Generalizable AI predicts immunotherapy outcomes across cancers and treatments
Wanxiang Shen / nature - Nature Medicine, Published online: 03 July 2026; doi:10.1038/s41591-026-04502-7COMPASS is a pan-cancer foundation model that predicts immunotherapy response, across cancer types and treatments, from bulk tumor transcriptomes.
AI Summary: Researchers unveiled a generalizable AI tool that predicts which patients will respond to immunotherapy across multiple cancer types and treatment regimens. By integrating diverse clinical and molecular data, the model helps stratify likely responders and could reduce exposure to costly, ineffective checkpoint therapy—promising smarter patient selection, faster trials, and fewer frustrated oncologists.
- COMPASS paper: pan-cancer AI predicts immunotherapy response (3)
- Researchers and clinicians react on social media (3)
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COMPASS paper: pan-cancer AI predicts immunotherapy response
Researchers and clinicians react on social media
All Other Stories
CAR T cell therapy selectively depletes disease-driving mutant calreticulin cells in xenotransplants and human organoid models of myelofibrosis
Alexandros Rampotas, Zoë C. Wong, Isaac Gannon, Charlotte K. Brierley, Yuqi Shen, Camelia Benlabiod, / science - Science Translational Medicine, Volume 18, Issue 856, July 2026.
AI Summary: Preclinical studies show CAR‑T cells engineered to target mutant calreticulin selectively eliminate disease‑driving clones in xenografts and human organoid models of myelofibrosis. The results reveal a potentially curative approach for a previously intractable mutation‑driven disease, though safety, on‑target effects and clinical translation remain to be rigorously tested.
Multi-antigen-targeting T cells in pediatric central nervous system tumors: a phase 1 trial
Stephanie Gomez / nature - Nature Medicine, Published online: 30 June 2026; doi:10.1038/s41591-026-04449-9In the phase 1 ReMIND trial of tumor-associated antigen-specific T cells in patients with pediatric central nervous system tumors, treatment was generally well tolerated with o…
AI Summary: A phase I trial of multi‑antigen‑targeted T cells for aggressive pediatric CNS tumors reported early survival and safety signals, suggesting these engineered cells can engage heterogeneous tumor antigens. Investigators emphasize cautious optimism: encouraging early responses in a dire setting, but longer follow‑up and larger cohorts are needed before this becomes standard‑of‑care.
CheckMate 214 Updates: Nivolumab Plus Ipilimumab Versus Sunitinib in Advanced RCC
oncodaily - First-line treatment for advanced renal cell carcinoma has changed substantially with the use of immune checkpoint inhibitor-based regimens. Long-term follow-up is important to show whether these early survival and response […]
AI Summary: Long‑term CheckMate‑214 data comparing nivolumab plus ipilimumab against sunitinib in advanced renal cell carcinoma show sustained survival benefits for the immunotherapy combination at nine years. The follow‑up reinforces durable responses in a defined subgroup, helping clinicians refine long‑term treatment sequencing and expectations for metastatic RCC.
EMERALD-3 at ESMO GI 2026: Tremelimumab Plus Durvalumab With or Without Lenvatinib Plus TACE in Embolisation-Eligible HCC
oncodaily - In the Proffered Paper session, Joseph P. Erinjeri from New York, United States, presented updated tumour response analyses from the phase III EMERALD-3 study. The abstract, titled “Tumour response analyses […]
AI Summary: EMERALD‑3, presented at ESMO GI 2026, evaluates tremelimumab plus durvalumab with or without lenvatinib and TACE in embolisation‑eligible hepatocellular carcinoma. The trial probes whether adding systemic immunotherapy to locoregional strategies improves outcomes for patients traditionally steered toward embolisation, potentially redefining combination approaches in intermediate‑stage HCC.