For managing nausea from ADCs like TDXD, a three-drug prophylactic regimen (steroid, 5-HT3 antagonist, NK1 inhibitor) is recommended. For delayed nausea, continuing the 5-HT3 antagonist on days two and three is often effective before needing to add agents like olanzapine.

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While platinum chemotherapy is considered the standard treatment after a patient progresses on a first-line ADC-IO combination, experts admit this is a standard "based on nothing." There is no clinical trial data to prove its efficacy in this specific setting; it serves only as a placeholder for new clinical trials.

The failure of an adjuvant trial for the TKI pazopanib was likely caused by a protocol change that reduced the dose to manage transaminitis. While well-intentioned to improve tolerability and adherence, the lower dose was sub-therapeutic. This serves as a critical lesson that managing side effects by compromising dose can nullify a drug's potential efficacy.

Real-world data suggests that using one antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) immediately after another is often ineffective. A potential strategy to overcome this resistance is to administer a different class of chemotherapy before starting the second ADC.

A clinical trial using an antibody to block GDF-15, a hormone that signals energetic stress and causes nausea in cancer patients, resulted in double the mortality rate. This suggests that overriding the body's natural, protective 'feel bad' signals can be profoundly dangerous.

To manage the common side effect of stomatitis from datopotamab deruxtecan (Dato-DXd), a preemptive strategy is effective. Prescribing steroid mouthwash and advising patients to use ice chips during infusion can reduce the severity and incidence of this toxicity.

The failure of the TROPiCS-04 trial for sacituzumab govitecan may not indicate the TROP2 ADC class is ineffective. Experts suggest problems with dosing and toxicity management (e.g., neutropenia) during the trial could be the real culprit, arguing that the drug class still holds promise.

When efficacy and safety profiles are comparable between ADCs like sacituzumab and datopotamab, the final choice can be guided by patient logistics. Factors include infusion frequency (Day 1 & 8 vs. every 3 weeks) and total time spent at the infusion center.

Emerging data shows that a second ADC, particularly one with the same payload, often has limited efficacy. This suggests clinicians must be highly strategic in selecting the first ADC, as it may be their most impactful opportunity for this class of drugs.

Despite showing massive weight loss, new obesity drugs from Eli Lilly and others have high discontinuation rates due to side effects. This suggests the industry's singular focus on efficacy may be hitting diminishing returns, opening a new competitive front based on better patient tolerance and adherence.

Clinical trial data shows that despite specific toxicities, antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) can be better tolerated overall than standard chemotherapy. For example, trials for both sacituzumab govitecan and dato-DXd reported fewer patients discontinuing treatment in the ADC arm compared to the chemotherapy arm.