Immunotherapy may be an “elegant” method of managing colorectal cancer, says Gregory Charak, MD.
New treatment modalities such as immunotherapy have made it a “very exciting time” to be a surgical oncologist in the colorectal cancer (CRC) field, according to Gregory Charak, MD.
Charak, a board-certified colorectal surgeon at Palisades Medical Center and Hackensack University Medical Center of Hackensack Meridian Health, spoke with CancerNetwork® at John Theurer Cancer Center about novel therapy strategies that have the potential to impact the standard of care in CRC.
Specifically, Charak described immunotherapy as an “elegant” strategy for treating this patient population compared with employing cytotoxic agents or more invasive surgical techniques. He stated that it would be “exciting” to learn how to apply immunotherapy to a greater proportion of tumors.
According to findings published by Cancer Research Institute, administering immunotherapy to patients with CRC may especially demonstrate efficacy in those with microsatellite instability–high (MSI-H) disease.1 Previously approved agents in this drug class include the monoclonal antibody panitumumab (Vectibix), which the FDA approved in June 2017 for use in combination with folinic acid, fluorouracil, and oxaliplatin (FOLFOX) as frontline therapy for those with RAS wild-type metastatic CRC.2
Other types of immunotherapy in CRC include checkpoint inhibitors such as pembrolizumab (Keytruda), which the FDA approved in June 2020 for use as first-line treatment for patients with unresectable or metastatic disease that is MSI-H or mismatch repair deficient (dMMR).3 Additionally, nivolumab (Opdivo) was granted an accelerated approval for MSI-H or dMMR CRC in July 2017.4 The FDA also granted accelerated approval to ipilimumab (Yervoy) in combination with nivolumab for MSI-H or dMMR metastatic CRC in July 2018.5
Transcript:
It’s a very exciting time to be a surgical oncologist. [There are] tremendous new treatment modalities coming down the pike. Immunotherapy, in particular, is extremely exciting because it’s such an elegant way to treat cancer: to harness and augment the body’s own defense system to eliminate a cancer rather than using cytotoxic chemicals or invasive surgery. It’s a beautiful thing. If we can get it to apply to more and more tumors and figure out how to make it work, it couldn’t be more exciting.