loader from loading.io

JCO at ASCO Annual Meeting: Lenvatinib Plus Pembrolizumab and Chemotherapy in Gastric Cancer

Journal of Clinical Oncology (JCO) Podcast

Release Date: 05/31/2025

Long-Term Remission After Cilta-cel in Patients With RRMM show art Long-Term Remission After Cilta-cel in Patients With RRMM

Journal of Clinical Oncology (JCO) Podcast

Guest Dr. Sundar Jagannath and host Dr. Davide Soldato discuss JCO article "," and the efficacy of CAR-T cell therapy in patients with heavily pretreated RRMM (relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma). TRANSCRIPT Dr. Davide Soldato: Hello and welcome to , the podcast where we sit down with authors from some of the latest articles published in . I am your host, Dr. Davide Soldato, medical oncologist at Ospedale San Martino in Genoa, Italy. Today, we are joined by author, Professor Sundar Jagannath, Professor of Medicine at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and the Tisch Cancer...

info_outline
JCO Article Insights: Xevinapant Plus Chemoradiotherapy in Unresected LA SCCHN show art JCO Article Insights: Xevinapant Plus Chemoradiotherapy in Unresected LA SCCHN

Journal of Clinical Oncology (JCO) Podcast

In this episode of JCO Article Insights, host Dr. Lauren Shih summarizes the article, "" by Bourhis, et al published September 03, 2025 TRANSCRIPT  

info_outline
Income Among Adolescents and Young Adults Surviving Cancer show art Income Among Adolescents and Young Adults Surviving Cancer

Journal of Clinical Oncology (JCO) Podcast

Host Dr. Shannon Westin and guest Dr. Giancarlo Di Guiseppe discuss the JCO article "" TRANSCRIPT The guest on this podcast episode has no disclosures to declare. Dr. Shannon Westin: Hi everybody and welcome to another episode of , the podcast where we go in depth on manuscripts that are published in the . I'm your host, Dr. Shannon Westin, social media editor of and gynecologic oncologist extraordinaire. I'm so very excited to talk to you today. We're going to speak about "." And I'm joined today by Dr. Giancarlo Di Giuseppe. He has a PhD in epidemiology that he actually just defended...

info_outline
JCO Article Insights: Phase I DLL3/CD3 T-Cell Engager in DLL3-Positive SCLC or NECs show art JCO Article Insights: Phase I DLL3/CD3 T-Cell Engager in DLL3-Positive SCLC or NECs

Journal of Clinical Oncology (JCO) Podcast

In this JCO Article Insights episode, Dr. Ece Cal interviews Dr. Martin Wermke, author of the JCO article, "." TRANSCRIPT The disclosures for guests on this podcast can be found in the transcript. Dr. Ece Cali: Welcome to this episode of . This is Dr. Ece Cali, editorial fellow, and today I am joined by Dr. Martin Wermke, Professor for Experimental Cancer Therapy at Dresden University of Technology, to discuss the manuscript “.” Obrixtamig is a bispecific T-cell engager that binds to DLL3 on tumor cells and CD3 on T-cells. This manuscript presents the phase 1A dose escalation results...

info_outline
TTFields in Locally Advanced Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma show art TTFields in Locally Advanced Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma

Journal of Clinical Oncology (JCO) Podcast

Host Dr. Shannon Westin and guest Dr. Hani Babiker discuss the JCO article "" TRANSCRIPT TTFields in Locally Advanced Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma Dr. Shannon Westin: Hello everyone, and welcome to another episode of , the podcast where we get in depth with manuscripts that have been published in the . I am your host, gynecologic oncologist , social media editor at the JCO, and just excited to be here to learn today about pancreatic cancer. None of our participants have conflicts of interest related to this podcast, and it is my honor to introduce . He is an associate professor of medicine,...

info_outline
JCO at WCLC: Multinational Pivotal Study of Sunvozertinib in Exon20ins NSCLC show art JCO at WCLC: Multinational Pivotal Study of Sunvozertinib in Exon20ins NSCLC

Journal of Clinical Oncology (JCO) Podcast

JCO fellow Dr. Ece Cali speaks with JCO Associate Editor Dr. Thomas E. Stinchcombe to discuss the JCO article , that was simultaneously released at the IASLC 2025 World Conference on Lung Cancer. TRANSCRIPT Dr. Ece Cali: Hello, and welcome to our series where we cover some of the top JCO papers published simultaneously with their abstract presentation at this year’s most important oncology meetings. I am your host, Dr. Ece Cali, JCO editorial fellow, and I am joined by Dr. Tom Stinchcombe, JCO associate editor, to discuss the Journal of Clinical Oncology article and 2025 World Conference...

info_outline
Racial and Ethnic Disparities Among Medicare Beneficiaries show art Racial and Ethnic Disparities Among Medicare Beneficiaries

Journal of Clinical Oncology (JCO) Podcast

Host Davide Soldato and guest Dr. John K. Lin discuss the JCO article "." TRANSCRIPT The guest on this podcast episode has no disclosures to declare. Dr. Davide Soldato: Hello, and welcome to , the podcast where we sit down with authors of the latest articles published in the . I'm your host, Dr. Davide Soldato, a medical oncologist at Ospedale San Martino in Genoa, Italy. Today, we are joined by Dr. Lin, assistant professor in the Department of Health Services Research at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center. Dr. Lin and I will be discussing the article titled, "." Thank...

info_outline
JCO Article Insights: Lymph Node Dissection for Lung Cancer show art JCO Article Insights: Lymph Node Dissection for Lung Cancer

Journal of Clinical Oncology (JCO) Podcast

In this JCO Article Insights episode, Dr. Joseph Matthew interviews authors Dr. Yang Zhang and Dr. Haiquan Chen about their recently published JCO article, "" TRANSCRIPT Joseph Mathew: Welcome to the episode for the August issue of the . This is Joseph Mathew, editorial fellow for JCO, and today, it is my pleasure to have with us Dr. Haiquan Chen and Dr. Yang Zhang, authors of the recently published manuscript, "," which we will be discussing today. Dr. Chen is the Director of the Institute of Thoracic Oncology at Fudan University and the Chief of Thoracic Surgery at Fudan University...

info_outline
JCO Article Insights: IMS-IMWG Consensus on High-Risk Multiple Myeloma show art JCO Article Insights: IMS-IMWG Consensus on High-Risk Multiple Myeloma

Journal of Clinical Oncology (JCO) Podcast

In this JCO Article Insights episode, Michael Hughes summarizes “International Myeloma Society and International Myeloma Working Group Consensus Recommendations on the Definition of High-Risk Multiple Myeloma" by Avet-Loiseau et al. published on June 09, 2025 along with an interview with author Dr Nikhil C. Munshi, MD. TRANSCRIPT Michael Hughes: Welcome to this episode of . This is Michael Hughes, JCO’s editorial fellow. Today I am interviewing Dr. Nikhil Munshi on the “” by Avet-Loiseau et al. At the time of this recording, our guest has disclosures that will be linked in the...

info_outline
JCO Article Insights: Pooled Taletrectinib Efficacy and Safety show art JCO Article Insights: Pooled Taletrectinib Efficacy and Safety

Journal of Clinical Oncology (JCO) Podcast

In this JCO Article Insights episode, host Peter Li summarizes "" by Pérol et al, published April 03, 2025, followed by an interview with first author, Dr Maurice Pérol. TRANSCRIPT The disclosures for guests on this podcast can be found in the show notes. Dr. Peter Li: Welcome to this episode of . I am Dr. Peter Li, JCO’s editorial fellow, and today I am joined by Dr. Maurice Pérol on “,” by Pérol et al. At the time of this recording, our guest has disclosures that will be linked in the transcript. Before we start our interview, I want to give our listeners a quick summary of...

info_outline
 
More Episodes

JCO Editorial Fellow Dr. Peter Li and JCO Associate Editor Dr. Andrew Ko discuss the ASCO 25 Simultaneous Publication paper "Lenvatinib Plus Pembrolizumab and Chemotherapy Versus Chemotherapy in Advanced Metastatic Gastroesophageal Adenocarcinoma: The Phase III Randomized LEAP-015 Study."

Transcript

The guest on this podcast episode has no disclosures to declare.

Dr. Peter Li: Hello, everyone, and welcome to our 2025 ASCO Annual Meeting Series where we cover some of the top JCO papers published simultaneously with their abstract presentation at this year's meeting. I'm your host, Dr. Peter Li, JCO Editorial Fellow, and I'm joined by Dr. Andrew Ko, JCO Associate Editor, to discuss the Journal of Clinical Oncology article and abstract presentation "Lenvatinib Plus Pembrolizumab and Chemotherapy Versus Chemotherapy in Advanced Metastatic Gastroesophageal Adenocarcinoma: The Phase III Randomized LEAP-015 Study."

Now, let's start off with the relevance of this article. Andrew, can you please explain this to our listeners?

Dr. Andrew Ko: Sure. Thanks, Peter. So, this was a very large international study evaluating the combination of lenvatinib and pembrolizumab. And just for context, that combination has been approved for use in other solid tumor types. It's FDA approved for renal cell carcinoma, for example, and endometrial carcinoma. But this study was looking specifically at this combination together with a chemotherapy backbone - so either FOLFOX or CAPOX - and comparing that to what at the time was a standard of care, which was just standard chemotherapy by itself. So, this very large study was intending to look at this particular novel combination. And we can get into some of the nuances of this study because the way that the experimental, the combination arm, was designed was perhaps a little bit more on the unusual side and led to maybe some imbalance in terms of how we think about the respective arms.

Dr. Peter Li: Okay. We can definitely talk more about that as we go on.

So, what are some of the key results of this study, and how do you think this will impact practice in the future?

Dr. Andrew Ko: That's a good question. Technically, it was not a positive study. Well, it was positive in the sense that the co-primary endpoints - which included both progression-free survival and overall survival - so, progression-free survival, it did technically meet its endpoint, both in terms of the overall population and the preplanned subgroup analysis of patients who had a PD-L1 CPS of greater than or equal to 1. So, there was a PFS benefit with the experimental combination - the lenvatinib, pembrolizumab, plus chemotherapy - compared to chemotherapy alone. I will say the benefit was on the more modest side. So, if you even look at the medians, it was not a marked difference. If you look at the hazard ratios, they did meet statistical significance. On the other hand, this did not translate into a benefit for overall survival.

So, when you ask, "Well, is this going to inform practice?" I'd have to say no. It highlights, I think, that JCO does want to publish articles that aren't necessarily going to be practice-changing, but that I think offer a lot of insights into trial design and important aspects of investigating novel treatments, even if they don't end up moving the needle in routine clinical practice.

Dr. Peter Li: I totally agree with you. I mean, it was significant in terms of progression-free survival, but again, not clinically significant. And then overall survival, the interventional arm actually appeared to do slightly worse overall.

Can you make some comments on the strengths and the weaknesses of this study, and where do you see us going from here?

Dr. Andrew Ko: So, I think a couple of things worth highlighting in this study, very well designed, more than 800 patients in total. So, first of all, as I mentioned at the beginning, the combination was a little bit unique in terms of patients enrolled to the experimental arm got the combination of lenvatinib, pembrolizumab, together with chemotherapy for a very finite duration. So, that period of chemotherapy they received was only three months. And per protocol, patients then just segued to, quote unquote “maintenance treatment” with just the lenvatinib and pembrolizumab combination. Whereas patients on the control arm, meaning chemotherapy alone, would continue chemotherapy basically in perpetuity until their disease progressed or intolerable toxicity. So, there really was an imbalance in terms of, if you think that chemotherapy or continuing chemotherapy beyond that initial three-month period of time may be significant, that could have had some impact on the robustness or the efficacy of the experimental arm. There were some other aspects in terms of perhaps some differences in the rates of post-progression treatment, in other words, patients going on to receive second-line treatment.

I think the other very relevant aspect, Peter, in this study was that the control arm - and no fault of the investigators - but the control arm at the time the study was ongoing just consisted of chemotherapy, FOLFOX CAPOX, by itself, without an immune checkpoint inhibitor, right? And we clearly know, based on results of several large phase III studies, and it's now in standard clinical practice, that we routinely use chemotherapy plus an immune checkpoint inhibitor. Certainly for patients with CPS PD-1/PD-L1 scores that are, well, you could argue greater than 1, or perhaps greater than 5 or 10. But the point being that the control arm of the study probably doesn't reflect what is currently used in clinical practice. And that's just always a challenge in clinical trial design, right? That when a study is designed and when it rolls out, you're always at risk in a rapidly changing and moving field that the standard of care may evolve during the lifetime of that particular trial, which is what I think you see in LEAP-015.

Dr. Peter Li: Totally understand. And the survival we see from this study is also roughly similar to the combination of immuno-chemotherapy that is the standard of care today, which is, the authors mentioned, 12 to 14 months.

Thank you so much, Andrew, for your input and for speaking about the JCO article "Lenvatinib Plus Pembrolizumab and Chemotherapy Versus Chemotherapy in Advanced Metastatic Gastroesophageal Adenocarcinoma: The Phase III Randomized LEAP-015 Study."

Join us again for the latest simultaneous publications from the 2025 ASCO Annual Meeting. Please take a moment to rate, review, and subscribe to all ASCO podcast shows at asco.org/podcasts. Until then, enjoy the rest of ASCO 2025.

The purpose of this podcast is to educate and to inform. This is not a substitute for professional medical care and is not intended for use in the diagnosis or treatment of individual conditions.

Guests on this podcast express their own opinions, experience, and conclusions. Guest statements on the podcast do not express the opinions of ASCO. The mention of any product, service, organization, activity, or therapy should not be construed as an ASCO endorsement.