Maurie Markman, MD

Articles

Weighing Treatment Risks Versus Benefits Ultimately a Patient Calculation

March 15th 2018

One of the cardinal principles of modern medicine, as practiced in the United States, is active participation by patients—and often their families—in the process of clinical decision making.

Is the Median All We Should Offer Our Patients?

February 28th 2018

Although median survival is a reasonable endpoint to highlight, it is only 1 of many relevant outcome factors to discuss, and, most important, this mathematical figure simply does not define the survival of any particular patient.

Decision Support Is Lacking in Flood of New Data

February 14th 2018

Decision support is only lightly touched upon in the academic oncology papers that are published almost daily suggesting a potential change in paradigms for management in a particular clinical setting.

Dr. Markman on Overall Survival as an Endpoint in Ovarian Cancer Trials

February 7th 2018

Maurie Markman, MD, president of Medicine and Science, Cancer Treatment Centers of America, editor-in-chief, OncologyLive, discusses overall survival as an endpoint in ovarian cancer clinical trials.

Biomarkers Go Beyond "All or None" Equation

January 31st 2018

The FDA’s recent approvals of novel anti-PARP agents as maintenance therapy for patients with previously treated advanced ovarian cancer highlight an issue that has received inadequate attention in the peer-reviewed oncology literature.

Proving "Noninferiority" May Become Another Challenge in Oncology Studies

January 17th 2018

Fewer than 4% of patients with cancer in the United States participate in clinical trials, the elderly and individuals with clinically relevant comorbidities are strikingly underrepresented in the research portfolio.

Missing in Action: Patient Perspective on Cancer Trial Goal

January 14th 2018

There is a critically important subject associated with the clinical trial experience that has had inadequate discussion within the medical literature, regarding the role of the patient beyond agreeing to serve as a research subject.

Where Overall Survival Falls Short as a Gauge

January 9th 2018

From the perspective of a patient and that patient’s family, it is completely understandable that the single most important goal of an antineoplastic strategy is to prolong survival and, if possible, produce a cure.

Don't Rush to Judgment on Off-Label Drug Promotions

January 6th 2018

Controversy over the FDA’s role in regulating off-label marketing practices of pharmaceutical companies continues to reverberate in the medical community.

Precision Medicine Can Help Reduce "Overdiagnosis" Problem

December 27th 2017

In patients with common solid tumors, it is well-established that those with early-stage cancers have a statistically defined superior prognosis compared with those who present with and are required to be treated at later stages of the disease.

Some Common Oncology Terms Carry Unanticipated Consequences

December 26th 2017

There are certain commonly used terms in the realm of oncology that may result in unintended consequences and should be considered carefully before being employed in conversation or in writing.

Dr. Markman on the Era of Precision Medicine in Ovarian Cancer

December 19th 2017

Maurie Markman, MD, president of Medicine and Science, Cancer Treatment Centers of America, editor-in-chief, OncologyLive, discusses the era of precision medicine in ovarian cancer.

Dr. Markman on Endpoints in Clinical Trials for Ovarian Cancer

November 16th 2017

Maurie Markman, MD, president of medicine and science, Cancer Treatment Centers of America, editor-in-chief, OncologyLive, discusses endpoints in clinical trials for ovarian cancer.

Clinical Impact of Chronic Low-Grade Nausea Is Woefully Underestimated

November 1st 2017

Antineoplastic drug therapy has been delivered by the oral route since the earliest days of the modern chemotherapeutic era.

Clinical Observations Can Change Research Failures Into Successes

October 24th 2017

There are many elegant examples of basic laboratory research or mathematical modeling studies that resulted, through the conduct of clinical trials, in major paradigm changes in how cancer is managed.

Assumptions Regarding Cancer Risk Require Constant Reevaluation

October 1st 2017

Oncologists are well aware that by the time a new antineoplastic drug or regimen first enters the pages of a traditional reference textbook, the data supporting its use, including doses, schedules, and clinical indications, may already be considerably out-of-date.

Through the ASCO Lens: A Perspective on the Present and Future of Oncology

September 23rd 2017

The clinical oncology community, along with patients, families, pharmaceutical companies, investors, and third-party payers, eagerly awaits the plenary session presentations at the ASCO annual meetings as representing the most important and impactful of the thousands of abstracts submitted each year.

There's a Growing Need to Look Under the Hood of the Clinical Trial Model

August 30th 2017

The decades-long argument over whether zinc lozenges can shorten the duration of the common cold is far removed from the arena of cancer medicine, yet the studies conducted to settle the debate help illustrate the shortcomings of the clinical trial model that has dominated the oncology sphere.

Precision Medicine Moves Forward, 1 Validated Biomarker at a Time

August 15th 2017

This commentary from Maurie Markman, MD, highlights a critical required component for the development of effective novel antineoplastic strategies through the process widely known as precision cancer medicine.

Missing the Mark: "Clinical Benefit" Is Often an Empty Term

August 1st 2017

In the cancer management arena, the term “clinical benefit” has unfortunately achieved a problematic status.