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DOI . ORG {}

  1. Analyzed Page
  2. Matching Content Categories
  3. CMS
  4. Monthly Traffic Estimate
  5. How Does Doi.org Make Money
  6. Keywords
  7. Topics
  8. Questions
  9. Schema
  10. External Links
  11. Analytics And Tracking
  12. Libraries
  13. Hosting Providers
  14. CDN Services

We began analyzing https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40264-018-0772-x, but it redirected us to https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40264-018-0772-x. The analysis below is for the second page.

Title[redir]:
Safety and Tolerability of Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor (EGFR) Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors in Oncology | Drug Safety
Description:
Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) that target epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) have dramatically improved progression-free survival in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients who carry sensitizing EGFR-activating mutations and in patients with breast and pancreatic cancers. However, EGFR-TKIs are associated with significant and disabling undesirable effects that adversely impact on quality of life and compliance. These effects include dermatological reactions, diarrhoea, hepatotoxicity, stomatitis, interstitial lung disease and ocular toxicity. Each individual EGFR-TKI is also associated with additional adverse effect(s) that are not shared widely by the other members of its class. Often, these effects call for dose reduction, treatment discontinuation or pharmacotherapeutic intervention. Since dermatological effects result from on-target effects on wild-type EGFR, rash is often considered to be a biomarker of efficacy. A number of studies have reported better outcomes in patients with skin reactions compared with those without. This has led to a ‘dosing-to-rash’ strategy to optimize therapeutic outcomes. Although conceptually attractive, there is currently insufficient evidence-based support for this strategy. While skin reactions following EGFR-TKIs are believed to result from an effect on wild-type EGFR, their efficacy is related to effects on mutant variants of EGFR. It is noteworthy that newer EGFR-TKIs that spare wild-type EGFR are associated with fewer dermatological reactions. Furthermore, secondary mutations such as T790M in exon 20 often lead to development of resistance to the clinical activity and efficacy of first- and second-generation EGFR-TKIs. This has stimulated the search for later-generations of EGFR-TKIs with the ability to overcome this resistance and with greater target selectivity to spare wild-type EGFR in expectations of an improved safety profile. However, available data reviewed herein indicate that not only are these newer agents associated with the aforementioned adverse effects typical of earlier agents, but they are also susceptible to resistance due to tertiary mutations, most frequently C797S. At least three later-generation EGFR-TKIs, canertinib, naquotinib and rociletinib, have been discontinued from further development in NSCLC following concerns about their safety and risk/benefit.

Matching Content Categories {📚}

  • Education
  • Health & Fitness
  • Science

Content Management System {📝}

What CMS is doi.org built with?

Custom-built

No common CMS systems were detected on Doi.org, and no known web development framework was identified.

Traffic Estimate {📈}

What is the average monthly size of doi.org audience?

🌠 Phenomenal Traffic: 5M - 10M visitors per month


Based on our best estimate, this website will receive around 5,000,019 visitors per month in the current month.
However, some sources were not loaded, we suggest to reload the page to get complete results.

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How Does Doi.org Make Money? {💸}

We find it hard to spot revenue streams.

Not all websites are made for profit; some exist to inform or educate users. Or any other reason why people make websites. And this might be the case. Doi.org might be making money, but it's not detectable how they're doing it.

Keywords {🔍}

pubmed, google, scholar, article, cancer, cas, lung, egfr, kinase, inhibitors, cell, oncol, nonsmall, tyrosine, central, patients, epidermal, growth, factor, clin, receptor, drug, shah, resistance, phase, rash, skin, study, nsclc, treatment, inhibitor, erlotinib, clinical, res, safety, efficacy, lee, liu, nonsmallcell, effects, zhang, management, wang, afatinib, med, acquired, rev, advanced, osimertinib, review,

Topics {✒️}

irreversible pan-erbb inhibitor gov/scripts/cder/daf/index curl=pages/medicines/landing/epar_search egfr mutant-specific inhibitor t790m-specific egfr inhibitor egfr-tyrosine kinase inhibitor month download article/chapter egfr-tyrosine kinase inhibitors ph-dependent drug–drug interactions mutant-selective egfr inhibitor egfrl858r/t790m/c797s resistance mutations drug-specific assessment reports small-cell lung carcinoma spare wild-type egfr related subjects anti-lung cancer therapies tyrosine kinase inhibitors tyrosine-kinase inhibitors egfr-mutant lung cancer small-cell lung cancer small-cell lung cancer small cell lung cancer egfr t790m/c797s/v948r gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2017/208772lbl gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2016/021743s025lbl erlotinib-related skin effects treatment-naïve egfr-mutant insufficient evidence-based support egfr kinase inhibitors single-center prospective study targeting egfrl858r/t790m egfr tki-targeted therapy generation egfr inhibitor severe osimertinib-induced hepatotoxicity interstitial lung disease generation egfr inhibitors toxic epidermal necrolysis egfr mutation-positive pharmacokinetic drug-drug interactions t790m-positive nsclc open-label study wild-type egfr drug-specific reviews mechanism-based cancer therapeutics metastatic nsclc related egfr t790m mutation untreated egfr-mutated advanced egfr kinase domain literature-based meta-analysis t790m-specific

Questions {❓}

  • Dosing to rash?
  • Hyperglycaemia induced by novel anticancer agents: an undesirable complication or a potential therapeutic opportunity?
  • New developments in the management of non-small-cell lung cancer, focus on rociletinib: what went wrong?

Schema {🗺️}

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      headline:Safety and Tolerability of Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor (EGFR) Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors in Oncology
      description:Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) that target epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) have dramatically improved progression-free survival in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients who carry sensitizing EGFR-activating mutations and in patients with breast and pancreatic cancers. However, EGFR-TKIs are associated with significant and disabling undesirable effects that adversely impact on quality of life and compliance. These effects include dermatological reactions, diarrhoea, hepatotoxicity, stomatitis, interstitial lung disease and ocular toxicity. Each individual EGFR-TKI is also associated with additional adverse effect(s) that are not shared widely by the other members of its class. Often, these effects call for dose reduction, treatment discontinuation or pharmacotherapeutic intervention. Since dermatological effects result from on-target effects on wild-type EGFR, rash is often considered to be a biomarker of efficacy. A number of studies have reported better outcomes in patients with skin reactions compared with those without. This has led to a ‘dosing-to-rash’ strategy to optimize therapeutic outcomes. Although conceptually attractive, there is currently insufficient evidence-based support for this strategy. While skin reactions following EGFR-TKIs are believed to result from an effect on wild-type EGFR, their efficacy is related to effects on mutant variants of EGFR. It is noteworthy that newer EGFR-TKIs that spare wild-type EGFR are associated with fewer dermatological reactions. Furthermore, secondary mutations such as T790M in exon 20 often lead to development of resistance to the clinical activity and efficacy of first- and second-generation EGFR-TKIs. This has stimulated the search for later-generations of EGFR-TKIs with the ability to overcome this resistance and with greater target selectivity to spare wild-type EGFR in expectations of an improved safety profile. However, available data reviewed herein indicate that not only are these newer agents associated with the aforementioned adverse effects typical of earlier agents, but they are also susceptible to resistance due to tertiary mutations, most frequently C797S. At least three later-generation EGFR-TKIs, canertinib, naquotinib and rociletinib, have been discontinued from further development in NSCLC following concerns about their safety and risk/benefit.
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External Links {🔗}(479)

Analytics and Tracking {📊}

  • Google Tag Manager

Libraries {📚}

  • Clipboard.js
  • Prism.js

Emails and Hosting {✉️}

Mail Servers:

  • mx.zoho.eu
  • mx2.zoho.eu
  • mx3.zoho.eu

Name Servers:

  • josh.ns.cloudflare.com
  • zita.ns.cloudflare.com

CDN Services {📦}

  • Crossref

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