Research shows ability to surface real-world, regimen-specific symptom trends and highlight potential in-class differences using the Canopy Remote Therapeutic Monitoring Platform
Canopy, the first Remote Therapeutic Monitoring Platform for oncology, today announced findings from two studies examining the use of EHR-integrated Remote Therapeutic Monitoring (RTM) to capture real-world treatment experience for patients receiving a variety of melanoma and breast cancer treatment regimens. These studies demonstrate the ability of the Canopy Platform to surface regimen-specific symptom trends and highlight potential in-class differences.
The studies were accepted for poster presentation and online publication at the American Society of Clinical Oncology annual meeting at McCormick Place in Chicago, Illinois, on May 30 – June 3, 2025.
Electronic Patient-Reported Outcomes (ePRO) in Patients with Advanced Melanoma Receiving Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors: Insights from the Canopy ePRO System (ASCO Abstract #11126, Poster Board #465) has been selected for poster presentation on Saturday, May 31, from 1:30 – 4:30 PM CDT in Hall A.
The study evaluates symptom patterns in patients receiving immune checkpoint inhibitors—pembrolizumab (pembro), nivolumab (nivo), or combination nivo/ipilimumab (ipi)—across community oncology practices. Using the Canopy RTM platform, patients submitted ePRO data used to assess toxicities and their functional impact. Key findings include:
- Pembro monotherapy may be associated with a lower incidence of some symptoms: Patients receiving pembro reported fewer symptoms compared to those on nivo (+/- ipi), while nivo monotherapy has fewer symptoms than nivo/ipi treatment.
- Symptom profiles vary across pembro monotherapy and nivo monotherapy: Distinct patterns of side effects—including infection and activities of daily living (ADLs)—were observed.
- ePRO as delivered through RTM may enable proactive intervention: The RTM platform supported structured, ongoing symptom reporting during treatment, providing care teams with insights that support proactive intervention.
“Immune checkpoint inhibitors may work through similar mechanisms, but this study highlights that patients don’t experience each regimen the same way,” said Benjamin Derman, MD, lead author and Assistant Professor of Medicine at the University of Chicago. “Incorporating structured ePRO collection into routine care is both feasible and informative, offering real-time visibility into symptom trends that may help guide clinical decision-making.”
Electronic Patient-Reported Outcomes in Breast Cancer Patients Receiving Adjuvant Chemotherapy (ASCO Abstract #e12519), selected for online publication, analyzes symptom trends in patients receiving two NCCN-preferred adjuvant chemotherapy regimens for early-stage, HER2-negative breast cancer: doxorubicin/cyclophosphamide followed by paclitaxel (ACT) or docetaxel/cyclophosphamide (TC). The analysis was based on ePRO data submitted across the full course of treatment and key findings include:
- Symptom patterns varied across NCCN-preferred regimens: Patients on ACT more frequently reported nausea and neuropathy, while those on TC reported more fatigue, pain, and diarrhea.
- ePRO as delivered through RTM captured symptom experience across regimens: Real-time reporting enabled clinicians to track symptom trends longitudinally throughout standard chemotherapy.
“Even among regimens considered clinically equivalent, the patient experience can vary significantly,” said Michael Kolodziej, MD, Chief Medical Officer at Canopy and lead author of the study. “ePROs offer critical insight into those differences—and help clinicians guide patients with greater transparency and precision.”
Previous studies highlighting the potential impact of Canopy’s platform on oncology patient experience in real-world settings have demonstrated:
- 45% improvement in treatment persistence at three months1 [ASCO, 2022]
- 22% reduction in ER visits/hospitalizations per 100 patient months2 [ASCO, 2022]
- 88% patient engagement sustained at six months3 [JCO, 2022]
At the 2024 American Society of Hematology (ASH) meeting, Canopy presented data highlighting:
- 37% reduction in treatment discontinuation at three months4 [ASH, 2024]
- Improved early detection of toxicities with bispecific antibody therapies5 [ASH, 2024]
Explore AITechPark for the latest advancements in AI, IOT, Cybersecurity, AITech News, and insightful updates from industry experts!