Apparatus

Newly Approved Targeted Drug Makes 79% Of Patients' Tumours Disappear Altogether, This Type Of Blood Tumour Is Saved!

The US FDA has approved pemigatinib, the first targeted drug to date for patients with specific mutated blood tumours, and the results of the study show that the drug made tumours disappear completely in 79% of patients!

Apparatus

Another Cancer-Independent Targeted Drug Approved! Up To 84% Efficacy!

Targeted drug Selpercatinib has received accelerated approval from the FDA. It is cancer-independent and may benefit any solid tumour with a positive RET gene fusion. It is up to 84% effective in selected patients with non-small cell lung cancer!

Medical

Power To The Brain! HER2-Targeted Drugs For Breast Cancer To Look Forward To!

DZD1516 is a reversible, selective HER2-targeting agent with full blood-brain barrier penetration. It has demonstrated good therapeutic response in phase I studies in patients with metastatic HER2-positive breast cancer, including breast cancer patients with central nervous system metastases.

Apparatus

New Targeted Drug For Leukaemia Approved, 35% Of Patients' Cancer Cells Disappear Completely!

The US FDA has approved a new leukaemia drug, Olutasidenib, which has been shown to be effective and has a controlled safety profile, resulting in the complete disappearance of cancer cells in 35% of patients enrolled, with efficacy lasting up to 25.9 months.

Medical

Cutting-Edge Targeted Drug For Cholangiocarcinoma Significantly Extends Patients' Lives!

Bile duct cancer is a rare but highly malignant tumour that occurs in the human bile duct system and has long had a poor prognosis. Now, researchers at University College London and University College London Hospitals, in an international multi-centre trial, have identified potentially good treatments that may radically improve the lives of some patients with bile duct cancer.

Medical

New Research: Cracking The Targeted Drug Resistance Puzzle And Eliminating Cancer Cells Before They Evolve!

Many lung cancer patients will be detected by genetic testing to carry an EGFR mutation, and these patients can often control their tumours with EGFR-targeted drugs. Although targeted drugs are effective and have fewer side effects than chemotherapy, resistance to them inevitably occurs, after which they no longer work.