2023
NCOG-29. THE NEURO-ONCOLOGY MAGNITUDE OF CLINICAL BENEFIT SCALE (NEURO-MCBS) AS A COMPREHENSIVE AND CLINICALLY RELEVANT ASSESSMENT TOOL TO DETERMINE CLINICAL BENEFIT FROM TARGETED THERAPIES IN CNS TUMORS
Kurz S, Renovanz M, Rieger J, Bombach P, Grosse L, Rieger D, Hucker S, Hille H, Hippler M, Oener O, Ruhm K, Beha J, Malek H, Moeller Y, Bitzer M, Malek N, Tabatabai G. NCOG-29. THE NEURO-ONCOLOGY MAGNITUDE OF CLINICAL BENEFIT SCALE (NEURO-MCBS) AS A COMPREHENSIVE AND CLINICALLY RELEVANT ASSESSMENT TOOL TO DETERMINE CLINICAL BENEFIT FROM TARGETED THERAPIES IN CNS TUMORS. Neuro-Oncology 2023, 25: v220-v220. PMCID: PMC10639832, DOI: 10.1093/neuonc/noad179.0842.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchProgression-free survivalCNS tumorsBrain metastasesTargeted therapyClinical benefitTherapy optionsFirst-line therapy optionTreatment efficacyDegree of clinical benefitClinical utilityMagnitude of Clinical Benefit ScaleNeuro-oncological conditionsSecondary CNS tumorsOutcome dataPhase I studyComprehensive molecular profilingOff-label therapyOutcome measuresAssessment of treatment efficacyClinical outcome dataAssess treatment efficacySurvival outcome dataPFS2/PFS1 ratioLongitudinal observational studyPerformance statusClinical outcome of biomarker-guided therapies in adult patients with tumors of the nervous system
Renovanz M, Kurz S, Rieger J, Walter B, Becker H, Hille H, Bombach P, Rieger D, Grosse L, Häusser L, Skardelly M, Merk D, Paulsen F, Hoffmann E, Gani C, Neumann M, Beschorner R, Rieß O, Roggia C, Schroeder C, Ossowski S, Armeanu-Ebinger S, Gschwind A, Biskup S, Schulze M, Fend F, Singer S, Zender L, Lengerke C, Brucker S, Engler T, Forschner A, Stenzl A, Kohlbacher O, Nahnsen S, Gabernet G, Fillinger S, Bender B, Ernemann U, Öner Ö, Beha J, Malek H, Möller Y, Ruhm K, Tatagiba M, Schittenhelm J, Bitzer M, Malek N, Zips D, Tabatabai G. Clinical outcome of biomarker-guided therapies in adult patients with tumors of the nervous system. Neuro-Oncology Advances 2023, 5: vdad012. PMID: 36915613, PMCID: PMC10007909, DOI: 10.1093/noajnl/vdad012.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchBiomarker-guided therapyAdult patientsMolecular profilingNeuro-oncology patientsAdvanced tumorsClinical utilityTargeted therapyNervous systemClinical trialsTherapy recommendationsComprehensive molecular profilingInclusion of patientsData cutoffClinical benefitClinical outcomesTumorTherapyPatientsEvidence levelClinical careTrialsMtbTranslation studiesInvestigate feasibility
2018
PD-1 inhibition has only limited clinical benefit in patients with recurrent high-grade glioma.
Kurz S, Cabrera L, Hastie D, Huang R, Unadkat P, Rinne M, Nayak L, Lee E, Reardon D, Wen P. PD-1 inhibition has only limited clinical benefit in patients with recurrent high-grade glioma. Neurology 2018, 91: e1355-e1359. PMID: 30171077, DOI: 10.1212/wnl.0000000000006283.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdultAgedAged, 80 and overAntibodies, Monoclonal, HumanizedAntineoplastic AgentsBevacizumabBrain NeoplasmsFemaleGliomaHumansMaleMiddle AgedNeoplasm Recurrence, LocalNivolumabProgrammed Cell Death 1 ReceptorRetrospective StudiesSalvage TherapySurvival AnalysisTreatment OutcomeYoung AdultConceptsRecurrent high-grade gliomaHigh-grade gliomasRetrospective observational studySalvage therapySurvival benefitSingle-institution retrospective observational studyPD-1 blocking antibodiesObservational studyPD-1 inhibitionProgression-free survivalClass IV evidenceConcurrent bevacizumabAntibody nivolumabPD-1Median survivalClinical benefitImproved survivalNivolumabPembrolizumabAdult patientsBevacizumabIV evidenceClinical trialsPatient populationPatients