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Trials slated for presentation at the 2025 ESMO Congress may reveal practice-changing data across different breast and lung cancer populations.
ESMO 2025: Key Anticipated Updates in Breast and Lung Tumors

October 13th 2025

Trials slated for presentation at the 2025 ESMO Congress may reveal practice-changing data across different breast and lung cancer populations.

Developers plan to discuss a regulatory path to conditional marketing authorization for OST-HER2 in the UK, US, and EU in resected metastatic osteosarcoma.
OST-HER2 Exhibits Survival Benefit in Pulmonary Metastatic Osteosarcoma

October 10th 2025

Treatment-related AEs with sunvozertinib were consistent with EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors in patients with NSCLC with EGFR exon 20 insertion mutations.
Sunvozertinib Exhibits Favorable Responses in EGFR-Mutated NSCLC

October 3rd 2025

Findings from the 2025 World Conference on Lung Cancer reflected key updates in the management of NSCLC, SCLC, and other lung cancer types.
WCLC 2025: The Top 5 Takeaways Across Lung Cancer Care

September 12th 2025

Phase 2b findings demonstrate improved 2-year survival outcomes with OST-HER2 compared with historical control data.
OST-HER2 Yields Significant Survival in Pulmonary Metastatic Osteosarcoma

August 8th 2025

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Radiation-Induced Lung Injury: Assessment, Management, and Prevention

January 1st 2008

Radiation therapy (RT) is an important treatment modality for multiple thoracic malignancies. Incidental irradiation of the lungs, which are particularly susceptible to injury, is unavoidable and often dose-limiting. The most radiosensitive subunit of the lung is the alveolar/capillary complex, and RT-induced lung injury is often described as diffuse alveolar damage. Reactive oxygen species generated by RT are directly toxic to parenchymal cells and initiate a cascade of molecular events that alter the cytokine milieu of the microenvironment, creating a self-sustaining cycle of inflammation and chronic oxidative stress. Replacement of normal lung parenchyma by fibrosis is the culminating event. Depending on the dose and volume of lung irradiated, acute radiation pneumonitis may develop, characterized by dry cough and dyspnea. Fibrosis of the lung, which can also cause dyspnea, is the late complication. Imaging studies and pulmonary function tests can be used to quantify the extent of lung injury. While strict dose-volume constraints to minimize the risk of injury are difficult to impose, substantial data support some general guidelines. New modalities such as intensity-modulated radiation therapy and stereotactic body radiation therapy provide new treatment options but also pose new challenges in safely delivering thoracic RT.