Episode 66:ASCO 2024 Recap: Advancements in Cancer Treatments

Episode 66:ASCO 2024 Recap: Advancements in Cancer Treatments

In this episode, Dr. Doug Blayney, oncologist, former President of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), and the Chief Medical Officer of Manta Cares, discusses the latest advancements in breast cancer treatments presented at ASCO’s 2024 Annual Meeting. He highlights the significant progress in antibody drug conjugates (ADCs), which are engineered to specifically target cancer cells, offering new hope in cancer treatment. The Manta Cares team also attended the ASCO conference, presenting an abstract for a personal treatment management tool designed to assist cancer patients and survivors (and their families!) in navigating their next steps – Manta Maps!

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About our guest
Dr. Doug Blayney is an oncology physician who specializes in breast cancer and the Chief Medical Officer of Manta Cares. His research focuses on quality improvement in cancer care systems, new drug development, and patient experience improvement. At the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), he was founding Editor-in-Chief of its flagship practice journal, and as President, started the ASCO Quality Symposium and began planning for ASCO’s CancerLinq. He was a founding member of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) Growth Factor Guideline panel, and is a past member of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s Oncology Drugs Advisory Committee and the NCCN Board of Directors.

Key Moments
1 minutes:
"As a doctor who treats breast cancer, I thought it was important that we have a lot of alternatives to chemotherapy. So even though some of the studies were portrayed as negative because they didn't improve overall survival, I think pushing out the time a patient gets chemotherapy and its associated toxicities is a major advance.”

22 minutes:
"We need better assays to predict who's going to respond to these ADCs (Antibody Drug Conjugates). We're learning that they're here to stay and they're a great benefit to many with breast cancer and other cancers."

35 minutes:
“It's thought that you and people without known cancer, develop one or two cancers a day, small little bitty ones and our body's immune system recognizes that as foreign and eats them up and the cancer doesn't grow and proliferate. One of the ways cancer grows, especially in adults, is immune escape. So somehow the brakes are put on the immune system at some point when that cancer develops. The IO checkpoint inhibitors are thought to work by taking off those brakes.”

Visit the Manta Cares website 

YouTube Chapters:

0:00-1:04 Welcome Dr. Blayney!

1:05-6:18 Takeaways from ASCO 2024

6:19-18:27 Chemotherapy toxicity versus ADC toxicity

18:28-27:09 The issues with IHC and HER2 identification

27:10-36:26 Assay issues within treatment development

36:27-44:20 You MAY produce one or two cancer cells a day

44:21-48:23 Summarizing the takeaways of ASCO 2024 

48:24-49:16 Outro and disclaimer

YouTube Tags: Manta Cares, breast cancer, ASCO, chemotherapy alternatives, antibody drug conjugates, ADCs, immune checkpoint inhibitors, liquid biopsy, personalized treatment, ADC



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