2 Clarke Drive
Suite 100
Cranbury, NJ 08512
© 2025 MJH Life Sciences™ and OncLive - Clinical Oncology News, Cancer Expert Insights. All rights reserved.
Preview the top lung, breast, GI, GU, gynecologic, and hematologic oncology abstracts and topics ahead of the 2025 ESMO Congress.
The wait is almost over. The 2025 ESMO Congress is only days away.
As the global oncology community turns its focus to Berlin, Germany, for the start of the 2025 ESMO Congress on Friday, October 17, the meeting is again primed to deliver practice-changing data across various tumor types and specialties.
With this year’s program shaping up to be one of the most comprehensive yet, OncLive® is here to help you navigate a crowded agenda featuring key updates and research across the lung, breast, gastrointestinal (GI), genitourinary (GU), gynecologic, and hematologic cancer spaces.
In anticipation of the congress, we gathered insights from experts in their respective fields, and we also invited the oncology community to vote in a series of preview polls highlighting the most-anticipated abstracts and topics in each tumor type.
Before experts from across the field of oncology converge at the 2025 ESMO Congress, there’s still time to prepare and preview some of the biggest presentations and data that shape the next era of oncology care.
Below, take a look at all of our previews for the 2025 ESMO Congress. Be sure to dive in before the congress kicks off on Friday. For an in-depth look at top abstracts across all tumor types, listen to our latest episode of OncLive On Air, which features insights from experts across specialties.
There will be no shortage of anticipated data in the breast cancer space during the 2025 ESMO Congress, with a smattering of late-breaking abstracts and other oral presentations set to dominate the meeting.
“A lot of incredible abstracts and late-breakers will be [presented during] ESMO 2025, [but] there are 2 main categories [of research driving the conversation],” Paolo Tarantino, MD, a research fellow in the Department of Medicine at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, Massachusetts, shared with OncLive. “One, as it often happens, is antibody-drug conjugates [ADCs]. The other hot [topic] is new drugs for hormone receptor–positive breast cancer…[including] CDK 4/6 inhibitors combined with PI3K/mTOR inhibitors.”
Our preview featured insights from Tarantino and the following breast cancer experts:
“The 2025 ESMO Congress will feature multiple late-breaking abstracts that could reshape the lung cancer treatment landscape,” Amol Akhade, MD, MBBS, a senior consultant at Fortis Hospitals Mumbai, consultant medical oncologist at Suyog Cancer Clinics in Thane, and the honorary in-charge consultant medical oncologist at Topiwala National Medical College in Mumbai, India, told OncLive. “Among them, the [trials] that stand out as particularly important [are the phase 3] HARMONi-6 [NCT05840016] and OptiTROP-Lung04 [NCT05870319] trials, as well as the [the phase 1] Beamion LUNG-1 trial [NCT04886804] and [the phase 1/2] SOHO-01 trial [NCT05099172] in the HER2-mutant setting.”
Along with Akhade, our preview featured expert insights from:
“[Something] we have to keep track of as we're hearing the new data is what trials are currently opening up [for enrollment],” Brian Slomovitz, MD, the director of Gynecologic Oncology and cochair of the Cancer Research Committee at Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York, told OncLive. “We have a whole slew of trials opening up in endometrial cancer, about 9 or 10 randomized, phase 3 trials that were opening up…These are all potentially practice-changing trials. We need to really keep an eye on where the data is going and what the new studies are that are coming out that'll help us do what's better for our patients.”
Our expert-led gynecologic cancer preview also featured insights from:
“We’re all looking forward to data with immuno-oncology [IO] and VEGF [inhibitor] combinations that might be coming out,” Kanwal P. S. Raghav, MBBS, MD, a professor in the Department of Gastrointestinal Medical Oncology in the Division of Cancer Medicine, associate vice president of the Department of Ambulatory Medical Operations, and executive medical director of the Department of Ambulatory Treatment Centers at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, told OncLive. “There are data on multiple antibody-drug conjugates with colorectal expansions that are coming forward, [including] data on HER2 and the long-term outcomes for the now FDA-approved fam-trastuzumab deruxtecan-nxki [Enhertu] in CRC. It’s going to be an exciting ESMO.”
Along with Raghav, our exclusive expert preview featured insights from:
“[At the 2025 ESMO Congress,] there will be many exciting abstracts in [GU oncology], so it is difficult to pick just a handful. In the frontline settings, we are in need of novel agents to improve the rate of durable responses. Kidney cancer is still in need of predictive and prognostic biomarkers, and there is much interesting work being done in this space,” David A. Braun, MD, PhD, an assistant professor of medicine (medical oncology) and Louis Goodman and Alfred Gilman Yale Scholar at Yale Medical School in New Haven, Connecticut, explained.
For the GU oncology preview, Braun’s insights were accompanied from perspectives from:
Although the 2025 ESMO Congress program is driven primarily by data, abstracts, and presentations surrounding solid tumor management, the congress will feature a spread of updates and data emerging from the hematologic oncology landscape.
Read our preview and poll results above to see what hematologic oncology topics made the cut for ESMO 2025 before this field turns its attention to the 2025 ASH Annual Meeting and Exposition in December.
Related Content: