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Comprehensive molecular testing (PD-L1, EGFR, ALK) is no longer reserved for advanced disease. It is now critical for all patients with stage 1B or higher resectable NSCLC *before* starting any treatment to guide neoadjuvant and adjuvant therapy decisions.

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There's a growing recognition that the molecular profile of a primary tumor can differ significantly from its metastases. To guide treatment more accurately, the preferred practice is to biopsy an accessible metastatic lesion when possible, as this better reflects the biology of the active disease being treated.

To reduce treatment delays, pathologists should initiate biomarker testing reflexively. Waiting for a medical oncologist to order tests at a first visit is a system failure, wasting critical time and risking the need to retrieve archived samples.

The NeoADURA trial demonstrates that adding osimertinib in the neoadjuvant setting for EGFR-mutated NSCLC results in a 'humongous benefit' in major pathological response and nodal downstaging compared to chemotherapy alone, significantly improving surgical outcomes.

Unlike rare biomarkers that necessitate a 'test-and-wait' approach, IB6 is expressed in over 80-90% of NSCLC tumors. This ubiquity could make pre-screening unnecessary for drugs like Sigvotatug Vedotin, allowing clinicians to initiate targeted therapy much faster and for a broader patient population.

Emerging data from major trials shows that ctDNA clearance during neoadjuvant therapy and negative post-surgical MRD status are strong predictors of improved survival. MRD positivity, in contrast, is associated with worse biology and rapid progression.

Clinicians ordering "NGS for lung" often misunderstand that Next-Generation Sequencing alone does not cover all actionable biomarkers, such as PD-L1 or HER2. This requires pathologists to interpret the clinician's intent and order a more comprehensive and appropriate test panel.

Despite major advances in immunotherapy, patient selection remains crude compared to targeted therapies. PD-L1 is still the primary, yet imperfect, biomarker used. Dr. Carbone highlights an urgent need to develop better predictive biomarkers to customize immunotherapy regimens, as is standard for targeted agents.

The success of perioperative osimertinib means oncologists cannot choose the optimal strategy (targeted therapy vs. chemoimmunotherapy) for resectable lung cancer without first knowing the patient's EGFR, ALK, and PD-L1 status. This elevates biomarker profiling from a metastatic-setting tool to a critical first step in early-stage disease.

For patients with actionable mutations like EGFR or ALK, targeted therapy is the priority, regardless of PD-L1 score. Starting immunotherapy first in these patients can significantly increase the risk of developing severe pneumonitis (ILD) when they later switch to targeted therapy like osimertinib.

For N2+ EGFR-mutant NSCLC, clinicians now face a choice. Combining neoadjuvant osimertinib with chemotherapy is potent and gets treatment done upfront, but osimertinib monotherapy is better tolerated, reducing the risk of toxicity that could prevent a patient from reaching their planned surgery.