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Experts highlight the top presentations to watch for at the 2025 Genitourinary Cancers Symposium.
Ahead of this year’s Genitourinary Cancers Symposium, OncLive® asked leading oncologists in the space to share what presentations they are most excited to learn more about during the meeting and why.
This exclusive preview features insights from the following:
“The press release has noted an improvement in overall survival [OS]; the magnitude of benefit in the entire population and the homologous recombination–deficient population will reinforce [the activity] of the combination for patients with homologous recombination repair deficiencies and continue the debate of its use across all patients.”
“[This will provide] interesting data on changes in KIM-1 to predict the benefit of nivolumab [Opdivo]/ipilimumab [Yervoy] after only one dose [in this population].”
“Perioperative durvalumab [Imfinzi] combined with neoadjuvant cisplatin-based chemotherapy reduced the risk of developing metastases and death from bladder cancer. Durvalumab improved event-free survival and OS in both pathologic complete response [pCR] and non-pCR groups. These data further support the role of perioperative durvalumab combined with cisplatin-based chemotherapy as a new standard for patients with non–muscle-invasive bladder cancer.”
“With 3-year median follow-up, consistent benefit in disease-free survival was observed with adjuvant nivolumab in all [patients with] muscle-invasive urothelial carcinoma, regardless of prior neoadjuvant chemotherapy, and favored those with a PD-L1 [expression of] 1% [or higher]. These results continue to support adjuvant nivolumab as a standard of care [SOC], potentially providing an opportunity for a curative outcome.”
“Datopotamab deruxtecan [Datroway], a TROP2-binding antibody-drug conjugate with a topoisomerase-1 inhibitor payload, demonstrated encouraging antitumor activity with a manageable safety profile in heavily pretreated patients [with] advanced urothelial carcinoma.”
“LY3866288, an oral, potent, selective, small molecule FGFR3 inhibitor designed to limit off-target toxicities with preserved activity against acquired FGFR3 resistance mutations is well tolerated with robust clinical activity, including in erdafitinib [Balversa]-refractory metastatic urothelial carcinoma.”
McGregor: “[This trial was] already practice changing based on initial results with less than 18 months of follow-up. Extended follow-up will shed insight into durability and toxicity.”
Sonpavde: “Enfortumab vedotin [Padcev] plus pembrolizumab [Keytruda] continues to demonstrate superior efficacy vs chemotherapy in a broad population, confirming durable efficacy with no new safety signals, reinforcing enfortumab vedotin plus pembrolizumab as SOC for the first-line treatment of patients with advanced urothelial carcinoma.”
“The ABLE-22 study is looking [at treating] Bacillus Calmette–Guérin [BCG]–unresponsive patients with nadofaragene firadenovec, with or without immunotherapy or chemotherapy—with the chemotherapy being gemcitabine and docetaxel, and the immunotherapy being pembrolizumab. That trial is now open at a couple of sites, and we’re awaiting accrual. We’re really interested to see [more from this].”
“'I’m also interested in a lot of the work that’s being done in the intermediate-risk space. There are a number of clinical trials there. Part of the question will be, how much of those treatments are needed? [However], just to call out a few, some of which are being presented at [at the meeting, they] include UGN-102, which is the gel formulation of mitomycin, essentially as an ablative therapy for intermediate-risk [NMIBC]. There’s also PIVOT-006, which is a cretostimogene [grenadenorepvec] study for the same indication, [and] ABLE-32 as well, for nadofaragene [firadenovec-vncg].”
“Another [agent for] BCG-unresponsive [NMIBC] that is under investigation is detalimogene voraplasmid, or EG-70. This is the LEGEND study. We’ve got some preliminary results expected at [the Genitourinary Cancers Symposium] for that, and it [will be] very interesting. We are a site at Emory for that study, and patients seem to tolerate that very well. I will also be presenting some of the translational work and the mechanism of action; it’s a non-viral immunotherapy, so we’ll be talking about that [at the meeting,] as well, at the poster session.”
“In terms of other [trials] that I am looking forward to [seeing], there was an interesting abstract submitted looking at a phase 2 study with immuno-ablation using nogapendekin alfa inbakicept-pmln [Anktiva; N-803.] In the intermediate-risk space, [this is examining] potentially doing an intra-bladder injection of that drug to see whether that has an impact on ablation, which I think is an interesting idea.”
“[There is] another study that I [am interested in.] We struggle with the detection and the staging of these tumors. As part of that, many physicians use blue light, which is essentially an enhanced cystoscopic imaging modality. There have been [mixed] data on the utility of that and which patients that’s best used for. There’s a large blue light, real-world clinical registry, which Emory is a part of, and there are some data being presented [at the meeting.] I’m looking forward to learning [more] about that as well.”
“As an oncologist who specializes in kidney cancer, I’m always looking forward to the Saturday [of the meeting,] the kidney cancer day. I think the big one I’ll have my eye out for is the final OS analysis from COSMIC 313; that's a really important trial. It’s the first what I would call ‘modern comparator’ trial, where the comparator arm is immune therapy: nivolumab plus ipilimumab. It explored a really important question: Is triplet therapy with nivolumab plus ipilimumab [and] cabozantinib [Cabometyx] superior to doublet therapy with nivolumab plus ipilimumab?
We saw some benefit in terms of progression-free survival, that was published a number of years ago, but we also saw a lot of toxicity, a lot of [adverse] effects [AEs] with the triplet therapy. I had a patient, and I always remember the question he’d ask me before any type of therapy, anytime we’d have a therapeutic switch, because we knew there was always going to be AEs, he’d ask, ‘Is the juice worth the squeeze? Is it really worth getting the AEs? Am I really going to get benefit from it?’ I think this is where we’ll see that answer for COSMIC 313. We know there’s more AEs, we know PFS is better, but is this really going to translate to people living longer, to better overall survival? That’s going to be a really important study for the field.”