2023
Representativeness of Patients Enrolled in the Lung Cancer Master Protocol (Lung-MAP)
Vaidya R, Unger J, Qian L, Minichiello K, Herbst R, Gandara D, Neal J, Leal T, Patel J, Dragnev K, Waqar S, Edelman M, Sigal E, Adam S, Malik S, Blanke C, LeBlanc M, Kelly K, Gray J, Redman M. Representativeness of Patients Enrolled in the Lung Cancer Master Protocol (Lung-MAP). JCO Precision Oncology 2023, 7: e2300218. PMID: 37677122, PMCID: PMC10581630, DOI: 10.1200/po.23.00218.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsCarcinoma, Non-Small-Cell LungFemaleHumansLungLung NeoplasmsMaleMolecular Targeted TherapyPatientsUnited StatesConceptsCharacteristics of patientsLung-MAPMaster protocolsNSCLC populationCell lung cancer trialsSEER registry dataPatients 65 yearsPrecision medicine clinical trialsPatient exclusion criteriaLung cancer trialsRepresentativeness of patientsMedicine clinical trialsNSCLC trialsOlder patientsMedicaid/More patientsSubgroup analysisCancer trialsClinical trialsVulnerable patientsRegistry dataExclusion criteriaPatientsNSCLC studiesSociodemographic characteristics
2022
Proceedings From the ASCO/College of American Pathologists Immune Checkpoint Inhibitor Predictive Biomarker Summit.
Hayes D, Herbst R, Myles J, Topalian S, Yohe S, Aronson N, Bellizzi A, Basu Roy U, Bradshaw G, Edwards R, El-Gabry E, Elvin J, Gajewski T, McShane L, Oberley M, Philip R, Rimm D, Rosenbaum J, Rubin E, Schlager L, Sherwood S, Stewart M, Taube J, Thurin M, Vasalos P, Laser J. Proceedings From the ASCO/College of American Pathologists Immune Checkpoint Inhibitor Predictive Biomarker Summit. JCO Precision Oncology 2022, 6: e2200454. PMID: 36446042, PMCID: PMC10530621, DOI: 10.1200/po.22.00454.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsICI therapyImmune checkpoint inhibition therapyDeath ligand 1 (PD-L1) expressionMultiple predictive biomarkersTumor biomarker testsCheckpoint inhibition therapyLigand 1 expressionDeath ligand 1Field of oncologyICI benefitPredictive factorsPredictive biomarkersInhibition therapyNeoantigen expressionBiomarker testsHealth insurance organizationsUS FoodDrug AdministrationAmerican PathologistsMedicaid ServicesTherapyBiomarker developmentNational InstituteLigand 1Clinical applicationElectronic Nicotine Delivery Systems: An Updated Policy Statement from the American Association for Cancer Research and the American Society of Clinical Oncology
Herbst RS, Hatsukami D, Acton D, Giuliani M, Moushey A, Phillips J, Sherwood S, Toll BA, Viswanath K, Warren NJH, Warren GW, Alberg AJ. Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems: An Updated Policy Statement from the American Association for Cancer Research and the American Society of Clinical Oncology. Clinical Cancer Research 2022, 28: of1-of10. PMID: 36287033, DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.ccr-22-2429.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsElectronic nicotine delivery systemsTobacco useENDS useCombustible tobaccoLong-term health risksEvidence-based treatmentsSurgeon General's ReportPublic healthNicotine delivery systemsTobacco-related disparitiesCombustible tobacco useBlood pressureSmoking cessationTobacco cessationCancer incidenceSmoking relapseClinical OncologyEpidemiological studiesImmune systemPotential efficacyE-cigarettesBrain developmentCancer developmentTobacco productsLongitudinal studyAssessment of Regional Variability in COVID-19 Outcomes Among Patients With Cancer in the United States
Hawley J, Sun T, Chism D, Duma N, Fu J, Gatson N, Mishra S, Nguyen R, Reid S, Serrano O, Singh S, Venepalli N, Bakouny Z, Bashir B, Bilen M, Caimi P, Choueiri T, Dawsey S, Fecher L, Flora D, Friese C, Glover M, Gonzalez C, Goyal S, Halfdanarson T, Hershman D, Khan H, Labaki C, Lewis M, McKay R, Messing I, Pennell N, Puc M, Ravindranathan D, Rhodes T, Rivera A, Roller J, Schwartz G, Shah S, Shaya J, Streckfuss M, Thompson M, Wulff-Burchfield E, Xie Z, Yu P, Warner J, Shah D, French B, Hwang C, Halmos B, Verma A, Gartrell B, Goel S, Ohri N, Sica R, Thakkar A, Stockerl-Goldstein K, Butt O, Campian J, Fiala M, Henderson J, Monahan R, Zhou A, Thompson M, Bohachek P, Mundt D, Streckfuss M, Tadesse E, Lammers P, Panagiotou O, Egan P, Farmakiotis D, Khan H, Olszewski A, Loaiza-Bonilla A, Del Prete S, Bar M, Gulati A, Steve Lo K, Rose S, Stratton J, Weinstein P, Caimi P, Barnholtz-Sloan J, Garcia J, Nakayama J, Gupta S, Pennell N, Ahluwalia M, Dawsey S, Lemmon C, Nizam A, Hoppenot C, Li A, Choueiri T, Bakouny Z, Bouchard G, Busser F, Connors J, Curran C, Demetri G, Giordano A, Kelleher K, Nohria A, Schmidt A, Shaw G, Van Allen E, Nuzzo P, Xu V, Zon R, Zhang T, Halabi S, Leighton J, Lyman G, Graber J, Grivas P, Khaki A, Loggers E, Lynch R, Nakasone E, Schweizer M, Tachiki L, Vinayak S, Wagner M, Yeh A, Gatson N, Goyal S, Huynh-Le M, Rosenstein L, Yu P, Clement J, Daher A, Dailey M, Elias R, Jayaraj A, Hsu E, Menendez A, Rathmann J, Serrano O, Hwang C, Gadgeel S, Singh S, Hawley J, Hershman D, Accordino M, Bhutani D, Schwartz G, Reuben D, Alexander M, Mushtaq S, Bernicker E, Deeken J, Shafer D, Lewis M, Rhodes T, Gill D, Low C, Mashru S, Mansoor A, Zaren H, Smith S, Nagaraj G, Akhtari M, Lau E, Reeves M, Berg S, Elms D, Morgans A, Wehbe F, Altman J, Gurley M, Mulcahy M, Durbin E, Kulkarni A, Nelson H, Sachs Z, Shah S, Rosovsky R, Reynolds K, Bardia A, Boland G, Gainor J, Zubiri L, Halfdanarson T, Bekaii-Saab T, Desai A, Xie Z, Mesa R, Bonnen M, Mahadevan D, Ramirez A, Salazar M, Shah D, Shah P, Faller B, McKay R, Ajmera A, Brouha S, Cabal A, Hsiao A, Kligerman S, Shaya J, Weissmann L, Jani C, Thomson C, Knoble J, Glace M, Rink C, Stauffer K, Zacks R, Blau S, Joshi M, Menon H, Rovito M, Griffiths E, Elshoury A, Jabbour S, Misdary C, Shah M, Bashir B, McNair C, Mahmood S, Mico V, Rivera A, Flora D, Logan B, Kloecker G, Mandapakala C, Shah S, Cabebe E, Glover M, Jha A, Schapira L, Wu J, Subbiah S, Lopes G, Revankar S, Stover D, Addison D, Chen J, Gatti-Mays M, Jhawar S, Karivedu V, Lustberg M, Palmer J, Wall S, Williams N, Wulff-Burchfield E, Kasi A, Edwin N, Smits M, Chism D, Owenby S, Doroshow D, Galsky M, Wotman M, Zhu H, Fu J, Fazio A, Sueyoshi M, Huber K, Riess J, Patel K, Rubinstein S, Wood W, Jensen C, Kumar V, Wise-Draper T, Ahmad S, Grover P, Gulati S, Kharofa J, Latif T, Marcum M, Park C, Shaikh H, Bowles D, Geiger C, Markham M, Bishnoi R, Russ A, Shah C, Acoba J, Rho Y, Feldman L, Hoskins K, Gantt G, Liu L, Khan M, Nguyen R, Pasquinelli M, Schwartz C, Venepalli N, Vikas P, Friese C, Fecher L, Mavromatis B, Bijjula R, Zaman Q, Warner J, Cheng A, Davis E, Duda S, Enriquez K, French B, Gillaspie E, Hennessy C, Hausrath D, Hsu C, Johnson D, Li X, Mishra S, Reid S, Rini B, Slosky D, Shyr Y, Solorzano C, Sun T, Tucker M, Vega-Luna K, Wang L, Kennecke H, Aboulafia D, Schroeder B, Puc M, Carducci T, Goldsmith K, Van Loon S, Topaloglu U, Alimohamed S, Rice R, Cabalona W, Pilar C, Peddi P, Rosen L, McCollough B, Bilen M, Ravindranathan D, Hafez N, Herbst R, LoRusso P, Masters T, Stratton C. Assessment of Regional Variability in COVID-19 Outcomes Among Patients With Cancer in the United States. JAMA Network Open 2022, 5: e2142046. PMID: 34982158, PMCID: PMC8728628, DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.42046.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAgedCause of DeathCensusesCOVID-19FemaleHealth FacilitiesHumansIntensive Care UnitsMaleMiddle AgedNeoplasmsOdds RatioPandemicsRegistriesRespiration, ArtificialRetrospective StudiesRisk FactorsRural PopulationSARS-CoV-2Severity of Illness IndexSocial VulnerabilitySpatial AnalysisUnited StatesUrban PopulationConceptsCOVID-19 outcomesRural-Urban Continuum CodesCohort studyLaboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infectionMortality rateUS census divisionsRegistry-based retrospective cohort studyIntensive care unit admissionRegistry-based cohort studySARS-CoV-2 infectionPatient-level risk factorsSecondary composite outcomeCare unit admissionRetrospective cohort studyCare of patientsCensus divisionsInvasive malignant neoplasmCOVID-19Significant differencesCOVID-19 diagnosisCause deathUnit admissionCause mortalityComposite outcomePatient characteristics
2019
Disparities in broad-based genomic sequencing for patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer
Riaz F, Presley CJ, Chiang AC, Longtine JA, Soulos PR, Adelson KB, Herbst RS, Nussbaum NC, Sorg RA, Abernethy AP, Agarwala V, Gross CP. Disparities in broad-based genomic sequencing for patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer. Journal Of Geriatric Oncology 2019, 10: 669-672. PMID: 30718180, DOI: 10.1016/j.jgo.2019.01.016.Peer-Reviewed Original Research
2017
Cetuximab plus carboplatin and paclitaxel with or without bevacizumab versus carboplatin and paclitaxel with or without bevacizumab in advanced NSCLC (SWOG S0819): a randomised, phase 3 study
Herbst RS, Redman MW, Kim ES, Semrad TJ, Bazhenova L, Masters G, Oettel K, Guaglianone P, Reynolds C, Karnad A, Arnold SM, Varella-Garcia M, Moon J, Mack PC, Blanke CD, Hirsch FR, Kelly K, Gandara DR. Cetuximab plus carboplatin and paclitaxel with or without bevacizumab versus carboplatin and paclitaxel with or without bevacizumab in advanced NSCLC (SWOG S0819): a randomised, phase 3 study. The Lancet Oncology 2017, 19: 101-114. PMID: 29169877, PMCID: PMC5847342, DOI: 10.1016/s1470-2045(17)30694-0.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdultAgedAged, 80 and overAntineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy ProtocolsCarboplatinCarcinoma, Non-Small-Cell LungCetuximabDisease ProgressionDisease-Free SurvivalErbB ReceptorsFemaleHumansIn Situ Hybridization, FluorescenceLung NeoplasmsMaleMexicoMiddle AgedMutationPaclitaxelRisk FactorsTime FactorsTreatment OutcomeUnited StatesConceptsProgression-free survivalSquamous cell histologyCetuximab groupEntire study populationOverall survivalCell histologyControl groupTreatment groupsAdvanced NSCLCAdverse eventsStudy populationProgression-free survival eventsSquamous cell carcinoma cancerEGFR FISHActivity of cetuximabCommon grade 3Non-squamous histologyStage IV NSCLCSevere adverse eventsCell lung cancerCo-primary endpointsAnti-EGFR antibodiesNational Cancer InstituteEligible patientsEGFR FISH statusAssociation of Delayed Adjuvant Chemotherapy With Survival After Lung Cancer Surgery
Salazar MC, Rosen JE, Wang Z, Arnold BN, Thomas DC, Herbst RS, Kim AW, Detterbeck FC, Blasberg JD, Boffa DJ. Association of Delayed Adjuvant Chemotherapy With Survival After Lung Cancer Surgery. JAMA Oncology 2017, 3: 610-619. PMID: 28056112, PMCID: PMC5824207, DOI: 10.1001/jamaoncol.2016.5829.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAgedAntineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy ProtocolsCarcinoma, Non-Small-Cell LungChemotherapy, AdjuvantDrug Administration ScheduleFemaleHumansLung NeoplasmsMaleMiddle AgedNeoplasm GradingNeoplasm StagingPneumonectomyPostoperative PeriodProportional Hazards ModelsRetrospective StudiesTreatment OutcomeUnited StatesConceptsLung cancer surgeryCell lung cancer resectionAdjuvant chemotherapyLung cancer resectionNational Cancer DatabaseCell lung cancerLower mortality riskCancer surgeryCox modelCancer resectionLung cancerCancer DatabaseMortality riskCell lung cancer surgeryHospital-based tumor registryIncident lung cancer casesPostoperative multiagent chemotherapyInitiation of chemotherapyTreatment-naive patientsPropensity-matched pairsRetrospective observational studyLymph node metastasisLung cancer casesChemotherapy initiationPostoperative chemotherapyEnhancing Insights into Pulmonary Vascular Disease through a Precision Medicine Approach. A Joint NHLBI–Cardiovascular Medical Research and Education Fund Workshop Report
Newman JH, Rich S, Abman SH, Alexander JH, Barnard J, Beck GJ, Benza RL, Bull TM, Chan SY, Chun HJ, Doogan D, Dupuis J, Erzurum SC, Frantz RP, Geraci M, Gillies H, Gladwin M, Gray MP, Hemnes AR, Herbst RS, Hernandez AF, Hill NS, Horn EM, Hunter K, Jing ZC, Johns R, Kaul S, Kawut SM, Lahm T, Leopold JA, Lewis GD, Mathai SC, McLaughlin VV, Michelakis ED, Nathan SD, Nichols W, Page G, Rabinovitch M, Rich J, Rischard F, Rounds S, Shah SJ, Tapson VF, Lowy N, Stockbridge N, Weinmann G, Xiao L. Enhancing Insights into Pulmonary Vascular Disease through a Precision Medicine Approach. A Joint NHLBI–Cardiovascular Medical Research and Education Fund Workshop Report. American Journal Of Respiratory And Critical Care Medicine 2017, 195: 1661-1670. PMID: 28430547, PMCID: PMC5476915, DOI: 10.1164/rccm.201701-0150ws.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsEducationHumansHypertension, PulmonaryNational Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (U.S.)Precision MedicineUnited StatesConceptsPulmonary vascular diseaseClinical trialsPulmonary hypertensionVascular diseaseNational Biological SamplePrecision medicine principlesVascular disease phenotypesNational Precision Medicine InitiativeSmall clinical trialsFuture clinical trialsPrecision medicine approachInnovative statistical designLung diseasePatient populationPatient advocacy organizationsPrecision Medicine InitiativeTherapeutic interventionsClinical investigatorsMedicine approachMedicine principlesMetabolic testsTrialsDiseaseBreakthrough InitiativePharmaceutical industry experts
2015
Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems: A Policy Statement from the American Association for Cancer Research and the American Society of Clinical Oncology
Brandon TH, Goniewicz ML, Hanna NH, Hatsukami DK, Herbst RS, Hobin JA, Ostroff JS, Shields PG, Toll BA, Tyne CA, Viswanath K, Warren GW. Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems: A Policy Statement from the American Association for Cancer Research and the American Society of Clinical Oncology. Clinical Cancer Research 2015, 21: 514-525. PMID: 25573384, DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.ccr-14-2544.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsElectronic nicotine delivery systemsTobacco useClinical OncologyHarm-reduction devicesNumber one preventable causeAmerican SocietyCombustible tobacco productsNicotine delivery systemsCancer researchCombustible tobacco useAdverse health effectsAmerican AssociationChildproof capsFormer smokersCigarette smokingPreventable causeSmoking ratesENDS useDefinitive dataE-cigarettesTobacco productsHealth effectsSmokersSmokingHealth impactsElectronic Nicotine Delivery Systems: A Policy Statement From the American Association for Cancer Research and the American Society of Clinical Oncology
Brandon TH, Goniewicz ML, Hanna NH, Hatsukami DK, Herbst RS, Hobin JA, Ostroff JS, Shields PG, Toll BA, Tyne CA, Viswanath K, Warren GW. Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems: A Policy Statement From the American Association for Cancer Research and the American Society of Clinical Oncology. Journal Of Clinical Oncology 2015, 33: 952-963. PMID: 25572671, DOI: 10.1200/jco.2014.59.4465.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsElectronic nicotine delivery systemsClinical OncologyTobacco useAmerican SocietyCancer researchHarm-reduction devicesNumber one preventable causeAmerican AssociationJoint writing groupCombustible tobacco productsClinical cancer researchNicotine delivery systemsCombustible tobacco useAdverse health effectsChildproof capsFormer smokersCigarette smokingPreventable causeTobacco cessationSmoking ratesUS FoodDrug AdministrationENDS useDefinitive dataElectronic cigarettes
2014
American Society of Clinical Oncology Perspective: Raising the Bar for Clinical Trials by Defining Clinically Meaningful Outcomes
Ellis LM, Bernstein DS, Voest EE, Berlin JD, Sargent D, Cortazar P, Garrett-Mayer E, Herbst RS, Lilenbaum RC, Sima C, Venook AP, Gonen M, Schilsky RL, Meropol NJ, Schnipper LE. American Society of Clinical Oncology Perspective: Raising the Bar for Clinical Trials by Defining Clinically Meaningful Outcomes. Journal Of Clinical Oncology 2014, 32: 1277-1280. PMID: 24638016, DOI: 10.1200/jco.2013.53.8009.Peer-Reviewed Original Research
2013
Reducing Tobacco‐Related Cancer Incidence and Mortality: Summary of an Institute of Medicine Workshop
Balogh EP, Dresler C, Fleury ME, Gritz ER, Kean TJ, Myers ML, Nass SJ, Nevidjon B, Toll BA, Warren GW, Herbst RS. Reducing Tobacco‐Related Cancer Incidence and Mortality: Summary of an Institute of Medicine Workshop. The Oncologist 2013, 19: 21-31. PMID: 24304712, PMCID: PMC3903060, DOI: 10.1634/theoncologist.2013-0230.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAssessing Tobacco Use by Cancer Patients and Facilitating Cessation: An American Association for Cancer Research Policy Statement
Toll BA, Brandon TH, Gritz ER, Warren GW, Herbst RS, Tobacco and Cancer W. Assessing Tobacco Use by Cancer Patients and Facilitating Cessation: An American Association for Cancer Research Policy Statement. Clinical Cancer Research 2013, 19: 1941-1948. PMID: 23570694, PMCID: PMC5992896, DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.ccr-13-0666.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsTobacco useTobacco cessationCessation interventionsEvidence-based cessation interventionsTreatment-related toxicitySecond primary tumorsTobacco cessation interventionsQuality cancer careQuality of lifeAmerican AssociationCessation assistancePoor outcomeCancer careCancer patientsPrimary tumorOncology settingCancer recurrencePatientsTreatment efficacyTreatment settingsEvidence-based proceduresCancer leadCancerCancer progressionClinical infrastructure
2009
The changing face of Phase 1 cancer clinical trials
Craft BS, Kurzrock R, Lei X, Herbst R, Lippman S, Fu S, Karp DD. The changing face of Phase 1 cancer clinical trials. Cancer 2009, 115: 1592-1597. PMID: 19165808, PMCID: PMC2668727, DOI: 10.1002/cncr.24171.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsPhase 2 trialEarly phase clinical trialsPhase 1 studyPhase 1 trialClinical trialsVital sign determinationsCancer clinical trialsPhysical examinationEarly phase cancer clinical trialsWeeks of protocolPhase 2 studyPhase 1 cancer clinical trialsNew drug studyStudy requirementsPhase 1Pharmacokinetic samplingMore patientsMedical oncologyOncology communityLaboratory testsSuch trialsDrug studiesTrialsPhase 1 programElectrocardiogram
2006
Asian Ethnicity as a Predictor of Response in Patients with Non–Small-Cell Lung Cancer Treated with Gefitinib on an Expanded Access Program
Thomas SK, Fossella FV, Liu D, Schaerer R, Tsao AS, Kies MS, Pisters KM, Blumenschein GR, Glisson BS, Lee JJ, Herbst RS, Zinner RG. Asian Ethnicity as a Predictor of Response in Patients with Non–Small-Cell Lung Cancer Treated with Gefitinib on an Expanded Access Program. Clinical Lung Cancer 2006, 7: 326-331. PMID: 16640804, DOI: 10.3816/clc.2006.n.014.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsExpanded Access ProgramCell lung cancerLung cancerAsian ethnicityD. Anderson Cancer CenterPartial response rateStable disease rateAdvanced-stage NSCLCPredictors of responseAccess programAnderson Cancer CenterEast Asian ethnicityChart reviewMedian survivalPartial responseIndependent predictorsMedian timeSmoking statusRetrospective studyCancer CenterPatientsResponse rateSurvival rateMultivariate analysisGefitinib
2005
Limited-Stage Small-Cell Lung Cancer (Stages I-III): Observations from the National Cancer Data Base
Gaspar LE, Gay EG, Crawford J, Putnam JB, Herbst RS, Bonner JA. Limited-Stage Small-Cell Lung Cancer (Stages I-III): Observations from the National Cancer Data Base. Clinical Lung Cancer 2005, 6: 355-360. PMID: 15943896, DOI: 10.3816/clc.2005.n.015.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsLimited stage small cell lung cancerSmall cell lung cancerLS-SCLCChemoradiation therapyStandard treatmentLung cancerRadiation therapySole treatmentSurvival rateConcurrent thoracic radiation therapyNational Cancer Data BaseMultiple-agent chemotherapyTreatment pattern changesPercent of patientsProportion of patientsThoracic radiation therapyUse of chemotherapyUse of chemoradiationAge of patientsGroup of patientsConfidence intervalsYears of agePercentage of womenCombined chemotherapyPatient cohort