Bradley Monk, MD, FACOG, FACS, clinician at Arizona Oncology, shares his experience mitigating the potential side effects of PARP inhibitors in ovarian cancer treatment.
Bradley Monk, MD, FACOG, FACS, clinician at Arizona Oncology, professor at the University of Arizona and Creighton University in Phoenix, shares his experience mitigating the potential side effects of PARP inhibitors in ovarian cancer treatment.
Transcript
Are there any practices physicians should ensure are implemented to ensure the best possible patient outcomes during treatment with PARP inhibitors?
When you utilize PARP inhibitors, I think it's important to have a multidisciplinary team. That will sort of depend on your scenario. It could include a physician's assistant or a nurse practitioner, patient navigator, or even a pharmacist. But together, monitoring is important. We monitor the blood counts once a week generally, especially in niraparib if the platelet count begins to fall less than 100, we stop and recover. We also monitor for GI disturbances, and certainly fatigue. GI disturbances are something that you're very familiar with, you can sort of mitigate the nausea or the diarrhea. But if your land subpoena ondansetron or imodium is not working, you should stop, and recover, and then dose reduce. Fatigue is a little bit more complicated because fatigue can be due to lots of things—sleep deprivation, depression, malnutrition, dehydration, hypothyroidism, and anemia. You've got to make sure that you have the attribution, the cause of the fatigue, right before you treat it. So we have an algorithm that can inform that. But I think you have to have an understanding of monitoring the adverse reactions and the mitigation strategies of these very active, particularly in the molecularly defined subsets, oral anti-cancer therapies.
Physician Gaps in Genetic Testing Knowledge May Impact Ovarian Cancer Care
February 5th 2025While genetic testing rates for advanced ovarian cancer have increased, gaps in physician understanding and confidence in interpreting results may limit optimal biomarker-driven treatment and patient access to genetic counseling.
Read More
Olaparib Leads PARP Inhibitors in Boosting OS for Platinum-Sensitive Recurrent Ovarian Cancer
February 3rd 2025While all poly ADP-ribose polymerase (PARP) inhibitors improved progression-free survival, olaparib significantly extended overall survival (OS), making it a preferred option.
Read More
Niraparib Extends PFS, Time to Next Treatment in Patients With EOC, Especially BRCA-Mutated Cases
January 28th 2025First-line maintenance (1LM) niraparib significantly extends progression-free survival (rwPFS) and time to next treatment (rwTTNT) in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC), with the greatest benefit observed in those considered homologous recombination-deficient (HRd) and those with BRCA-mutated (BRCAm) tumors.
Read More
Real-World Study Highlights PARP Inhibitor Challenges in Ovarian Cancer Care
January 23rd 2025Nearly half of patients with advanced ovarian cancer treated with first-line poly-ADP-ribose polymerase (PARP) inhibitors experienced recurrence in this real-world study, emphasizing the need for enhanced strategies to optimize postrecurrence treatment.
Read More
Gynecologic Oncology Practices Evolve With Surgical De-Escalation Trends
January 21st 2025Researchers identified a 15-year shift toward surgical de-escalation in gynecologic oncology, marked by fewer surgical interventions, increased adoption of minimally invasive techniques, and a greater focus on fertility preservation and sentinel lymph node procedures.
Read More