Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington . Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington .

4.25 A Critique of COVID-19 Health Policy with Infectious Disease Ethicist Dr. Zeb Jamrozik

Today we have an interview with Dr. Zeb Jamrozik, an infectious disease bioethicist at the Monash Bioethics Centre and the University of Oxford. We talk about COVID-19 health policy and where we went wrong, speaking specifically from the values framework of health, fairness, and freedom.

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Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington . Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington .

4.24 COVID-19: Moderna booster, Myocarditis, Progressivism, Social Media, Masks, Tests, J&J booster

We have a summary of our thoughts for you on recent news about COVID. We discuss the prospect of FDA authorization of a Moderna booster, 8 lessons for health policy in times of crisis, updates on myocarditis data from Israel and Europe, how our experiences with COVID warn us of the possible end to democracy, how progressivism is dead, why social media should not censor views, the CDC's new masking studies, the slogan "follow the science", weekly testing of vaccinated college students who don't have symptoms, the survival of science after COVID, and the question of requiring a booster to follow the Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

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Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington . Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington .

4.23 Access to Cancer Medicines, Standard of Care in Oncology, and the Oncology Value Paradigm

On today's episode we're joined by a number of special guests: Dr. Christopher Booth and Dr. Adam Fundytus of Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario, Dr. Manju Sengar of the Tata Memorial Centre, and Dr. Aaron Goodman of the University of California at San Diego. We talk about their new papers: "Access to cancer medicines deemed essential by oncologists in 82 countries: an international, cross-sectional survey", "Practicing on the edge of oncology: when standard of care feels uncomfortable", and "Has the Current Oncology Value Paradigm Forgotten Patients’ Time? Too Little of a Good Thing".

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Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington . Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington .

4.22 Honoring Dr. Elilhu Estey and His Decades-Long Oncology Career

On today's episode, in honor of him and in recognition of his passing, we have an old interview with Dr. Elihu Estey of the University of Washington on his 40 years of experience as an oncologist, the "Renaissance" of drugs for leukemia, and advice for trainees on how to approach career goals. This interview originally aired as episode 1.49. He will be missed.

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Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington . Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington .

4.21 Cognitive Errors in Medical Decision-Making with Dr. Daniel Morgan & COVID-19 Policy

This week we take a break from #zerocovid to give you another episode that's a deep dive into COVID-19. We start with an interview with epidemiologist and infectious disease expert Dr. Daniel Morgan of the University of Maryland School of Medicine; we talk about cognitive errors in medical decision-making and how it relates to COVID-19 health policy. After that, we have a series of thoughts for you on COVID vaccine mandates for schools, President Biden's vaccine plan, the FDA's vote on boosters, John Ioannidis' new paper on vaccinating students, the Pfizer results for vaccines in kids 5-11, and accepting that COVID is here to stay.

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Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington . Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington .

4.20: Vaccinating Kids and College Students, Boosters, Outdoor Masking, Bangladesh RCT, & more!

Today we take a brief break from our #zerocovid mantra to offer you our thoughts on current events. We cover a variety of topics, including: medical doctors in academia, cancelling conferences even for the vaccinated, masking 2-year-olds, equipoise, the CDC Georgia study, myocarditis, booster shots, outdoor masking at Duke, no more zero COVID in Australia, the Bangladesh cluster RCT on masks and its implications for kids in the USA, the resignation of two senior FDA officials, LA schools mandating vaccines, vaccinating college students, and more.

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Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington . Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington .

4.18 Dementia Interventions, Skills for Epidemiologists, & Aducanumab with Dr. Maria Glymour

Today we're joined by social epidemiologist, Dr. Maria Glymour of UCSF. We talk about her work in studying public health interventions for dementia and how her experience in academia has led to her conviction in the necessity of rigorous, quantitative technical skills training for epidemiology PhD students. We touch on how to have a good idea, her advice for PhD applicants, and working in a soft money (grants) vs hard money environment. Finally, we discuss her idea for a stepped-wedge trial approach to evaluate the new Alzheimer's drug, aducanumab.

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Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington . Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington .

4.17 RCTs for Cancer Drug Approval with Dr. Saroj Niraula & Myeloma Studies with Dr. Manni Mohyuddin

We have two oncology conversations for you today. The first is with Dr. Saroj Niraula of the University of Manitoba, and together we discuss the necessity of randomized controlled trials for granting FDA approval of cancer drugs. The second is with Dr. Ghulam Rehman "Manni" Mohyuddin of the University of Utah on a variety of myeloma studies, including LIGHTHOUSE, OCEANS, and HORIZON.

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Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington . Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington .

4.14 Evolution of GI Cancer Therapy, Editing JCO, Advice for Clinical Trialists with Dr. Alan Venook

Today we interview Dr. Alan Venook of UCSF, a renowned expert in clinical trial design and gastrointestinal malignancies. We talk about the evolution of the treatment for colorectal cancer over the last few decades, starting with 5FU. We also discuss his time working as an editor for the Journal of Clinical Oncology and we talk about his advice for budding clinical trialists.

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Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington . Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington .

4.13 Lessons from Publishing 300 Peer-Reviewed Papers & What Telemedicine Will Do to Cancer Care

Today we interview Dr. Josee-Lyne Ethier of Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario, Canada on her new paper "Practice Patterns and Outcomes of Novel Targeted Agents for the Treatment of ERBB2-Positive Metastatic Breast Cancer", out now in JAMA Oncology. We talk about the real-world survival outcomes for pertuzumab and T-DM1, comparing these outcomes to the results of pivotal clinical trials CLEOPATRA and EMILIA.

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Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington . Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington .

4.12 Real-World Survival Outcomes for Pertuzumab and T-DM1 with Dr. Josee-Lyne Ethier

Today we interview Dr. Josee-Lyne Ethier of Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario, Canada on her new paper "Practice Patterns and Outcomes of Novel Targeted Agents for the Treatment of ERBB2-Positive Metastatic Breast Cancer", out now in JAMA Oncology. We talk about the real-world survival outcomes for pertuzumab and T-DM1, comparing these outcomes to the results of pivotal clinical trials CLEOPATRA and EMILIA.

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Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington . Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington .

4.11 CheckMate 274, PARADIGM-HF/Ernesto, POLO, & an AI Approach to Reducing Knee Pain

Today's episode is a compilation of a few short monologues. We provide an oncologist's evidence-based medicine perspective on four papers: CheckMate 274, adjuvant nivolumab in urothelial cancer; PARADIGM-HF/Entresto; the POLO trial, olaparib in pancreas cancer; and the paper "An algorithmic approach to reducing unexplained pain disparities in underserved populations".

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Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington . Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington .

4.10 A Deep Dive into CheckMate 649 with Dr. Jeffrey Bien

Today we sit down (in person!) with Dr. Jeff Bien of Stanford University to break down all the details -- from the methods to the statistical analysis to the conclusions -- of the CheckMate 649 trial, which pitted first-line nivolumab plus chemotherapy against chemotherapy alone for advanced gastric, gastro-oesophageal junction, and oesophageal adenocarcinoma.

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Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington . Oncology, Medicine, Health Policy Kerrington .

4.09 Problems with the VISION Trial & Stool Transplant Plus Nivo for Metastatic Melanoma

Today we have two short monologues for you on recent papers. The first, by popular request, is the problems with the VISION trial, which treated metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer with lutetium-177–PSMA-617 (Lu-177–PSMA-617) radioligand therapy and standard of care. The second is on the paper recently published in Science titled "Fecal microbiota transplant promotes response in immunotherapy-refractory melanoma patients".

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