Forsidebilde av showet Precision Signals

Precision Signals

Podkast av Sean Khozin, MD, MPH

engelsk

Teknologi og vitenskap

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Les mer Precision Signals

Precision Signals is a podcast from the CEO Roundtable on Cancer about decoding biomedical progress: what’s real, what matters, and what’s next. We talk with scientists, regulators, investors, and builders operating across the messy interface of research, healthcare, and policy. Some are moving the system from within; others are reshaping it from the outside. All of them bring signal in a world crowded with noise.

Alle episoder

13 Episoder

episode Dr. Brian Druker on Gleevec, Precision Oncology, and the Future of Cancer Research cover

Dr. Brian Druker on Gleevec, Precision Oncology, and the Future of Cancer Research

Dr. Brian Druker helped change the course of modern oncology through his central role in the development of imatinib (Gleevec), a therapy that transformed chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) and helped establish the modern era of precision oncology. In this episode of Precision Signals, Dr. Sean Khozin speaks with Dr. Brian Druker about the scientific, clinical, and human story behind Gleevec, from the early search for a drug that could inhibit the abnormal signal driving CML, to skepticism around targeted therapy, to the first clinical trials and the broader impact on cancer medicine. The conversation also explores Dr. Druker’s path into oncology, the development of targeted therapies beyond CML, the limits of molecularly targeted drugs, the arrival of immunotherapy, the challenge of persistent leukemia cells, current work in AML, and how AI may help generate hypotheses while still requiring rigorous biological validation. This is a conversation about scientific persistence, translational medicine, precision oncology, and what meaningful progress in cancer research really requires.

I går - 1 h 16 min
episode Leading the Charge in Oncology: A Conversation with ASCO's Dr. Clifford Hudis cover

Leading the Charge in Oncology: A Conversation with ASCO's Dr. Clifford Hudis

In this episode of Precision Signals, Sean Khozin, MD, MPH sits down with Clifford A. Hudis, MD, FACP, FASCO, CEO of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), to trace a career that began with a childhood memory of Brian Piccolo and Memorial Sloan Kettering, and now sits at the helm of the world's largest professional society in cancer care. Dr. Hudis reflects on his path from Northeast Philadelphia to an accelerated BA/MD program, to a transformative fellowship at MSK under Larry Norton, and through three decades building the modern breast cancer clinic. He shares what it has meant to lead ASCO through a period of profound change: the rise of AI and real-world evidence, the persistence of access and equity gaps, the evolving science of clinical trials, and the tension between precision and pragmatism at the bedside. Takeaways: * Dr. Clifford A. Hudis reflects on his transformative journey from a modest upbringing to becoming the CEO of ASCO, illustrating the profound impact of early life experiences on career trajectory. * The evolution of oncology, particularly in breast cancer treatment, is marked by significant advancements such as dose-dense chemotherapy and HER2-targeted therapies, reshaping patient outcomes. * ASCO's guidelines are undergoing a revolutionary change towards dynamic, living guidelines, ensuring that oncologists have access to the most current and relevant treatment protocols. * AI is positioned to become an integral component of clinical practice, enhancing decision-making and patient care, thereby allowing oncologists to focus more on patient relationships. * The tension between science and societal perceptions of healthcare necessitates an ongoing dialogue to build trust and understanding, particularly in the face of misinformation and skepticism. * Leadership in oncology requires not only clinical excellence but also an embrace of business acumen and a visionary outlook, fostering progress in a rapidly changing medical landscape. Companies mentioned in this episode: * ASCO * American Society of Clinical Oncology * Memorial Sloan Kettering * Genentech * MD Anderson * Dana Farber * NCCN * NIH * NCI * AACR * ACS

20. mai 2026 - 1 h 32 min
episode Sunil Verma on ADCs, AstraZeneca, and Eliminating Cancer as a Cause of Death cover

Sunil Verma on ADCs, AstraZeneca, and Eliminating Cancer as a Cause of Death

Sunil Verma, SVP and Global Head of Oncology at AstraZeneca, has lived a life defined by reinvention. Born in Zambia, raised across Africa, India, and Canada, he was accepted to medical school at 19, became one of the most respected breast cancer oncologists in Canada, built a cancer center in Calgary from the ground up, and then left academia entirely to help write the next chapters of oncology at AstraZeneca alongside the late Jose Baselga. In this conversation, Sean Khozin and Sunil explore the formative experiences that shaped his worldview and leadership philosophy, what it means to build healthcare infrastructure around the concept of healing, and how AstraZeneca's oncology portfolio expanded from a single asset into one of the most consequential in the world. They go deep on the science and strategy behind antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs), the frontier of ADC and immunotherapy combinations, and a distinction Sunil considers the true next frontier of the field: the difference between precision medicine and genuinely personalized medicine, where patient values are matched to therapeutic value.

25. mars 2026 - 1 h 0 min
episode Beyond Survival: The Architecture of Cancer Immunotherapies cover

Beyond Survival: The Architecture of Cancer Immunotherapies

As cancer treatments become more powerful and precise, the field of oncology is entering a new era. We are moving beyond the question of "Can we extend life?" to "How do we live with the biology these therapies unleash?"In this episode of Precision Signals, host Sean Khozin is joined by Dr. Afreen Shariff (Director of the Endocrine Neoplasia Program at Duke University) and Jon McDunn (President of Project DataSphere) to discuss the complexities of immune-related adverse events (irAEs). While immune checkpoint inhibitors have revolutionized outcomes for various cancers, they can also trigger inflammatory conditions affecting the thyroid, heart, and nervous system. Our guests explore the "double-edged sword" of immunotherapy and how data science, AI, and clinician-led innovation are bridging the gap between clinical trials and real-world patient care. In this episode, we discuss: 1. The "Next HIV": Why Dr. Shariff believes cancer care is reaching a similar turning point in long-term management. 2. The Gap in Data: Why traditional clinical trial reporting often fails to capture the nuances physicians see at the bedside. 3. AI & Triage: How unique e-consult models and AI tools are helping oncologists manage complex side effects more efficiently. The Future of Oncology: 4. Predictions on patient-driven care and the push for greater data accessibility to drive innovation.

12. mars 2026 - 1 h 6 min
episode David Fajgenbaum: Surviving Castleman Disease and Reinventing Drug Discovery with AI cover

David Fajgenbaum: Surviving Castleman Disease and Reinventing Drug Discovery with AI

In this episode of Precision Signals, Sean Khozin sits down with Dr. David Fajgenbaum — physician, scientist, patient, and founder of Every Cure — to explore one of the most extraordinary stories in modern medicine. As a third-year medical student, David developed idiopathic multicentric Castleman disease, a rare inflammatory disorder that led to multi-organ failure. He was read his last rites five times. Facing a condition with no clear therapeutic roadmap, he began banking his own blood, performing proteomic analyses, and identified an mTOR pathway signal that led to a life-saving repurposed transplant drug. He has now been in remission for over a decade. But survival was only the beginning. David went on to found the Castleman Disease Collaborative Network and later co-founded Every Cure, a nonprofit using AI and computational pharmacophenomics to systematically evaluate every approved drug against every known disease. This episode is about moving from serendipity to strategy in medicine — and what it will take to build systems that leave no patient behind.

18. feb. 2026 - 56 min
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