Despite accounting for 1 in 4 cancer deaths, gastrointestinal (GI) cancers receive significantly less attention than lung and breast cancer. While other oncology fields have seen breakthrough innovations, pancreatic, colorectal, and gastric cancers remain stubbornly resistant to treatment.1
The ASCO GI 2025 Symposium brought these challenges into sharp focus. Leading researchers presented the many challenges and opportunities of this field, and we outline them here. This article covers:
The ASCO GI 2025 conference highlighted several barriers to progress:
For the first time, a targeted therapy is showing meaningful molecular responses in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC), one of the most treatment-resistant cancers. This breakthrough could open the door to precision treatments that directly inhibit RAS mutations, a long-standing challenge in pancreatic cancer therapy.5
Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) is emerging as a powerful, non-invasive tool for monitoring treatment response in pancreatic cancer. Instead of waiting months for scans, clinicians could track tumor evolution in real-time (minimal residual disease [MRD] concept), leading to faster, more adaptive treatment decisions.6
A combination approach using Everolimus and Lanreotide has shown extended progression-free survival (PFS) in gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumors. This is an encouraging step forward in hormone-driven GI cancers, where treatment options remain limited.6
The development of HER2-targeted therapies like Zanidatamab offers new treatment avenues for biliary tract cancers, an area with historically poor therapeutic options. As antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) gain momentum, we’re seeing a shift toward more precise, less toxic treatments in GI oncology.7
mKRAS-targeted vaccines are now showing promise in patients with MSS colorectal cancer, a group that has historically been resistant to immunotherapy. If successful, these personalized and off-the-shelf vaccines could revolutionize the way we treat previously untreatable GI cancers.4
Precision advances treatments through innovative trial designs and operational excellence. Our track record includes 77 GI Oncology Trials:
This strong foundation in GI oncology allows us to accelerate development, improve trial efficiency, and bring novel therapies to patients faster.
Precision’s experience managing small patient populations and biomarker-driven studies in rare diseases applies directly to understudied GI cancers, such as neuroendocrine tumors, cholangiocarcinoma, hepatocellular carcinoma, pancreatic, and esophageal cancers.
While CLDN 18.2-targeted CAR-T therapy has shown promise, success requires better patient selection, toxicity management, and trial execution—areas where Precision excels.
Emerging targeted radionuclide therapies are providing new opportunities in GI oncology, and Precision is helping optimize these trials.
From bispecific antibodies to novel checkpoint inhibitors, Precision is helping biotech and pharma test and refine immunotherapy combinations to tackle immune-cold tumors.
GI cancers have waited long enough. Pancreatic and colorectal patients still face the same grim statistics they did a decade ago, but the science is catching up. 2025’s breakthroughs signal a turning point, but the key to impact isn’t just discovery—it’s speed.
Bringing these new treatments to patients faster requires a partner who understands both: