Video

Dr. Plimack on the Challenges With Available Immunotherapies for Bladder Cancer

Elizabeth Plimack, MD, director of Genitourinary Clinical Research at Fox Chase Cancer Center, shares the challenges with the FDA-approved immunotherapy agents for the treatment of patients with bladder cancer.

Elizabeth Plimack, MD, director of Genitourinary Clinical Research at Fox Chase Cancer Center, shares the challenges with FDA-approved immunotherapy agents for the treatment of patients with bladder cancer.

In the last year, there have been 5 new immunotherapy agents approved for patients with bladder cancer, which is a significant advance as there had not been an FDA approval in the field for decades prior. However, the issue with all of these PD-1/PD-L1 therapies is that are all vastly similar, Plimack explains.

Researchers are unable to see a difference between them. Moreover, while data or clinical trial design may differ, clinicians have not yet been able to see a difference in the agents themselves, she says. What the field needs, she adds, are novel therapies. Such examples of this include the combination of pembrolizumab (Keytruda) and epacodostat, as well as a strategy exploring clinical success following failure on a checkpoint inhibitor.

Related Videos
Viktor Grünwald, MD, PhD
Aaron Gerds, MD
Christine M. Lovly, MD, PhD, Ingram Associate Professor of Cancer Research, associate professor, medicine (hematology/oncology), Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center
Haeseong Park, MD, MPH
David L. Porter, MD
Timothy Yap, MBBS, PhD, FRCP
Leo I. Gordon, MD, Abby and John Friend Professor of Oncology Research, professor, medicine (hematology and oncology), Feinberg School of Medicine, Robert H. Lurie Cancer Center
Hetty E. Carraway, MD, MBA, staff associate professor, Department of Medicine, School of Medicine, Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine of Case Western Reserve University; member, Immune Oncology Program, Case Comprehensive Cancer Center; vice chair, Strategy and Enterprise Development, Taussig Cancer Institute, Division of Hematologic Oncology and Blood Disorders, Cleveland Clinic
David A. Braun, MD, PhD, assistant professor, medicine (medical oncology), Louis Goodman and Alfred Gilman Yale Scholar, member, Center of Molecular and Cellular Oncology, Yale Cancer Center
Julia Foldi, MD, PhD