{"title":"第一人简介:Eileen M. O'Reilly, MD","authors":"Mary Beth Nierengarten","doi":"10.1002/cncr.35554","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Eileen M. O’Reilly, MD, has devoted her career to developing therapeutics for one of the most challenging and difficult diseases to treat: pancreatic cancer. Although advancements in treatments for many cancers have dramatically improved outcomes, pancreatic cancer remains among those for which effective treatments have lagged with few new therapeutic options.</p><p>However, that is changing. Research led by Dr O’Reilly, who holds the Winthrop Endowed Chair in Medical Oncology at Memorial Sloan Kettering (MSK) Cancer Center, has resulted in the first new therapy in more than a decade for treatment-naïve metastatic pancreatic cancer. In February 2024, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved NALIRIFOX (irinotecan liposome, oxaliplatin, 5-fluouroracil, and leucovorin) for the frontline treatment of metastatic pancreatic adenocarcinoma over the standard of care based on the results of the NAPOLI-3 trial.<span><sup>1, 2</sup></span></p><p>That is but one success story in Dr O’Reilly’s journey as a medical oncologist clinician–scientist. Her team defined the use of platinum-based therapy for <i>BRCA</i>-related pancreatic cancer based on the National Cancer Institute’s (NCI’s)–funded research,<span><sup>3</sup></span> and this led to the updating of national guidelines. Applying what was known about the tumor-based genetics of pancreatic cancer, she also was involved in the early drug development of poly(adenosine diphosphate ribose) polymerase inhibitors as maintenance treatment for pancreatic cancer. She was a coauthor of the landmark phase 3 POLO study, which showed the superiority of olaparib over the standard of care as maintenance therapy for patients with metastatic pancreatic cancer with germline BRCA mutations and led to its FDA approval in 2019.<span><sup>4, 5</sup></span></p><p>Building on her work on the tumor-based genetics of pancreatic cancer, Dr O’Reilly is particularly excited about developments in KRAS-based therapeutics. Although it has been known for a long time that the <i>KRAS</i> gene is ubiquitous in pancreatic cancer, targeting it has been seen as actionable only recently, she says. Multiple drugs are currently in development and moving into phase 3 trials, she adds, and it is expected that this class of drugs will change outcomes in this disease.</p><p>Currently, working with her colleagues at MSK Cancer Center and collaborating with investigators at other institutions, Dr O’Reilly is focusing much of her research on the development of vaccines against pancreatic and other gastrointestinal cancers. Her ongoing research is aimed at two types of vaccines: new personalized antigen messenger RNA vaccines with systemic treatments (on which she and her MSK colleague, Vinod Balachandran, MD, are collaborating) and off-the-shelf KRAS-directed vaccines following standard adjuvant therapy for pancreatic cancer. Recently, she and her colleagues published preliminary evidence on the safety and efficacy of a KRAS-specific vaccine in inducing T-cell responses in patients with immunotherapy-recalcitrant KRAS-mutated tumors.<span><sup>6</sup></span></p><p>Dr O’Reilly’s Irish roots are evident in her name, heard in her lovely lilting brogue, and expressed in her deep feeling of growing up as “a proud Dubliner.” In Dublin, she earned her medical degree at Trinity College and completed her residency in internal medicine and first fellowship in medical oncology at St. Vincent’s Hospital. She was inspired to pursue oncology through her work with oncologists Peter Daly, MD, and John Crown, MD, the latter encouraging her to pursue a fellowship in medical oncology at MSK Cancer Center.</p><p>That fortuitous fellowship placed her where she remains today. Dr O’Reilly is the primary investigator of the MSK Pancreas Specialized Program in Oncology Research Excellence, one of three NCI–funded team science grants currently awarded in the country specifically for pancreatic cancer. In her other administrative roles at MSK Cancer Center, she serves as the section head for hepatopancreatic biliary/neuroendocrine cancers in the Gastrointestinal Oncology Service, as codirector for medical initiatives at the David M. Rubenstein Center for Pancreatic Cancer, and as chair of the human research protection program and institutional review board. She is an attending physician at MSK Cancer Center and a professor of medicine at Weill Cornell Medical College.</p><p>Dr O’Reilly also serves as an associate editor for the <i>Journal of Clinical Oncology</i> (American Society of Clinical Oncology), senior editor for clinical trials for <i>Cancer Research Communications</i> (American Association for Cancer Research), and editor for gastrointestinal cancers for <i>The Oncologist</i>. She has published hundreds of articles, editorials, and book chapters.</p><p>Dr O’Reilly has received numerous awards and honors, including the Burkitt Medal (2022), in which she takes particular pride. Established in 2013 at Trinity College in Dublin and named after Denis Burkitt, MD (a Trinity graduate), who discovered Burkitt lymphoma and was seen as a medical social humanitarian, the award honors individuals for their extraordinary achievements and advancements in the field of cancer globally. More recently, she was named a Giant of Cancer Care in gastrointestinal cancer (2023). Since 2005, she consistently has been listed among the top doctors by the Castle Connolly report.</p><p>From her deep roots in Ireland, which gave her the solid foundation on which she has built an accomplished career in the United States, Dr O’Reilly continues to increase her reach. In partnership with her husband, Ghassan Abou-Alfa, MD, a Lebanese-born medical oncologist at MSK Cancer Center with a faculty appointment at Trinity College in Dublin, she regularly returns to their respective homes, where she is fully aware and appreciative of the different ways in which medicine is practiced in different parts of the world. She underscores the importance of recognizing these differences and not elevating one approach over another but rather cultivating a cultural sensitivity and awareness of these differences.</p><p>What does not change by geography or culture is the mandate to keep the patient at the center of all that she does. “At the end of the day, the most important thing in life is the person in front of us,” she says. “For all of us in medicine, it is this really ground-level setting and something we have to be extraordinarily respectful of.”</p>","PeriodicalId":138,"journal":{"name":"Cancer","volume":"130 20","pages":"3398"},"PeriodicalIF":6.1000,"publicationDate":"2024-09-26","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/cncr.35554","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"First person profile: Eileen M. O’Reilly, MD\",\"authors\":\"Mary Beth Nierengarten\",\"doi\":\"10.1002/cncr.35554\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>Eileen M. O’Reilly, MD, has devoted her career to developing therapeutics for one of the most challenging and difficult diseases to treat: pancreatic cancer. Although advancements in treatments for many cancers have dramatically improved outcomes, pancreatic cancer remains among those for which effective treatments have lagged with few new therapeutic options.</p><p>However, that is changing. Research led by Dr O’Reilly, who holds the Winthrop Endowed Chair in Medical Oncology at Memorial Sloan Kettering (MSK) Cancer Center, has resulted in the first new therapy in more than a decade for treatment-naïve metastatic pancreatic cancer. In February 2024, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved NALIRIFOX (irinotecan liposome, oxaliplatin, 5-fluouroracil, and leucovorin) for the frontline treatment of metastatic pancreatic adenocarcinoma over the standard of care based on the results of the NAPOLI-3 trial.<span><sup>1, 2</sup></span></p><p>That is but one success story in Dr O’Reilly’s journey as a medical oncologist clinician–scientist. Her team defined the use of platinum-based therapy for <i>BRCA</i>-related pancreatic cancer based on the National Cancer Institute’s (NCI’s)–funded research,<span><sup>3</sup></span> and this led to the updating of national guidelines. Applying what was known about the tumor-based genetics of pancreatic cancer, she also was involved in the early drug development of poly(adenosine diphosphate ribose) polymerase inhibitors as maintenance treatment for pancreatic cancer. She was a coauthor of the landmark phase 3 POLO study, which showed the superiority of olaparib over the standard of care as maintenance therapy for patients with metastatic pancreatic cancer with germline BRCA mutations and led to its FDA approval in 2019.<span><sup>4, 5</sup></span></p><p>Building on her work on the tumor-based genetics of pancreatic cancer, Dr O’Reilly is particularly excited about developments in KRAS-based therapeutics. Although it has been known for a long time that the <i>KRAS</i> gene is ubiquitous in pancreatic cancer, targeting it has been seen as actionable only recently, she says. Multiple drugs are currently in development and moving into phase 3 trials, she adds, and it is expected that this class of drugs will change outcomes in this disease.</p><p>Currently, working with her colleagues at MSK Cancer Center and collaborating with investigators at other institutions, Dr O’Reilly is focusing much of her research on the development of vaccines against pancreatic and other gastrointestinal cancers. Her ongoing research is aimed at two types of vaccines: new personalized antigen messenger RNA vaccines with systemic treatments (on which she and her MSK colleague, Vinod Balachandran, MD, are collaborating) and off-the-shelf KRAS-directed vaccines following standard adjuvant therapy for pancreatic cancer. Recently, she and her colleagues published preliminary evidence on the safety and efficacy of a KRAS-specific vaccine in inducing T-cell responses in patients with immunotherapy-recalcitrant KRAS-mutated tumors.<span><sup>6</sup></span></p><p>Dr O’Reilly’s Irish roots are evident in her name, heard in her lovely lilting brogue, and expressed in her deep feeling of growing up as “a proud Dubliner.” In Dublin, she earned her medical degree at Trinity College and completed her residency in internal medicine and first fellowship in medical oncology at St. Vincent’s Hospital. She was inspired to pursue oncology through her work with oncologists Peter Daly, MD, and John Crown, MD, the latter encouraging her to pursue a fellowship in medical oncology at MSK Cancer Center.</p><p>That fortuitous fellowship placed her where she remains today. Dr O’Reilly is the primary investigator of the MSK Pancreas Specialized Program in Oncology Research Excellence, one of three NCI–funded team science grants currently awarded in the country specifically for pancreatic cancer. In her other administrative roles at MSK Cancer Center, she serves as the section head for hepatopancreatic biliary/neuroendocrine cancers in the Gastrointestinal Oncology Service, as codirector for medical initiatives at the David M. Rubenstein Center for Pancreatic Cancer, and as chair of the human research protection program and institutional review board. She is an attending physician at MSK Cancer Center and a professor of medicine at Weill Cornell Medical College.</p><p>Dr O’Reilly also serves as an associate editor for the <i>Journal of Clinical Oncology</i> (American Society of Clinical Oncology), senior editor for clinical trials for <i>Cancer Research Communications</i> (American Association for Cancer Research), and editor for gastrointestinal cancers for <i>The Oncologist</i>. She has published hundreds of articles, editorials, and book chapters.</p><p>Dr O’Reilly has received numerous awards and honors, including the Burkitt Medal (2022), in which she takes particular pride. Established in 2013 at Trinity College in Dublin and named after Denis Burkitt, MD (a Trinity graduate), who discovered Burkitt lymphoma and was seen as a medical social humanitarian, the award honors individuals for their extraordinary achievements and advancements in the field of cancer globally. More recently, she was named a Giant of Cancer Care in gastrointestinal cancer (2023). Since 2005, she consistently has been listed among the top doctors by the Castle Connolly report.</p><p>From her deep roots in Ireland, which gave her the solid foundation on which she has built an accomplished career in the United States, Dr O’Reilly continues to increase her reach. In partnership with her husband, Ghassan Abou-Alfa, MD, a Lebanese-born medical oncologist at MSK Cancer Center with a faculty appointment at Trinity College in Dublin, she regularly returns to their respective homes, where she is fully aware and appreciative of the different ways in which medicine is practiced in different parts of the world. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
艾琳-M.-奥莱利(Eileen M. O'Reilly)医学博士的职业生涯致力于开发治疗最具挑战性、最难治疗的疾病之一--胰腺癌的疗法。尽管许多癌症的治疗方法都有了长足的进步,但胰腺癌的治疗仍然落后,几乎没有新的治疗方法可供选择。在纪念斯隆-凯特琳癌症中心(MSK)担任温斯洛普捐赠肿瘤内科主席的奥莱利博士领导的研究,十多年来首次为治疗无效的转移性胰腺癌提供了新疗法。2024 年 2 月,美国食品和药物管理局(FDA)根据 NAPOLI-3 试验的结果,批准 NALIRIFOX(伊立替康脂质体、奥沙利铂、5-氟尿嘧啶和白消安)用于转移性胰腺腺癌的一线治疗,优于标准疗法。她的团队根据美国国家癌症研究所(NCI)资助的研究3,确定了对 BRCA 相关性胰腺癌使用铂类药物治疗的方法,并由此更新了国家指南。根据对胰腺癌肿瘤遗传学的了解,她还参与了聚二磷酸腺苷核糖聚合酶抑制剂作为胰腺癌维持治疗药物的早期开发。她是具有里程碑意义的 3 期 POLO 研究的共同作者之一,该研究表明奥拉帕利作为具有种系 BRCA 基因突变的转移性胰腺癌患者的维持治疗药物优于标准疗法,并促使该药物于 2019 年获得美国食品药品管理局的批准。她说,虽然人们很早就知道 KRAS 基因在胰腺癌中无处不在,但将其作为靶点直到最近才被认为是可行的。目前,O'Reilly 博士与她在 MSK 癌症中心的同事合作,并与其他机构的研究人员合作,她的研究重点主要是开发针对胰腺癌和其他胃肠道癌症的疫苗。她正在进行的研究主要针对两类疫苗:新型个性化抗原信使 RNA 疫苗与全身治疗(她和她的 MSK 同事 Vinod Balachandran 医学博士正在合作研究),以及在胰腺癌标准佐剂治疗后使用现成的 KRAS 导向疫苗。最近,她和同事们公布了 KRAS 特异性疫苗在诱导免疫疗法复发的 KRAS 突变肿瘤患者的 T 细胞应答方面的安全性和有效性的初步证据。6 O'Reilly 博士的爱尔兰血统从她的名字中可见一斑,从她可爱的轻柔的口音中可听一听,从她成长为 "骄傲的都柏林人 "的深切感受中也可感受到。在都柏林,她在圣三一学院获得了医学学位,并在圣文森特医院完成了内科住院医师培训和肿瘤内科的第一份奖学金。她与肿瘤学家彼得-戴利(Peter Daly)医学博士和约翰-克朗(John Crown)医学博士共事,后者鼓励她在MSK癌症中心攻读肿瘤内科学研究员。O'Reilly博士是MSK胰腺肿瘤卓越研究专项计划的主要研究员,该计划是目前美国三项由NCI资助的胰腺癌团队科学基金之一。在 MSK 癌症中心的其他行政职务中,她还担任胃肠肿瘤服务部肝胰胆管/神经内分泌癌症科主任、大卫-鲁宾斯坦胰腺癌中心(David M. Rubenstein Center for Pancreatic Cancer)医疗计划联合主任以及人类研究保护计划和机构审查委员会主席。她还是 MSK 癌症中心的主治医师和威尔康奈尔医学院的医学教授。O'Reilly 博士还担任《临床肿瘤学杂志》(美国临床肿瘤学会)的副编辑、《癌症研究通讯》(美国癌症研究协会)临床试验高级编辑和《肿瘤学家》胃肠道癌症编辑。她发表了数百篇文章、社论和书籍章节。O'Reilly 博士获得了众多奖项和荣誉,其中包括伯基特奖章(2022 年),她对此尤为自豪。
Eileen M. O’Reilly, MD, has devoted her career to developing therapeutics for one of the most challenging and difficult diseases to treat: pancreatic cancer. Although advancements in treatments for many cancers have dramatically improved outcomes, pancreatic cancer remains among those for which effective treatments have lagged with few new therapeutic options.
However, that is changing. Research led by Dr O’Reilly, who holds the Winthrop Endowed Chair in Medical Oncology at Memorial Sloan Kettering (MSK) Cancer Center, has resulted in the first new therapy in more than a decade for treatment-naïve metastatic pancreatic cancer. In February 2024, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved NALIRIFOX (irinotecan liposome, oxaliplatin, 5-fluouroracil, and leucovorin) for the frontline treatment of metastatic pancreatic adenocarcinoma over the standard of care based on the results of the NAPOLI-3 trial.1, 2
That is but one success story in Dr O’Reilly’s journey as a medical oncologist clinician–scientist. Her team defined the use of platinum-based therapy for BRCA-related pancreatic cancer based on the National Cancer Institute’s (NCI’s)–funded research,3 and this led to the updating of national guidelines. Applying what was known about the tumor-based genetics of pancreatic cancer, she also was involved in the early drug development of poly(adenosine diphosphate ribose) polymerase inhibitors as maintenance treatment for pancreatic cancer. She was a coauthor of the landmark phase 3 POLO study, which showed the superiority of olaparib over the standard of care as maintenance therapy for patients with metastatic pancreatic cancer with germline BRCA mutations and led to its FDA approval in 2019.4, 5
Building on her work on the tumor-based genetics of pancreatic cancer, Dr O’Reilly is particularly excited about developments in KRAS-based therapeutics. Although it has been known for a long time that the KRAS gene is ubiquitous in pancreatic cancer, targeting it has been seen as actionable only recently, she says. Multiple drugs are currently in development and moving into phase 3 trials, she adds, and it is expected that this class of drugs will change outcomes in this disease.
Currently, working with her colleagues at MSK Cancer Center and collaborating with investigators at other institutions, Dr O’Reilly is focusing much of her research on the development of vaccines against pancreatic and other gastrointestinal cancers. Her ongoing research is aimed at two types of vaccines: new personalized antigen messenger RNA vaccines with systemic treatments (on which she and her MSK colleague, Vinod Balachandran, MD, are collaborating) and off-the-shelf KRAS-directed vaccines following standard adjuvant therapy for pancreatic cancer. Recently, she and her colleagues published preliminary evidence on the safety and efficacy of a KRAS-specific vaccine in inducing T-cell responses in patients with immunotherapy-recalcitrant KRAS-mutated tumors.6
Dr O’Reilly’s Irish roots are evident in her name, heard in her lovely lilting brogue, and expressed in her deep feeling of growing up as “a proud Dubliner.” In Dublin, she earned her medical degree at Trinity College and completed her residency in internal medicine and first fellowship in medical oncology at St. Vincent’s Hospital. She was inspired to pursue oncology through her work with oncologists Peter Daly, MD, and John Crown, MD, the latter encouraging her to pursue a fellowship in medical oncology at MSK Cancer Center.
That fortuitous fellowship placed her where she remains today. Dr O’Reilly is the primary investigator of the MSK Pancreas Specialized Program in Oncology Research Excellence, one of three NCI–funded team science grants currently awarded in the country specifically for pancreatic cancer. In her other administrative roles at MSK Cancer Center, she serves as the section head for hepatopancreatic biliary/neuroendocrine cancers in the Gastrointestinal Oncology Service, as codirector for medical initiatives at the David M. Rubenstein Center for Pancreatic Cancer, and as chair of the human research protection program and institutional review board. She is an attending physician at MSK Cancer Center and a professor of medicine at Weill Cornell Medical College.
Dr O’Reilly also serves as an associate editor for the Journal of Clinical Oncology (American Society of Clinical Oncology), senior editor for clinical trials for Cancer Research Communications (American Association for Cancer Research), and editor for gastrointestinal cancers for The Oncologist. She has published hundreds of articles, editorials, and book chapters.
Dr O’Reilly has received numerous awards and honors, including the Burkitt Medal (2022), in which she takes particular pride. Established in 2013 at Trinity College in Dublin and named after Denis Burkitt, MD (a Trinity graduate), who discovered Burkitt lymphoma and was seen as a medical social humanitarian, the award honors individuals for their extraordinary achievements and advancements in the field of cancer globally. More recently, she was named a Giant of Cancer Care in gastrointestinal cancer (2023). Since 2005, she consistently has been listed among the top doctors by the Castle Connolly report.
From her deep roots in Ireland, which gave her the solid foundation on which she has built an accomplished career in the United States, Dr O’Reilly continues to increase her reach. In partnership with her husband, Ghassan Abou-Alfa, MD, a Lebanese-born medical oncologist at MSK Cancer Center with a faculty appointment at Trinity College in Dublin, she regularly returns to their respective homes, where she is fully aware and appreciative of the different ways in which medicine is practiced in different parts of the world. She underscores the importance of recognizing these differences and not elevating one approach over another but rather cultivating a cultural sensitivity and awareness of these differences.
What does not change by geography or culture is the mandate to keep the patient at the center of all that she does. “At the end of the day, the most important thing in life is the person in front of us,” she says. “For all of us in medicine, it is this really ground-level setting and something we have to be extraordinarily respectful of.”
期刊介绍:
The CANCER site is a full-text, electronic implementation of CANCER, an Interdisciplinary International Journal of the American Cancer Society, and CANCER CYTOPATHOLOGY, a Journal of the American Cancer Society.
CANCER publishes interdisciplinary oncologic information according to, but not limited to, the following disease sites and disciplines: blood/bone marrow; breast disease; endocrine disorders; epidemiology; gastrointestinal tract; genitourinary disease; gynecologic oncology; head and neck disease; hepatobiliary tract; integrated medicine; lung disease; medical oncology; neuro-oncology; pathology radiation oncology; translational research