 01:10:23tell you you have cancer.
    • 01:10:25Well, we don't have it
    • 01:10:26yet, but believe me, there's
    • 01:10:27a ton of work going
    • 01:10:28on,
    • 01:10:29for that. Yeah. Yeah. So,
    • 01:10:31you know, it's it's truly
    • 01:10:33we I couldn't have said
    • 01:10:34this ten years ago when
    • 01:10:35we started screening that that
    • 01:10:36was on the horizon, but
    • 01:10:38it but it is. Yeah.
    • 01:10:40Thank you.
    • 01:10:43Alright. Great. Thanks to this
    • 01:10:44panel and, to the audience
    • 01:10:46for listening, and
    • 01:10:47we'll move on to our
    • 01:10:48last panel.
    • 01:10:58Alright. So we are moving
    • 01:10:59on to our next panel.
    • 01:11:00We have two more panels.
    • 01:11:02This one, I am moderating.
    • 01:11:04So this one is called
    • 01:11:05progression
    • 01:11:07through participation.
    • 01:11:09Lung cancer clinical trials matter.
    • 01:11:12I don't see any panelists
    • 01:11:13here with me. Be asking
    • 01:11:15myself questions. Okay.
    • 01:11:17So come up.
    • 01:11:18Okay. Good. Here are my
    • 01:11:19panelists in. Okay.
    • 01:11:23Thought I was gonna have
    • 01:11:24to ask and answer the
    • 01:11:25questions.
    • 01:11:27That was cool.
    • 01:11:30Alright.
    • 01:11:31So you have already heard
    • 01:11:33during the last hour or
    • 01:11:35so
    • 01:11:37about clinical trials.
    • 01:11:42And the reason for that
    • 01:11:43isn't people have mentioned this
    • 01:11:44all along is,
    • 01:11:47the only way we learn
    • 01:11:48more about
    • 01:11:50cancer or any disease and
    • 01:11:52how to best treat it
    • 01:11:53is through trials. It is
    • 01:11:54the literally the only way.
    • 01:11:55We we sometimes can do
    • 01:11:57other types of studies, but
    • 01:11:58the best way to to
    • 01:12:00make progress, to figure things
    • 01:12:01out, to get the best
    • 01:12:02treatments
    • 01:12:03is to do studies. It's
    • 01:12:04really the only way that
    • 01:12:05that we learn more about
    • 01:12:06it and also that the
    • 01:12:07FDA
    • 01:12:08recognizes
    • 01:12:09a medication or a treatment
    • 01:12:10that should become standard.
    • 01:12:12And so at Yale and
    • 01:12:14at really all cancer centers,
    • 01:12:16major cancer centers where where
    • 01:12:17there's research done,
    • 01:12:19this is a
    • 01:12:21really a primary goal because
    • 01:12:23we, of course, need to
    • 01:12:24treat everybody
    • 01:12:25with cancer, but we also
    • 01:12:27need to make progress. Right?
    • 01:12:28We never really settle on
    • 01:12:29where we are now. We
    • 01:12:30always wanna do better. I
    • 01:12:31always think until we're curing
    • 01:12:32all cancer, all lung cancer,
    • 01:12:34any cancer, we could always
    • 01:12:35do better, and the only
    • 01:12:36way to do that is
    • 01:12:37through research. So we are
    • 01:12:38all very dedicated to that,
    • 01:12:40and we have a panel
    • 01:12:41here of people that do
    • 01:12:42research for lung cancer and
    • 01:12:44work on trials and other
    • 01:12:46types of research. And, really,
    • 01:12:47everybody you've heard from today
    • 01:12:48does that in some part.
    • 01:12:49Really, everybody at Yale who
    • 01:12:51works here in some way
    • 01:12:52also works on research. So
    • 01:12:53it's something we're all really
    • 01:12:54passionate about. So I will
    • 01:12:56let my panelists introduce themselves
    • 01:12:58and tell you what they
    • 01:13:00do and what role in
    • 01:13:01research specifically they have, and
    • 01:13:02then I will ask some
    • 01:13:03questions and then open it
    • 01:13:04up to all of you.
    • 01:13:05So
    • 01:13:06we have another microphone.
    • 01:13:10Hey, everybody.
    • 01:13:12I'm Mike Grant. I am
    • 01:13:13a thoracic oncologist.
    • 01:13:15I'm up in Waterbury, Connecticut,
    • 01:13:19and I trained here,
    • 01:13:21under Sarah and a lot
    • 01:13:23of these people.
    • 01:13:24And, you know, the the
    • 01:13:26main
    • 01:13:27involvement that I have is
    • 01:13:28in clinical research. So
    • 01:13:30seeing patients,
    • 01:13:31in the clinic and then
    • 01:13:32trying to think about the
    • 01:13:34trials that we have open,
    • 01:13:36Help, you know, use use
    • 01:13:38help from our team and
    • 01:13:39then match patients to clinical
    • 01:13:41trials.
    • 01:13:45How's this on? Yes.
    • 01:13:46My name is Jennifer Pope.
    • 01:13:47I'm the clinical research manager
    • 01:13:49in our clinical trials office
    • 01:13:51here at Yale.
    • 01:13:52So I manage a team
    • 01:13:53of Clinical Research Nurses and
    • 01:13:55Clinical Research Coordinators,
    • 01:13:58who you may have seen
    • 01:14:00in the clinic,
    • 01:14:01with our providers.
    • 01:14:03And we work directly with
    • 01:14:05clinicians
    • 01:14:06and with patients in order
    • 01:14:08to bring you clinical trials.
    • 01:14:12Hi, everyone. My name is
    • 01:14:13Ben Liu. Excuse me. I'm
    • 01:14:16a physician scientist, and so
    • 01:14:18I'm a medical oncologist who
    • 01:14:19sees patients with lung cancers.
    • 01:14:21And then I also,
    • 01:14:22do research in a laboratory
    • 01:14:24setting, so a little bit
    • 01:14:25different than what,
    • 01:14:26doctor Grant does. But,
    • 01:14:28I like to ask questions
    • 01:14:30and try and understand how
    • 01:14:31our immune system interacts with
    • 01:14:33tumor cells and particularly,
    • 01:14:35what happens when tumor cells
    • 01:14:36go into the brain? How
    • 01:14:38can our immune system,
    • 01:14:40how can we understand how
    • 01:14:41that interaction works?
    • 01:14:44Right. Superstar team. Ben, keep
    • 01:14:46the microphone because I'm gonna
    • 01:14:47ask you a question first.
    • 01:14:49So
    • 01:14:50a lot of people here
    • 01:14:52and and,
    • 01:14:53at Yale may have heard
    • 01:14:55about a trial or have
    • 01:14:56been asked to be on
    • 01:14:57a trial or participate in
    • 01:14:58a trial, but let's, like,
    • 01:14:59rewind to the beginning. How
    • 01:15:01does an idea even get
    • 01:15:02into a trial in the
    • 01:15:02first place? So you mentioned
    • 01:15:04you're in the lab. How
    • 01:15:05does something you're working on
    • 01:15:06sells or whatever you're working
    • 01:15:07on in the lab, how
    • 01:15:09does that become an idea
    • 01:15:10that then finds its way
    • 01:15:11into trial? What's the the
    • 01:15:13brief version of the process?
    • 01:15:14Yeah. That that that's a
    • 01:15:15terrific question. I think you
    • 01:15:17all saw the end product
    • 01:15:18with what Doctor. Herbst had
    • 01:15:19mentioned earlier, what Doctor. Wilson,
    • 01:15:21Doctor. Gettinger, and, everyone has
    • 01:15:24talked about,
    • 01:15:25these,
    • 01:15:26what we define as successes
    • 01:15:27in terms of new treatment
    • 01:15:29options for patients.
    • 01:15:31But Doctor Herbst also showed
    • 01:15:32a picture of this huge
    • 01:15:34team of people, and it
    • 01:15:36really does take an entire
    • 01:15:38community of clinicians,
    • 01:15:40nurses, pharmacists,
    • 01:15:42pharmaceutical companies,
    • 01:15:43scientists,
    • 01:15:45to be able to put
    • 01:15:45that all of that work
    • 01:15:46together. And part of the
    • 01:15:47reason why,
    • 01:15:48everyone celebrated that is because
    • 01:15:50it it really does take
    • 01:15:51such a long period of
    • 01:15:52time for us to be
    • 01:15:54able to ask the questions
    • 01:15:55in the lab,
    • 01:15:57show that this is in
    • 01:15:58fact what happens,
    • 01:16:01come up with the right
    • 01:16:02medications to target those
    • 01:16:04pathways and then to actually
    • 01:16:05bring it to patients.
    • 01:16:07And so, you know,
    • 01:16:09for me as a human
    • 01:16:10immunologist, it starts with,
    • 01:16:12and as a physician scientist,
    • 01:16:14it starts with learning from
    • 01:16:15patients, learning where are
    • 01:16:18areas that we need to
    • 01:16:19improve upon and then taking
    • 01:16:21that question back to the
    • 01:16:22laboratory and seeing, Okay, how
    • 01:16:24can we go about trying
    • 01:16:26to answer? What is the
    • 01:16:26fundamental
    • 01:16:28issue here?
    • 01:16:29What is a way that
    • 01:16:30we can address this? And
    • 01:16:31then once we've come up
    • 01:16:32with a model like what
    • 01:16:33Doctor. Felitti does in the
    • 01:16:34lab that helps
    • 01:16:37us understand
    • 01:16:40whether or not we think
    • 01:16:41this will work in patients,
    • 01:16:42then bring it along into
    • 01:16:44clinical trials and see whether
    • 01:16:46or not we can bring
    • 01:16:47it, as a new treatment
    • 01:16:48option for patients.
    • 01:16:50Great.
    • 01:16:51Jenna, I'm gonna turn to
    • 01:16:53you.
    • 01:16:54How long have you been
    • 01:16:54working on clinical trials?
    • 01:16:57Fifteen years, I think. A
    • 01:16:59long time. Great. So perfect.
    • 01:17:00So I knew it was
    • 01:17:01a while. I didn't know
    • 01:17:02exactly how long. Tell us
    • 01:17:03what you've seen change over
    • 01:17:04the years because I've been
    • 01:17:05doing this about a little
    • 01:17:07around that amount of time
    • 01:17:08too, and I I feel
    • 01:17:09like things have really changed.
    • 01:17:10So a lot of the
    • 01:17:11work that you do is
    • 01:17:12is the I mentioned this
    • 01:17:14expression before, but really the
    • 01:17:15behind the scenes. Right? Making
    • 01:17:16all this work. So what
    • 01:17:17what has changed in you
    • 01:17:18from your perspective? And tell
    • 01:17:19us a little bit about
    • 01:17:20that behind the scenes, how
    • 01:17:21things actually work with with
    • 01:17:22trials.
    • 01:17:24Sure. So,
    • 01:17:25we talk about this a
    • 01:17:26lot on our team that
    • 01:17:28we used to have
    • 01:17:29a sort of small handful
    • 01:17:31of trials that we could
    • 01:17:32offer to patients and it
    • 01:17:33was more like we had
    • 01:17:35a trial that we tried
    • 01:17:36to fit every patient into.
    • 01:17:37And now we kind of
    • 01:17:38are able to take the
    • 01:17:40the opposite approach where we
    • 01:17:41have many options and we're
    • 01:17:43really trying to find this
    • 01:17:44the perfect option for each
    • 01:17:46patient,
    • 01:17:47and then many options along
    • 01:17:48the way.
    • 01:17:49So, right from your initial
    • 01:17:52diagnosis
    • 01:17:52through the process,
    • 01:17:54through multiple lines of therapy,
    • 01:17:56we're able to find specific
    • 01:17:58trials that will work best
    • 01:17:59in those situations. If you're
    • 01:18:00a early disease or or
    • 01:18:02later
    • 01:18:03disease all along the way.
    • 01:18:05And now our what we're
    • 01:18:06looking at, the questions we're
    • 01:18:07trying to answer are much
    • 01:18:08more broad. So we're collecting
    • 01:18:10you know maybe some additional
    • 01:18:11blood samples from you, we're
    • 01:18:13collecting some additional tumor when
    • 01:18:14we're going in for a
    • 01:18:15biopsy so we can
    • 01:18:17answer these broader questions about
    • 01:18:19why a treatment might work
    • 01:18:20better for one person,
    • 01:18:22than another.
    • 01:18:24Thank you. I I always
    • 01:18:25say that we always try
    • 01:18:26to learn as much as
    • 01:18:28we possibly can. It's not
    • 01:18:29just does this treatment work,
    • 01:18:30but why and how, and
    • 01:18:33if it doesn't work, why
    • 01:18:34not? So I I absolutely
    • 01:18:35agree with that.
    • 01:18:37Mike,
    • 01:18:38tell us what it's like
    • 01:18:39when you're seeing a patient
    • 01:18:40in terms of how you
    • 01:18:41talk to them about different
    • 01:18:43options.
    • 01:18:44When might someone wanna think
    • 01:18:45about a trial? Is it
    • 01:18:47you heard from the panel
    • 01:18:48before. Is it only for
    • 01:18:50people with advanced disease, or
    • 01:18:51are we thinking about it
    • 01:18:52at different stages? How do
    • 01:18:53how do you think about
    • 01:18:54it? Do you always think
    • 01:18:54about it for patients also?
    • 01:18:57Yeah. I do. I think
    • 01:18:58that's that's the first step.
    • 01:18:59You know, our our job
    • 01:19:01as investigators
    • 01:19:02and people that,
    • 01:19:03have access to these trials
    • 01:19:05and, you know, try to
    • 01:19:06provide access to our patients
    • 01:19:08is to know the trials,
    • 01:19:09like, to know what we
    • 01:19:10have open,
    • 01:19:12to know, you know, to
    • 01:19:14an extent the ins and
    • 01:19:15outs of them and what
    • 01:19:16criteria,
    • 01:19:18how a patient would would
    • 01:19:20potentially qualify for the study.
    • 01:19:22And then,
    • 01:19:23you know, that's that's what
    • 01:19:24I'm thinking about when I
    • 01:19:25see a patient is, you
    • 01:19:27know, is there an option
    • 01:19:28that I can provide for
    • 01:19:29this patient,
    • 01:19:31that is a trial that's
    • 01:19:32better than what we can
    • 01:19:33offer off the trial?
    • 01:19:35Ultimately, what we're trying to
    • 01:19:36do with research is really
    • 01:19:38just build on the treatments
    • 01:19:40that are available.
    • 01:19:42Unfortunately,
    • 01:19:43you know, there there's a
    • 01:19:44lot of deficiencies in lung
    • 01:19:45cancer treatment, and that is
    • 01:19:47sort of what we're trying
    • 01:19:48to use these trials to
    • 01:19:49do to build on. So
    • 01:19:51I think,
    • 01:19:52yeah, every trial is trying
    • 01:19:53to answer a question like
    • 01:19:54Jen said,
    • 01:19:56and every
    • 01:19:57time that you have a
    • 01:19:58patient in front of you,
    • 01:19:59we're trying to fit the
    • 01:20:01pay we're not trying to
    • 01:20:02fit the patient on a
    • 01:20:03trial.
    • 01:20:04We're trying to find the
    • 01:20:05right option for the patient,
    • 01:20:06which may be a trial
    • 01:20:07and which may not be
    • 01:20:08a trial.
    • 01:20:09So I think it it
    • 01:20:10starts with how how we
    • 01:20:12understand the trials, how we
    • 01:20:13how we sort of work
    • 01:20:14with our team to know
    • 01:20:16what we have open,
    • 01:20:17and then, you know, the
    • 01:20:18rest is just conversations with
    • 01:20:20patients.
    • 01:20:23Alright. We're we're running a
    • 01:20:25little low on time, so
    • 01:20:25I I I might
    • 01:20:28maybe I'll open it up
    • 01:20:29to the the floor now,
    • 01:20:30and then I I I
    • 01:20:31could keep going. I have
    • 01:20:31a whole list here. But
    • 01:20:32does anybody have questions
    • 01:20:35about clinical trials or anything
    • 01:20:37else for this esteemed panel?
    • 01:20:39Yes.
    • 01:20:46How much of a collaboration
    • 01:20:48is between your teams and
    • 01:20:49the pharmaceutical industry? You work
    • 01:20:50hand in hand
    • 01:20:52collaboratively,
    • 01:20:54or do you Who wants
    • 01:20:55to take that one? Hand
    • 01:20:56off
    • 01:20:57trials to one another.
    • 01:20:59Great questions.
    • 01:21:01Mike, do you wanna take
    • 01:21:02that one? Yeah. So,
    • 01:21:05I think, you know, some
    • 01:21:06of our trials that we
    • 01:21:07have open at Yale are
    • 01:21:09in come you know, in
    • 01:21:10in,
    • 01:21:11industry sponsored, so trials that
    • 01:21:13we work with companies.
    • 01:21:15Other trials are, in the
    • 01:21:17context of cooperative groups, which
    • 01:21:18are large organizations that,
    • 01:21:21you know, try to answer
    • 01:21:23practical questions in cancer care.
    • 01:21:26So we have a mix
    • 01:21:27of of these these things,
    • 01:21:29and I think, you know,
    • 01:21:30it's it's our clinical trial
    • 01:21:32team and and doctor Goldberg
    • 01:21:33who sort of,
    • 01:21:35were always looking for opportunities
    • 01:21:38to bring drugs that look
    • 01:21:39promising. And sometimes this these
    • 01:21:41are drugs that are very
    • 01:21:42early in development
    • 01:21:44and, that we can sort
    • 01:21:45of work with pharmaceutical companies
    • 01:21:47to bring them to patients
    • 01:21:48in our clinics.
    • 01:21:51You
    • 01:21:55need this,
    • 01:21:57they say.
    • 01:21:58We'll try and make that.
    • 01:22:01I don't know if they
    • 01:22:02make it for us. So
    • 01:22:03no. It's such it's such
    • 01:22:05a great question, but I
    • 01:22:06I'll just say something.
    • 01:22:07You might not realize this,
    • 01:22:09but there's actually lots of
    • 01:22:10people from the pharmaceutical
    • 01:22:11industry in this very room.
    • 01:22:14So so we work incredibly
    • 01:22:16closely together. I think
    • 01:22:18so much of what we
    • 01:22:19do, especially as medical oncologists
    • 01:22:20where we're developing drugs and
    • 01:22:22we're trying to make better
    • 01:22:23drugs,
    • 01:22:24is is so much in
    • 01:22:25collaboration
    • 01:22:26with people in the pharmaceutical
    • 01:22:28industry. And a lot of
    • 01:22:29our scientists are working on
    • 01:22:30things. Maybe Ben is gonna
    • 01:22:32tell us this about this
    • 01:22:33now, and then work with
    • 01:22:34the pharmaceutical companies to try
    • 01:22:36to bring those to patients.
    • 01:22:37So it is a kind
    • 01:22:38of a a circle of
    • 01:22:39of trying to work together
    • 01:22:41to
    • 01:22:42do you know, to to
    • 01:22:43create better drugs, to develop
    • 01:22:44better drugs, and then to
    • 01:22:45bring the trials here so
    • 01:22:46that we can can study
    • 01:22:47them better. Ben, go ahead.
    • 01:22:49Yeah. I I just to
    • 01:22:51add to what doctor Gober
    • 01:22:52said, you know, I think
    • 01:22:53that
    • 01:22:54pharmaceutical companies and our academic
    • 01:22:57centers have very complementary roles
    • 01:22:59in terms of the types
    • 01:23:00of the,
    • 01:23:02treatments they can bring to
    • 01:23:03patients.
    • 01:23:04One thing that I will
    • 01:23:05say, and I I think
    • 01:23:06it's particularly beneficial to be
    • 01:23:08here at a u institution
    • 01:23:09like Yale where, you know,
    • 01:23:11the medical oncologists, the clinicians,
    • 01:23:13and the scientists kind of
    • 01:23:14stand side by side is
    • 01:23:15that we do have the
    • 01:23:16opportunity
    • 01:23:17to ask, you know, probably
    • 01:23:19more unique and,
    • 01:23:22to us, interesting questions that
    • 01:23:24pharmaceutical companies might not be
    • 01:23:26necessarily thinking about, or we
    • 01:23:28may have access to, you
    • 01:23:30know, science that isn't as
    • 01:23:32mature, but that we can
    • 01:23:33help to develop.
    • 01:23:35And so, you know, I
    • 01:23:36I I do think that
    • 01:23:37the roles are very complementary.
    • 01:23:38Certainly, we do work with
    • 01:23:40pharmaceutical companies, but, there is
    • 01:23:42also a lot of access
    • 01:23:43to clinical trials that,
    • 01:23:45are independent of them.
    • 01:23:50Nobody hurt themselves, please. I'll
    • 01:23:52be quick.
    • 01:23:53How do you work out
    • 01:23:54the ethics,
    • 01:23:55ethical questions that can arise
    • 01:23:57between these kinds of collaborations?
    • 01:24:00Good questions.
    • 01:24:01Jen, do you wanna take
    • 01:24:02that since you're holding the
    • 01:24:03microphone?
    • 01:24:04Or does anybody else would
    • 01:24:05like to like to answer?
    • 01:24:07I can talk just a
    • 01:24:08a little bit about, like,
    • 01:24:09the research, like, consenting process.
    • 01:24:12So when when we pro
    • 01:24:13when we present a clinical
    • 01:24:14trial to a patient,
    • 01:24:16we are required. We have
    • 01:24:18institutional review boards that require
    • 01:24:19this. There's federal regulations and
    • 01:24:21laws,
    • 01:24:22that require us to tell
    • 01:24:24you about all the options
    • 01:24:25that are available to you.
    • 01:24:26So your
    • 01:24:27provider will talk to you
    • 01:24:29about
    • 01:24:31so that that is yes.
    • 01:24:32Exactly. Who's funding it? Who's
    • 01:24:34funding it? Who's gonna ax
    • 01:24:35have access to the information
    • 01:24:37about you?
    • 01:24:39All all of that is
    • 01:24:40presented to you.
    • 01:24:41I think, in my opinion,
    • 01:24:43one of the the critical
    • 01:24:44part is what are the
    • 01:24:45other options. So this is
    • 01:24:46the option that the trial
    • 01:24:47is giving you. And then
    • 01:24:49these are the other options
    • 01:24:50that you should also be
    • 01:24:50considering,
    • 01:24:52at the same time.
    • 01:24:54Yeah. I think I think
    • 01:24:54it's such an important point,
    • 01:24:56and
    • 01:24:57we we
    • 01:24:58and, really, everyone else tries
    • 01:25:00to be very transparent about
    • 01:25:02it because
    • 01:25:03the pharmaceutical industry is
    • 01:25:06for profit. Right? And that
    • 01:25:08is something that you need
    • 01:25:09to know about. And so
    • 01:25:10in every
    • 01:25:11trial and every consent form,
    • 01:25:12it will talk about who's
    • 01:25:14funding the study,
    • 01:25:15if any of the investigators
    • 01:25:17have any do do any
    • 01:25:18work with that company. It's
    • 01:25:19all in there. So it's
    • 01:25:20required to be in there.
    • 01:25:21It's not a Yale thing.
    • 01:25:22So that that's part of
    • 01:25:23it so that it's very
    • 01:25:24transparent, and you can make
    • 01:25:25it an educated decision about
    • 01:25:27participating with that information.
    • 01:25:30Hang on. Sorry.
    • 01:25:32I I think another thing
    • 01:25:34is that clinical trials,
    • 01:25:36I think what doctor Grant
    • 01:25:37said earlier is, that, you
    • 01:25:39know, every clinical trial that
    • 01:25:40we try to offer is
    • 01:25:42really trying to build upon
    • 01:25:43and not,
    • 01:25:44on the standard of care,
    • 01:25:46meaning care that you would
    • 01:25:47get with your,
    • 01:25:48providers outside of the trial.
    • 01:25:51And I think one behind
    • 01:25:52the scenes look at how
    • 01:25:55we select the clinical trials
    • 01:25:57is that, you know, doctor
    • 01:25:58Goldberg and Jen and Doctor.
    • 01:26:00Grant, every single week, they're
    • 01:26:02every single day, they're constantly
    • 01:26:04looking to see, you know,
    • 01:26:05what are the most exciting
    • 01:26:07options that they can bring
    • 01:26:08to patients. And so, you
    • 01:26:10know,
    • 01:26:11I think
    • 01:26:13for them in their selection
    • 01:26:14process, for us in our
    • 01:26:15selection process,
    • 01:26:17it really is about trying
    • 01:26:18to find the best option
    • 01:26:19and putting the patients first.
    • 01:26:21Yes, there are ethical con
    • 01:26:23con considerations
    • 01:26:25when we are working with
    • 01:26:26pharmaceutical companies, but I think
    • 01:26:28it is it does take
    • 01:26:29a thoughtful approach to,
    • 01:26:31be able to present some
    • 01:26:32of the options to you.
    • 01:26:36K. I think maybe one
    • 01:26:37last question, and then we'll
    • 01:26:38move on to our
    • 01:26:40next panel.
    • 01:26:42Just curious if you have
    • 01:26:43a notion about kind of
    • 01:26:44how it breaks down what
    • 01:26:45percentage of your, the clinical
    • 01:26:47trials are that you are
    • 01:26:49one part of a multisite,
    • 01:26:52research that involves other, other
    • 01:26:55research sites around the country
    • 01:26:56and how much are kind
    • 01:26:58of all housed here?
    • 01:27:00Yeah. I maybe I'll answer
    • 01:27:02that. So most of the
    • 01:27:03studies that we do are
    • 01:27:05not just here.
    • 01:27:07Most of the studies are
    • 01:27:08multicenter studies that enroll at
    • 01:27:10many institutions, sometimes dozens or
    • 01:27:13hundred around the country and
    • 01:27:14around the world. There are
    • 01:27:15a few studies that we
    • 01:27:16have that
    • 01:27:18are Yale studies
    • 01:27:20developed by our investigators
    • 01:27:22here.
    • 01:27:23A lot of times based
    • 01:27:24on science that comes from
    • 01:27:25the laboratories and then we
    • 01:27:26bring into the into the
    • 01:27:27clinic, a lot of times
    • 01:27:28those are just Yale studies.
    • 01:27:29They tend to be small
    • 01:27:30studies,
    • 01:27:31but but, typically, they're the
    • 01:27:33studies that we have are
    • 01:27:34not just here.
    • 01:27:36They're in collaboration with many
    • 01:27:38others.
    • 01:27:40Good question. Alright. Any last
    • 01:27:42burning questions, or shall we
    • 01:27:43move on?
    • 01:27:44Okay. Thank you so much
    • 01:27:46to our panelists and for
    • 01:27:47all that you do. Thanks.
    • 01:27:51Alright.
    • 01:27:52I'm gonna introduce our last
    • 01:27:54panel, which will be moderated
    • 01:27:56by doctor Dan Baffa,
    • 01:27:59who's the chief of thoracic
    • 01:28:00surgery here at Yale,
    • 01:28:02and he will
    • 01:28:04introduce his panelists or have
    • 01:28:05them introduce themselves. Thank you
    • 01:28:06so much, Dan.
    • 01:28:11Alright.
    • 01:28:13Thank you so much.
    • 01:28:14I'm the last, we're the
    • 01:28:16last act here. So,
    • 01:28:19hang tight, and, we'll try
    • 01:28:20to make this a little
    • 01:28:21bit more,
    • 01:28:23engaging if we can.
    • 01:28:26I'll I'll answer a couple
    • 01:28:27of things that that came
    • 01:28:28up just,
    • 01:28:30you there was a question
    • 01:28:31about AI
    • 01:28:33and,
    • 01:28:34how do drug companies
    • 01:28:36discover
    • 01:28:37new drugs. And just to
    • 01:28:38give you a sense of
    • 01:28:39how crazy
    • 01:28:40the next five years are
    • 01:28:42gonna be,
    • 01:28:43that DeepMind did a collaboration
    • 01:28:45actually with Yale to look
    • 01:28:47at,
    • 01:28:48different drugs
    • 01:28:49to, have cancer cells show
    • 01:28:52things on their surface that
    • 01:28:53would make the immune system
    • 01:28:55recognize them.
    • 01:28:56And they tested, like, five
    • 01:28:57thousand drugs and narrowed it
    • 01:28:59down to, like, five, which
    • 01:29:00is simulated
    • 01:29:01AI experiments, and the five
    • 01:29:02actually looked pretty good.
    • 01:29:04And so the the amount
    • 01:29:05of discovery that's gonna happen
    • 01:29:07in the next five years
    • 01:29:08is truly crazy. I mean,
    • 01:29:09the the amount of the
    • 01:29:11amount of information that's collected
    • 01:29:12on patients every year is
    • 01:29:14like a zettabyte.
    • 01:29:16That's the equivalent
    • 01:29:18to every book
    • 01:29:20that's been published ever
    • 01:29:22a million times.
    • 01:29:24So we we collect that
    • 01:29:25much data every year on
    • 01:29:27patients, and and this is
    • 01:29:29going to be used to
    • 01:29:29totally change everything we know
    • 01:29:31about medicine.
    • 01:29:33So, with that,
    • 01:29:35let me have, why don't
    • 01:29:36you guys go ahead and
    • 01:29:37introduce yourselves and say, something
    • 01:29:39about yourselves? I'm a thoracic
    • 01:29:40surgeon, Dan Boffa. Hi
    • 01:29:43there. I'm Henry Park. I'm
    • 01:29:44a radiation oncologist, and I
    • 01:29:46I treat patients with, with
    • 01:29:47with all stages of lung
    • 01:29:48cancer, with with radiation therapy.
    • 01:29:52I'm, Michael Cohen. I'm a
    • 01:29:54thoraxic oncologist
    • 01:29:55at the Trumbull and one
    • 01:29:57day a week in Derby,
    • 01:29:59where I treat lung cancer
    • 01:30:00patients.
    • 01:30:02Hello, everyone. I'm Chanel Charles,
    • 01:30:04and I'm the social worker
    • 01:30:05on the team.
    • 01:30:08My name is Michael Glenenning.
    • 01:30:10I'm a physician assistant with
    • 01:30:11the medical oncology team, helping
    • 01:30:13take care of patients while
    • 01:30:13they're getting their treatments.
    • 01:30:16So we we kind of
    • 01:30:17have a loosely defined
    • 01:30:19category here, and I I
    • 01:30:20sort of think of it
    • 01:30:21as
    • 01:30:22survivorship.
    • 01:30:23And survivorship is basically everything
    • 01:30:26after you've been diagnosed and
    • 01:30:27started treatment. It's the rest
    • 01:30:29of your life, basically. And
    • 01:30:31I I like to think
    • 01:30:31of it as
    • 01:30:33sur thrivorship because we don't
    • 01:30:34want you just living. We
    • 01:30:36want you thriving. And so
    • 01:30:37all the things that we
    • 01:30:38need to do to help
    • 01:30:39you achieve
    • 01:30:41all of your life goals
    • 01:30:42between the time you're diagnosed
    • 01:30:44and the rest of your
    • 01:30:46life. And so
    • 01:30:47that is the framing
    • 01:30:48for this next, little session.
    • 01:30:50And so I'll start with
    • 01:30:52with Michael. And,
    • 01:30:55and I I missed the
    • 01:30:57first part. So if somebody
    • 01:30:58wants to just quickly tell
    • 01:30:59me what you guys talked
    • 01:30:59about to be yeah.
    • 01:31:03The,
    • 01:31:04the, so
    • 01:31:06the re the impact of
    • 01:31:07research on lung cancer is
    • 01:31:08truly crazy. I'm I'm sure
    • 01:31:10somebody covered this, but the
    • 01:31:11the cure rate for lung
    • 01:31:12cancer
    • 01:31:13has doubled in the past
    • 01:31:15eight years. We used to
    • 01:31:16get excited
    • 01:31:18when you increase survival by
    • 01:31:19two weeks. That was a
    • 01:31:21New England Journal paper. If
    • 01:31:22you if people live longer
    • 01:31:24by two weeks, it was
    • 01:31:25a New England Journal paper.
    • 01:31:27Now,
    • 01:31:28it is it's doubled in
    • 01:31:29the past eight years. And
    • 01:31:30so we have a lot
    • 01:31:31more people
    • 01:31:32that are living
    • 01:31:34with lung cancer as a
    • 01:31:35chronic disease.
    • 01:31:36And,
    • 01:31:38obviously, living is is preferable
    • 01:31:41to the alternative,
    • 01:31:42but
    • 01:31:43some of these, patients are
    • 01:31:45maintained
    • 01:31:46on lifelong therapy. And so,
    • 01:31:49Michael, just in terms of,
    • 01:31:52say, targeted therapy, people who
    • 01:31:53are spending a long time
    • 01:31:55on targeted therapy,
    • 01:31:57what are what is that,
    • 01:32:00what what is that like
    • 01:32:01and what are the ways
    • 01:32:02that we can support them
    • 01:32:03through that in terms of
    • 01:32:05of making lifestyle changes, and
    • 01:32:07and what does that look
    • 01:32:08like?
    • 01:32:10Me, Michael, or him.
    • 01:32:12Me, Michael. Owner of them.
    • 01:32:13Okay. G or c.
    • 01:32:16We'll c. So
    • 01:32:17I I agree with Dan.
    • 01:32:18I mean, not only have
    • 01:32:20we gone beyond the point
    • 01:32:22of two weeks, but I
    • 01:32:23mean, when we think about
    • 01:32:25when I first went into
    • 01:32:27oncology, less than five percent
    • 01:32:28of people were living till
    • 01:32:30five years, And now we're
    • 01:32:31pushing over forty percent.
    • 01:32:33I mean, it's really just
    • 01:32:34happening in leaps and bounds.
    • 01:32:36So as Dan said, then
    • 01:32:38we have to think, well,
    • 01:32:39what is life like on
    • 01:32:41treatment? I remember going to
    • 01:32:42a talk at ASCO last
    • 01:32:44year,
    • 01:32:45and there was a survivor
    • 01:32:47who was on anti eGFR
    • 01:32:49therapy.
    • 01:32:50I'm treated a really interesting
    • 01:32:51way of framing it, which
    • 01:32:53was
    • 01:32:55we think about side effects,
    • 01:32:56and doctor Chang talked about
    • 01:32:58this, grade one, grade two,
    • 01:32:59grade three.
    • 01:33:00But even a grade one,
    • 01:33:02which we as oncologists don't
    • 01:33:04tend to think about a
    • 01:33:04lot,
    • 01:33:05if they have it day
    • 01:33:07by day, year after year,
    • 01:33:09that's very impactful. And the
    • 01:33:11way she described it is
    • 01:33:13if you had a little
    • 01:33:14pebble in your shoe
    • 01:33:16and you're sitting around, it
    • 01:33:17doesn't really bother you. If
    • 01:33:19that little pebble in your
    • 01:33:20shoe is with you on
    • 01:33:21a five mile hike, that's
    • 01:33:22a really big deal.
    • 01:33:24And so we do have
    • 01:33:25to entertain these things. You
    • 01:33:27know, living with a little
    • 01:33:28bit of diarrhea
    • 01:33:30every day for years
    • 01:33:31is impactful.
    • 01:33:33And a lot of it
    • 01:33:34is just communication
    • 01:33:35between the treating team and
    • 01:33:37the patient. What is tolerable
    • 01:33:38to you? What is acceptable?
    • 01:33:40How can we manage this?
    • 01:33:43And for the most part,
    • 01:33:44we can help alleviate
    • 01:33:46almost every side effect,
    • 01:33:48maybe with the exception of
    • 01:33:49some, hopefully to the point
    • 01:33:51where a patient says this
    • 01:33:53is something I can handle.
    • 01:33:55And they hopefully will feel
    • 01:33:56free to advocate for themselves
    • 01:33:58when they can't
    • 01:34:00and say, I need a
    • 01:34:01break. I need a dose
    • 01:34:02reduction.
    • 01:34:04I think that's really the
    • 01:34:05partnership.
    • 01:34:07Great. Was that was that
    • 01:34:09Annabelle
    • 01:34:10Grewich that gave that talk?
    • 01:34:11I my friend. So Yeah.
    • 01:34:13So
    • 01:34:14I did not ask him
    • 01:34:15to give that example. But,
    • 01:34:17Annabelle just came out with
    • 01:34:18a new book called The
    • 01:34:19End of My Life is
    • 01:34:20Killing Me, and it's about
    • 01:34:21her lifelong battle with,
    • 01:34:24EGFR mutated cancer. And she's
    • 01:34:26gonna be here in March,
    • 01:34:29giving a talk and doing
    • 01:34:30a reading, so just,
    • 01:34:31look out for that. She's
    • 01:34:33amazing. But,
    • 01:34:36so
    • 01:34:38health care is expensive, and,
    • 01:34:40Chanel, this is coming your
    • 01:34:41way. So,
    • 01:34:43health health care costs are
    • 01:34:46the the number one cause
    • 01:34:48of bankruptcy in the United
    • 01:34:50States. And it is a
    • 01:34:51big deal. It is, you
    • 01:34:53know, people are missing work.
    • 01:34:54And
    • 01:34:56what what do you when
    • 01:34:57you think of somebody that
    • 01:34:58comes in with a diagnosis,
    • 01:34:59how do we approach that?
    • 01:35:00How do we support that?
    • 01:35:02What are their options and
    • 01:35:03etcetera?
    • 01:35:05Make sure I get this
    • 01:35:06right this time.
    • 01:35:08Can you hear me? Yes.
    • 01:35:10So,
    • 01:35:11thank you for asking that.
    • 01:35:12Now I am the nonmedical
    • 01:35:14person on the team. And,
    • 01:35:15of course, with the cancer
    • 01:35:16diagnosis
    • 01:35:17comes with a lot of
    • 01:35:18psychosocial issues, including financial issues.
    • 01:35:21And so
    • 01:35:22we, there are grants that
    • 01:35:24we can apply for for
    • 01:35:26patients.
    • 01:35:27We help patients,
    • 01:35:29tap into resources in the
    • 01:35:30community,
    • 01:35:31from different agency. There is
    • 01:35:33Connecticut Cancer Foundation. There's Cancer
    • 01:35:35Care. So there are different
    • 01:35:36organizations
    • 01:35:37out there that we can
    • 01:35:38apply to for grants,
    • 01:35:40on behalf of patients. We
    • 01:35:42also help
    • 01:35:44government resources.
    • 01:35:46Okay. I know. What is
    • 01:35:49It's all the government. Okay.
    • 01:35:50Thank you.
    • 01:35:52That's for government resources.
    • 01:35:54Right now and on.
    • 01:35:56It's here. Here. Here.
    • 01:36:00Thank you.
    • 01:36:01Government resources.
    • 01:36:03Some patients may be qualified
    • 01:36:04for title nineteen
    • 01:36:07or other, Yale has an
    • 01:36:09assisted
    • 01:36:10program, a program that they
    • 01:36:11will assist patients pay for
    • 01:36:12their care.
    • 01:36:13So we explore all the
    • 01:36:15options that are out there,
    • 01:36:16whether through Yale or in
    • 01:36:17the community to help patients
    • 01:36:18pay for care. And just
    • 01:36:20not just care, but,
    • 01:36:22bills,
    • 01:36:23household bills. That's a big
    • 01:36:24factor. When someone is going
    • 01:36:26through cancer, now you're no
    • 01:36:27longer able to work, and
    • 01:36:29so the bills fall to
    • 01:36:31the wayside. So we assist
    • 01:36:32patients with getting,
    • 01:36:34monies to pay for
    • 01:36:36bills.
    • 01:36:37Yeah. I I think the
    • 01:36:38most important thing is you
    • 01:36:40gotta communicate that to your
    • 01:36:42team. These are real things,
    • 01:36:44and you gotta be open,
    • 01:36:46and,
    • 01:36:47it's all a part of
    • 01:36:48the experience. And, sometimes it
    • 01:36:51may mean that you get
    • 01:36:52treated closer to home. I
    • 01:36:54mean, I I personally believe
    • 01:36:55you should get as much
    • 01:36:56care as close to home
    • 01:36:57as possible.
    • 01:36:59I think you should have
    • 01:37:00expert care, but I think
    • 01:37:01you should have as much
    • 01:37:02as close to home as
    • 01:37:03possible. That's my opinion.
    • 01:37:06Henry
    • 01:37:10and and Michael, I think
    • 01:37:11this is a fair question
    • 01:37:12for both of you. When
    • 01:37:12you're
    • 01:37:14thinking about the goals of
    • 01:37:15care, both of the things
    • 01:37:17that you guys are offering
    • 01:37:19could affect
    • 01:37:20people's ability
    • 01:37:22to do things
    • 01:37:23in the
    • 01:37:24recovery phase and the
    • 01:37:27the after cancer phase.
    • 01:37:29How do you think about
    • 01:37:30that when you talk to
    • 01:37:31people about treatment choices,
    • 01:37:34about decision making and getting
    • 01:37:37a good understanding of what's
    • 01:37:38most important to them and
    • 01:37:40and how you change your
    • 01:37:41planning accordingly?
    • 01:37:44So often for stage one
    • 01:37:45cancer, for example,
    • 01:37:47often the choice is between
    • 01:37:48surgery or radiation therapy, as
    • 01:37:49doctor Woodard had mentioned earlier,
    • 01:37:51as as, you know, one
    • 01:37:52local therapy,
    • 01:37:53hopefully, without any need for
    • 01:37:54systemic therapy as well. But
    • 01:37:56there's they they really are
    • 01:37:58both very, they're complementary in
    • 01:37:59a lot of ways for
    • 01:38:00different people in terms of
    • 01:38:01who would benefit more from
    • 01:38:03getting surgery and who would
    • 01:38:04benefit more from getting radiation
    • 01:38:05therapy. It's not so clear
    • 01:38:07cut like an algorithm where
    • 01:38:08you can say, you know,
    • 01:38:09it's very obvious that you
    • 01:38:11should go to surgery and
    • 01:38:12you should go to radiation.
    • 01:38:13Sometimes it's more obvious than
    • 01:38:14others, but there's, we'd we'd
    • 01:38:16we'd like to meet you
    • 01:38:17and really discuss,
    • 01:38:19what you are interested in
    • 01:38:20in terms of the the
    • 01:38:21side effects that you're concerned
    • 01:38:22about,
    • 01:38:23but the the, the kind
    • 01:38:25of life you're looking to
    • 01:38:26live for the remainder of
    • 01:38:27your life as well, especially
    • 01:38:28when we're in a in
    • 01:38:29a mode where we're trying
    • 01:38:30cure your cancers. We we
    • 01:38:32have an early stage disease.
    • 01:38:33We wanna make sure that,
    • 01:38:34you know, we're fitting along
    • 01:38:35with what the life's the
    • 01:38:36life you're likely to live
    • 01:38:37afterwards. Is that gonna look
    • 01:38:39the way that you're hoping
    • 01:38:40for? And and and which
    • 01:38:41of the two options looks
    • 01:38:42better to you overall.
    • 01:38:44You know, some folks decide
    • 01:38:45that they want to get
    • 01:38:47surgery because they they have
    • 01:38:48the cancer removed. I think
    • 01:38:49psychologically, that makes a lot
    • 01:38:50of sense. You know, we
    • 01:38:51don't have a randomized trial
    • 01:38:52yet to prove which is
    • 01:38:54better, surgery or radiation. Often,
    • 01:38:56if you can get surgery,
    • 01:38:57many people do.
    • 01:38:58Some, however, if if they
    • 01:39:00are,
    • 01:39:01candidates for surgery, but they
    • 01:39:02don't don't necessarily
    • 01:39:03want to undergo surgery, for
    • 01:39:05whatever reason, then radiation therapy
    • 01:39:07is a great option as
    • 01:39:07well. But you have to
    • 01:39:08understand the effects it can
    • 01:39:09have on you both in
    • 01:39:10the short term and the
    • 01:39:11long term. So that's why
    • 01:39:12we really try to get
    • 01:39:13to know you in just
    • 01:39:14that hour that we meet
    • 01:39:15in consultation, and then you
    • 01:39:16meet with the surgeon as
    • 01:39:17well, because we want to,
    • 01:39:19and then we wanna meet
    • 01:39:20your family and and get
    • 01:39:21to know what is,
    • 01:39:23you you know, your your
    • 01:39:24goals ultimately.
    • 01:39:26So, that's for stage one.
    • 01:39:27You know, for stage three,
    • 01:39:28stage four, same same kind
    • 01:39:30of idea that, you know,
    • 01:39:31here are the expectations of
    • 01:39:32what this treatment can provide,
    • 01:39:34but here's also some downsides
    • 01:39:35because there's always gonna be
    • 01:39:37some potential downsides here, for
    • 01:39:38any of the treatments that
    • 01:39:39you undergo.
    • 01:39:40So just the understanding of
    • 01:39:42what it could look like,
    • 01:39:43which could vary a lot
    • 01:39:44depending on the person, but
    • 01:39:45knowing what your risk factors
    • 01:39:47are in terms of what
    • 01:39:48factors may make you more
    • 01:39:49prone to certain side effects
    • 01:39:51And what really matters to
    • 01:39:52you a lot, some people
    • 01:39:53say, you know, that being
    • 01:39:54on oxygen is okay with
    • 01:39:55them if they needed to
    • 01:39:56be on it. Other people
    • 01:39:57say I'd really,
    • 01:39:58that that that would really
    • 01:39:59impact my the the lifestyle
    • 01:40:01I wanna live, for example.
    • 01:40:03Right? There's, you know, if
    • 01:40:04I ever needed steroid medications
    • 01:40:05down the road, oh, I've
    • 01:40:06been on that before. No
    • 01:40:07big deal. Other people say
    • 01:40:09if I can at all
    • 01:40:10avoid that whatsoever, I really
    • 01:40:12wanna wanna do that. So
    • 01:40:14all these things we need
    • 01:40:15to hear about and learn
    • 01:40:16about from you during the
    • 01:40:17consultation. We we don't walk
    • 01:40:19in with a clear, we
    • 01:40:20already know what we're gonna
    • 01:40:21do for you, right, because
    • 01:40:22of the fact that and
    • 01:40:24we wanna have options like
    • 01:40:25that because each individual person
    • 01:40:26can be treated differently even
    • 01:40:28if you have the exact
    • 01:40:28same scan on the screen
    • 01:40:30or the exact same stage
    • 01:40:31of of cancer, same type
    • 01:40:32of cancer. Each person is
    • 01:40:34gonna be different in terms
    • 01:40:35of what they're looking for.
    • 01:40:37Michael,
    • 01:40:39please, if if you add
    • 01:40:41to that or I or
    • 01:40:41I will give you another
    • 01:40:42one. That's fine.
    • 01:40:45I mean, the conversation makes
    • 01:40:46me think a lot about,
    • 01:40:47a a great talk that
    • 01:40:48I listened to from a
    • 01:40:49clinician who focused on palliative
    • 01:40:52care, but they talked about
    • 01:40:53when they were meeting their
    • 01:40:54patients that
    • 01:40:55one of the things they
    • 01:40:56really
    • 01:40:57started out with was asking
    • 01:40:59them
    • 01:41:00what tell them one thing
    • 01:41:01about them that was just
    • 01:41:03really important for them to
    • 01:41:04know that they wanted their
    • 01:41:05clinician or their physician to
    • 01:41:06know,
    • 01:41:07about their life, their lifestyle,
    • 01:41:09things that were meaningful to
    • 01:41:10them so that they could
    • 01:41:11have conversations and get to
    • 01:41:12know each other a little
    • 01:41:13bit better,
    • 01:41:14and understand
    • 01:41:15what those important things were
    • 01:41:17and how they might be
    • 01:41:17impacted by the therapies that
    • 01:41:18we're being offered.
    • 01:41:20And so I think that
    • 01:41:21that is a great point.
    • 01:41:22I think that spending time
    • 01:41:23and I think it's what
    • 01:41:25all of us try to
    • 01:41:25do when we're interacting with
    • 01:41:27our patients is spending time
    • 01:41:29getting to know them, spending
    • 01:41:30time trying to understand the
    • 01:41:31things that make a difference
    • 01:41:32in your lives,
    • 01:41:34and thinking carefully about the
    • 01:41:35things that we are doing
    • 01:41:36to you to try and
    • 01:41:38help you, but also hopefully
    • 01:41:39not to impair you from
    • 01:41:40doing the things that are
    • 01:41:41so important to you. Whether
    • 01:41:43it's playing instruments that could
    • 01:41:45be impacted by the neuropathy
    • 01:41:46from certain chemotherapies,
    • 01:41:49fatigue that devastates you and
    • 01:41:50prevents you from exercising in
    • 01:41:52the ways that are super
    • 01:41:53important to you, and any
    • 01:41:54variety of other things. I
    • 01:41:55think it's just that idea
    • 01:41:56that we really wanna get
    • 01:41:57to know you well and
    • 01:41:58understand the things that are
    • 01:41:59important to you to make
    • 01:42:00those choices with you and
    • 01:42:01for you that are best
    • 01:42:02going to serve your long
    • 01:42:03term goals.
    • 01:42:06Well, I could keep going.
    • 01:42:07If anybody in the audience
    • 01:42:08has questions, I wanna give
    • 01:42:09you guys time.
    • 01:42:11Here we go.
    • 01:42:14Actually, I don't have a
    • 01:42:15question. I'm Steve Ham. You
    • 01:42:17two guys saved me
    • 01:42:19a year ago, and I
    • 01:42:20just wanna thank you so
    • 01:42:21very much.
    • 01:42:22Okay?
    • 01:42:27Well, thank you for saying
    • 01:42:29that. I I commonly,
    • 01:42:31get asked, like, what it
    • 01:42:32is about
    • 01:42:34us and our team, and
    • 01:42:35it is seven fifteen.
    • 01:42:37And if you look in
    • 01:42:38that row right back there,
    • 01:42:41there are
    • 01:42:42four five of our five
    • 01:42:44of our nurses are here.
    • 01:42:46Six
    • 01:42:47can just
    • 01:42:48can can our team just
    • 01:42:50stand up? I just I
    • 01:42:51want you guys to just
    • 01:42:52see this is the type
    • 01:42:53of commitment. This is what
    • 01:42:54separates us. This is how
    • 01:42:55we're able to do
    • 01:42:57the things that we're able
    • 01:42:58to do.
    • 01:43:01So that is that is
    • 01:43:02really the that is the
    • 01:43:03Yale difference right there.
    • 01:43:09Well,
    • 01:43:10I'll tell you. So a
    • 01:43:11question
    • 01:43:12I commonly get asked is
    • 01:43:14what can you what can
    • 01:43:15I do
    • 01:43:16to make treatment work better?
    • 01:43:18Should I eat an all
    • 01:43:19blueberry diet? Should I, you
    • 01:43:21know, I and and I
    • 01:43:22don't know.
    • 01:43:24Do you guys have any
    • 01:43:25thoughts about things that people
    • 01:43:27can do? You're diagnosed with
    • 01:43:28cancer.
    • 01:43:29What can they do to
    • 01:43:31make the treatment work better,
    • 01:43:32to make the cancer not
    • 01:43:34come back? Or is there
    • 01:43:35anything that they can do?
    • 01:43:36Stop. Stop. Okay.
    • 01:43:38That's a hundred percent. So
    • 01:43:40the the the side effects
    • 01:43:41of chemotherapy
    • 01:43:42and treatment are less if
    • 01:43:44you stop smoking.
    • 01:43:45The recurrence rates are lower.
    • 01:43:47It's actually
    • 01:43:48as
    • 01:43:49powerful
    • 01:43:50as immunotherapy
    • 01:43:52in terms of mortality reduction,
    • 01:43:53quitting smoking. So quitting smoking
    • 01:43:56at any age, at any
    • 01:43:57stage,
    • 01:43:59will make you live longer.
    • 01:44:02As active as possible.
    • 01:44:05Go expand on that.
    • 01:44:08Just being active is is
    • 01:44:10critically important. We know there's
    • 01:44:11a lot of research that's
    • 01:44:12ongoing,
    • 01:44:14a lot of research that's
    • 01:44:14been gathered over the years.
    • 01:44:16People who
    • 01:44:17are active, and it doesn't
    • 01:44:18mean running marathons or lifting,
    • 01:44:21you know, three hundred pound
    • 01:44:22bench presses,
    • 01:44:24But being active on a
    • 01:44:25regular basis really impacts how
    • 01:44:27you tolerate therapy.
    • 01:44:28It impacts survival and how
    • 01:44:30you will do in the
    • 01:44:31long term, and it impacts
    • 01:44:32you in ways that can
    • 01:44:34counteract the effects of the
    • 01:44:35therapies that you're on. So
    • 01:44:36it's really important,
    • 01:44:38to find ways that you
    • 01:44:39enjoy being active and that
    • 01:44:40you can be active. And
    • 01:44:42if you're in doubt about
    • 01:44:43what you should or could
    • 01:44:44do, talk with your clinicians
    • 01:44:45about that. They can help
    • 01:44:46guide you, for the appropriate
    • 01:44:48kinds of activity for your
    • 01:44:49particular cases.
    • 01:44:54Yeah. I'll just add to
    • 01:44:55that. I often get asked
    • 01:44:56about diet. We we have
    • 01:44:57we do have dietitians in
    • 01:44:58both medical oncology and radiation
    • 01:45:00oncology who definitely can help
    • 01:45:02with that in terms of
    • 01:45:02how to get enough nutrition
    • 01:45:04in, especially if you're, you
    • 01:45:05know, some some forms of
    • 01:45:06radiation, especially with larger field
    • 01:45:08radiation close to the esophagus.
    • 01:45:09If a large length of
    • 01:45:10esophagus is covered, then sometimes
    • 01:45:12we'll have, you know, patients
    • 01:45:13will have difficulty being able
    • 01:45:14to maintain their weight. So
    • 01:45:16we're we're we're actually of
    • 01:45:17the and and I think
    • 01:45:18with with
    • 01:45:20trying to keep people
    • 01:45:22at at at steady weight,
    • 01:45:23which is maybe this may
    • 01:45:24be different from other parts
    • 01:45:26of your life where you're
    • 01:45:26trying to lose weight. Here
    • 01:45:27we're trying to keep you
    • 01:45:28from losing weight as much
    • 01:45:29as possible, but also to
    • 01:45:30keep on muscle and to
    • 01:45:31keep on, you know, your
    • 01:45:32ability to, to to move
    • 01:45:34and and function,
    • 01:45:36well, also. So, you know,
    • 01:45:37I think with with, with
    • 01:45:39with just good exercise, good
    • 01:45:41diet, as much as is
    • 01:45:42reasonable. Right? Like you're saying,
    • 01:45:44not everyone can do everything.
    • 01:45:46But but but trying to
    • 01:45:47maintain and kinda push yourself
    • 01:45:49to to some degree, not
    • 01:45:50not over tire yourself, but
    • 01:45:52push yourself to take those
    • 01:45:53steps.
    • 01:45:54You you know, there there's
    • 01:45:55there's some people who use
    • 01:45:56Fitbits to try to keep,
    • 01:45:57you know, or or even
    • 01:45:58the eye for the phones
    • 01:45:59now can can track the
    • 01:46:00number of steps you take.
    • 01:46:01So even things like that,
    • 01:46:03simple things like just taking
    • 01:46:04walks and such, you you
    • 01:46:05may feel pretty down with
    • 01:46:06your treatment sometimes and wanna
    • 01:46:08just lie around the the,
    • 01:46:09you know, to to to
    • 01:46:10watch TV all day and
    • 01:46:11and and and be in
    • 01:46:11your house all day. As
    • 01:46:13much as you can just
    • 01:46:13do kind of daily errands,
    • 01:46:15things like that, it'll keep
    • 01:46:16you both mentally and physically
    • 01:46:18sharper.
    • 01:46:20And I I think also
    • 01:46:21it's really critical, again, just
    • 01:46:23communicate with your care team,
    • 01:46:25especially when we think about,
    • 01:46:28complimentary
    • 01:46:29treatments that a lot of
    • 01:46:30patients will take and they
    • 01:46:32think sometimes they're afraid to
    • 01:46:33bring up with their caregivers.
    • 01:46:35As many
    • 01:46:36very valuable and very safe
    • 01:46:38complimentary treatments as there are,
    • 01:46:39there are some that are
    • 01:46:40harmful
    • 01:46:41or that are detrimental because
    • 01:46:43they counteract with the chemotherapies.
    • 01:46:45Talk to us and we
    • 01:46:46will go through
    • 01:46:48each, you know, naturopathic
    • 01:46:51thing that you're taking. We
    • 01:46:52can refer to our integrative
    • 01:46:54medicine specialists.
    • 01:46:55I mean, we wanna know
    • 01:46:57everything because we're open to
    • 01:46:59that. We know that there's
    • 01:47:00always room to add to
    • 01:47:02the care of our patients
    • 01:47:04and that sometimes we need
    • 01:47:05to think outside of the
    • 01:47:06box.
    • 01:47:10I'd like to comment more
    • 01:47:10on the complimentary alternative medicine
    • 01:47:12aspect. You know, we've we've
    • 01:47:13done some studies here on
    • 01:47:15on that as well, and
    • 01:47:15I think it's important to
    • 01:47:16understand what the difference is
    • 01:47:17between complimentary and alternative.
    • 01:47:20They're often linked together, but
    • 01:47:21alternative really means instead of
    • 01:47:24some part of your care.
    • 01:47:25Right? That's recommended from other
    • 01:47:27the cancer related care that's
    • 01:47:28recommended either whether it's chemotherapy,
    • 01:47:30immunotherapy, radiation surgery. If you're
    • 01:47:32omitting all of it or
    • 01:47:34some of it, that's would
    • 01:47:35be considered alternative, whereas complementary
    • 01:47:37is really more in addition
    • 01:47:38to. So I just want
    • 01:47:39to make sure we understood
    • 01:47:40the the definitions
    • 01:47:42of this as well. There's
    • 01:47:43a lot of misinformation out
    • 01:47:45there. Right? I think it'd
    • 01:47:46be just yeah. I do
    • 01:47:47wanna spend a little time
    • 01:47:48on this because,
    • 01:47:49you know, if if you
    • 01:47:50open any social media anytime
    • 01:47:51or the news or anything,
    • 01:47:53you're going to see a
    • 01:47:54lot of information out there
    • 01:47:55that's very difficult to elucidate.
    • 01:47:57Well, to figure out what's
    • 01:47:58fact and what's fiction,
    • 01:48:00especially with just the news
    • 01:48:01cycle these days. It's very
    • 01:48:02hard to tell sometime. I
    • 01:48:03mean, not making any any
    • 01:48:05any judgments, you know, specifically.
    • 01:48:06Just just saying that it's
    • 01:48:08sometimes very hard to separate
    • 01:48:09fact from fiction and almost
    • 01:48:10anything these days. Right? So
    • 01:48:12I think,
    • 01:48:13when someone tells you something
    • 01:48:14in a very convincing way,
    • 01:48:16it's it's hard to know
    • 01:48:17where is that coming from.
    • 01:48:18So ask those questions no
    • 01:48:20matter who it is. Even
    • 01:48:20if it's your physicians who's
    • 01:48:21who are telling you something,
    • 01:48:23ask the questions that are
    • 01:48:24are making you wonder, is
    • 01:48:26this true? Right? How do
    • 01:48:27you know this is true?
    • 01:48:28How sure are you about
    • 01:48:29this? Right? We can explain
    • 01:48:31that to you as much
    • 01:48:31as best as we can.
    • 01:48:33Other people should be able
    • 01:48:33to explain this too. Right?
    • 01:48:34If they're writing just because
    • 01:48:36someone wrote a book about
    • 01:48:37something doesn't mean that that's
    • 01:48:38true. Right? Just because something's
    • 01:48:39in the in the the
    • 01:48:40mainstream news versus, you know,
    • 01:48:42some alternative source,
    • 01:48:43you know, that doesn't mean
    • 01:48:44it's true or false either.
    • 01:48:45So, it it but it's
    • 01:48:47very difficult to distinguish sometimes,
    • 01:48:48and and we'll try to
    • 01:48:49help you through that. Again,
    • 01:48:50and don't be shy about
    • 01:48:52bringing something up that you've
    • 01:48:53read about. Even if you
    • 01:48:54feel like it will sound
    • 01:48:55silly to you or or
    • 01:48:56your family or to us,
    • 01:48:57we wanna hear about it
    • 01:48:58because that's something that we
    • 01:49:00can help you sort through
    • 01:49:01it.
    • 01:49:02If it's on TikTok, it's
    • 01:49:04pro.
    • 01:49:06The,
    • 01:49:07just and I think we're
    • 01:49:09at the time. I just
    • 01:49:09wanna give one last plug
    • 01:49:11to research.
    • 01:49:13The there's been a lot
    • 01:49:14of talk about research being
    • 01:49:16cut. There's been forty percent
    • 01:49:18NIH cuts, and I just
    • 01:49:20I just,
    • 01:49:21people don't commonly realize how
    • 01:49:23good we are at research
    • 01:49:24in the United States. We
    • 01:49:26not only have the most
    • 01:49:27Nobel prizes in medicine,
    • 01:49:29we have more than three
    • 01:49:30times more than second place.
    • 01:49:32That fuels the economy. Every
    • 01:49:34dollar the NIH spends brings
    • 01:49:36two dollars back to the
    • 01:49:38United States,
    • 01:49:39and it's we get early
    • 01:49:41access to drugs,
    • 01:49:43and new devices. And so
    • 01:49:45I really do believe research
    • 01:49:46is, the best way to
    • 01:49:48turn hope into miracles. So
    • 01:49:50thank you guys for coming.
    • 01:49:51I don't know if,
    • 01:49:58So I'll I'll just say
    • 01:50:00two last comments, and then
    • 01:50:01we can break for the
    • 01:50:02evening.
    • 01:50:03I wanted to first thank
    • 01:50:05all of the
    • 01:50:06speakers
    • 01:50:07and panelists
    • 01:50:09and people who helped organize
    • 01:50:11this, Emily and Renee,
    • 01:50:13and,
    • 01:50:13all the other team members
    • 01:50:15who are in the audience
    • 01:50:16who are here as Dan
    • 01:50:17pointed out. Thank you for
    • 01:50:18doing that. We have such
    • 01:50:19an incredible team, and I
    • 01:50:20love, this is selfish, but
    • 01:50:22I love this this that
    • 01:50:23this,
    • 01:50:24session that we do because
    • 01:50:25it brings us all together,
    • 01:50:26and it reminds me again.
    • 01:50:29I know this every day,
    • 01:50:30but it reminds me even
    • 01:50:30more how amazing our team
    • 01:50:32is, and I am so
    • 01:50:32proud of everybody and to
    • 01:50:34be part of this. So
    • 01:50:35that's the the first comment.
    • 01:50:36The second is to thank
    • 01:50:37all of our patients and
    • 01:50:38families. We are all here
    • 01:50:40because of all of you.
    • 01:50:42And, again, it's so amazing
    • 01:50:44to see you all here
    • 01:50:44in person, and hello to
    • 01:50:46everybody who's watching this later
    • 01:50:47on, you as well. Thank
    • 01:50:48you for for listening.
    • 01:50:50And, again, thank you for
    • 01:50:51for being here and for
    • 01:50:52your interest. And,
    • 01:50:54again, we're here for you.
    • 01:50:55So come up and talk
    • 01:50:56to us afterwards. Find us
    • 01:50:57in clinic when you have
    • 01:50:58questions.
    • 01:50:59And, I think that's it.
    • 01:51:01Any last comments from anyone
    • 01:51:02else? Okay. Thank you so
    • 01:51:04much again.