Jyoti S. Mayadev, MD, Discusses Future Directions Within the Cervical Cancer Space

Video

Jyoti S. Mayadev, MD, indicated that future research for cervical cancer will be focused on combination immune checkpoint inhibitors and biomarker research.

At the 2022 American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) Annual Meeting, Jyoti S. Mayadev, MD, a radiation oncologist and professor of radiation medicine and applied sciences at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine, spoke with CancerNetwork® about where future research efforts are likely to be focused within the cervical cancer space. In particular, Mayadev highlighted how combination immunotherapies and biomarker research will be areas of focus for this population.

Transcript:

We've seen that immunotherapy with cervical cancer has been efficacious and improved survival in the metastatic setting. There have been synergies with various checkpoint inhibitors, including dual checkpoint inhibition—tyrosine kinase inhibitors [TKIs] and immunotherapy synergy. There have been new developments in terms of LAG-3 [inhibitors]. We have a real opportunity with novel therapeutics in cervical cancer and combinations with immunotherapy and synergies that will be better elucidated with biomarker development and better prediction tools as to which patients will unfortunately succumb to their disease despite standard therapy. Those are the patients that we need to enrich our clinical trial patient population with.

Recent Videos
Trials at scale can be conducted in middle-income, low-middle-income, and even lower-income countries if you organize a trial ecosystem.
Immunotherapy-based combinations may elicit a synergistic effect that surpasses monotherapy outcomes among patients with muscle-invasive bladder cancer.
A new partnership agreement involving AI use may help spread radiotherapeutic standards from academic centers to more patients in community-based practices.
For example, you have a belt of certain diseases or genetic disorders that you come across, such as sickle cell disease or thalassemia, that are more prevalent in these areas.
Recent findings presented at ASTRO 2025 suggest an “exciting opportunity” to expand the role of radiation oncology in different non-malignant indications.
The 3 most likely directions of radiotherapy advancements come from new technology, combinations with immunotherapy, and the incorporation of particle therapy.
Talent shortages in the manufacturing and administration of cellular therapies are problems that must be addressed at the level of each country.
Administering oral SERD-based regimens may enhance patients’ quality of life when undergoing treatment for ER-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer.
Related Content