KOL Pulse Insights Blog

Who's Moving the Needle in Lung-Cancer Trial Conversations on X? | KOL Pulse

Written by Brian Shields | Jul 1, 2026 3:15:47 PM

“Combination therapy shows over ONE-YEAR mOS improvement compared to osimertinib alone. Key data to discuss with patients in clinic—but does this simplify first-line treatment decisions?”

— Eric K. Singhi, MD (@lungoncdoc) on MARIPOSA — 59,629 impressions

When Dr. Eric Singhi asks his followers whether MARIPOSA’s survival win simplifies first-line decisions, he isn’t just reporting data — he’s shaping how the field reads the trial. That’s how sentiment forms in lung cancer: in the takes practicing oncologists post, debate, and amplify. The problem: a name search on X tells you whether a doctor posts — not whose questions actually move the conversation. The miss: follower counts hide who genuinely shapes sentiment on a given trial, whose take travels through the community, and who pushes back. The lens: rank by real engagement and peer amplification, trial by trial. Here’s how the lung-cancer conversation is actually structured — aggregated across 15 major trials (MARIPOSA, FLAURA2, LAURA, CROWN, ADAURA, ADRIATIC, AEGEAN, CheckMate-77T, ALINA, HARMONi-6, LIBRETTO-432 and more), practicing physicians only, by the numbers.

The lung-cancer leaderboard (real engagement, physicians only)

These are practicing thoracic oncologists — media and pharma accounts removed — ranked by total impressions on clinical-trial discussion across the 15 trials we aggregated. The number that matters most next to each is peer amplification (retweets + quotes received): how far their take actually travels.

KOL Impressions Amplification Most active on
Stephen V. Liu @stephenvliu 599,453 1,856 MARIPOSA, LAURA, AEGEAN, HARMONi-6
Eric K. Singhi @lungoncdoc 544,090 648 MARIPOSA
Rami Manochakian @rmanochakian 223,975 546 ADRIATIC, MARIPOSA, FLAURA2
Amol Akhade @suyogcancer 214,947 373 MARIPOSA, LAURA, ALINA
Rishabh Jain @drrishabhonco 199,539 370 LIBRETTO-432 (curator)
Jarushka Naidoo @drjnaidoo 173,394 410 FLAURA2, ALINA
H. Jack West @jackwestmd 162,383 96 LAURA, ADAURA (skeptic)
Charu Aggarwal @charuaggarwalmd 156,719 199 ADAURA, CROWN
Hidehito Horinouchi @hhorinouchi 135,302 376 CROWN, AEGEAN
Antonio Calles @tony_calles 134,348 489 FLAURA2, FLAURA

Impressions and amplification (retweets + quotes received) aggregated across 15 lung trials in the KOL Pulse database. Media, institutional, and pharma accounts excluded.

The micro-networks: who shapes the conversation on each trial?

Zoom in and the broad lung network resolves into trial-level micro-networks — tight clusters of physicians engaging around one study. Dr. Stephen Liu is the connecting hub, the most-engaged voice across many trials at once. But beneath the hub, each trial has its own anchor — the voice, besides Dr. Liu, who most shapes that specific conversation. Ranked by real engagement (likes + retweets + replies + quotes, not just views) — and on MARIPOSA, that anchor out-engages even the hub:

Trial micro-network Trial’s anchoring voice Engagement Impressions
MARIPOSA @lungoncdoc — Eric Singhi 1,457 217,015
LIBRETTO-432 (RET+) @drrishabhonco — Rishabh Jain 877 164,728
LAURA @fordepatrick — Patrick Forde 442 52,377
ADAURA @vprasadmdmph — Vinay Prasad 291 221,874
AEGEAN @drewmoghanaki — Drew Moghanaki 232 69,678
ALINA @dr_yakupergun — Yakup Ergün 236 19,719

Engagement = likes + retweets + replies + quotes for that physician on that trial, from verified multi-post discussion (3+ posts, excluding one-off presenter announcements). The table excludes the cross-trial hub (Dr. Stephen Liu) to surface each trial’s own anchoring voice. Physicians only.

Don’t confuse the presenter with the voice shaping the digital conversations

One nuance the raw numbers hide: engagement attributed to an author can belong to a PI or presenter whose talk the field is discussing — not an actively engaged digital voice. On ADAURA, the most-engaged account is Dr. Roy Herbst, but his footprint is two presenter announcements (“Presenting the ADAURA data now @ASCO … DFS HR=0.17!” and the 2023 OS plenary). On ADRIATIC, the top author is reporting Dr. David Spigel’s plenary. These conversations orbit the presenter rather than being shaped by them on X. Both signals matter — Dr. Herbst and Dr. Spigel are the authoritative PIs behind the data — but presenter gravity is a different thing from a voice actively shaping social sentiment, and only a real engagement view (who authored what, how often) tells the two apart.

See the network, not just the list
A leaderboard tells you who; a network visualization shows you how they connect — the hub-and-spoke clusters, the amplifier bridges between trials, and the micro-networks a ranked list flattens. Our ELCC 2026 social network maps exactly this for the European thoracic community: 335 verified physicians across 38 countries, rendered as an interactive influence graph you can filter to find each trial’s micro-network.
Explore the ELCC 2026 network →

See the analytics in action

These aren’t cherry-picked screenshots — they’re the top authored posts from each trial’s most-engaged voice, with the real engagement KOL Pulse captures on every tweet. Notice the through-line: each is a substantive take on a specific trial — a question to the field, a read on the data, an opinion — which is how sentiment actually forms:

Eric K. Singhi, MD
@lungoncdoc
MARIPOSA
“Getting great questions from patients with EGFR+ lung cancer about the #MARIPOSA and #MARIPOSA2 studies after #ELCC25, and how they differ. What else should we add to this table to make it more helpful?”
14,894 impressions155 likes54 reposts7 replies
View source post on X →
Dr Rishabh Jain
@drrishabhonco
LIBRETTO-432
“THE 15 MOST IMPORTANT TRIALS OF #ASCO26 … PLENARY GAME-CHANGERS: PROTEUS … LIBRETTO-432 (Adjuvant selpercatinib in RET+ NSCLC). Which trial are you watching most closely?”
97,591 impressions379 likes159 reposts9 replies
View source post on X →
Stephen V. Liu, MD
@stephenvliu
LAURA
“Dr. @LeciaSequist with a brilliant #ASCO24 discussion of LAURA and #EGFR NSCLC. Do we apply this paradigm now to subtypes with CNS-active agents that have long-term safety data like #ALK and #RET? I think so!”
16,066 impressions123 likes31 reposts9 replies
View source post on X →
Dr. Antonio Calles
@tony_calles
FLAURA2
“Pasi Janne presents overall survival by prognostic factors in FLAURA-2 trial of Osimertinib + chemo vs osi alone. Nicely summarized in his last slide. #ESMO25 #LCSM”
7,061 impressions108 likes39 reposts3 replies
View source post on X →

The archetypes moving the needle

1. The Central Hub — broad across the field

Dr. Stephen Liu is the EGFR/ALK conversation hub: nearly 600K impressions and the top voice on FLAURA2, LAURA, AEGEAN, CheckMate-77T and KRYSTAL-12, with the highest peer amplification in lung cancer(1,856 retweets + quotes). When he frames a question, the field answers.

Stephen V. Liu, MD · @stephenvliu  |  11,105 impressions · May 31, 2026
“Dr. Shun Lu presents HARMONi-6 #ASCO26 plenary: first-line ivonescimab + chemo vs tislelizumab + chemo in squamous NSCLC. An unmet need, where long-term survival with standard chemo-IO is uncommon. Will PD-1/VEGFa bispecific improve OS & prove safe in squamous?”
View source tweet on X →

2. The trial-focused voice — deep, not wide

Dr. Eric Singhi is the clearest example: 544K impressions, the overwhelming majority concentrated on MARIPOSA, making him the leading digital voice in the conversation on amivantamab + lazertinib in 1L EGFR NSCLC. His MARIPOSA micro-network draws 1,457 engagements — more than anyone else on the trial, the cross-trial hub included. A follower count alone would never tell you that — the trial-level engagement does.

Eric K. Singhi, MD · @lungoncdoc  |  32,860 impressions · Mar 26, 2025
“Breaking news—the OVERALL SURVIVAL results from #MARIPOSA are out at #ELCC25. Does this update change practice for all patients with treatment-naïve EGFR+ metastatic NSCLC? Let’s dive into the details…”
View source tweet on X →

3. The amplifier / curator — reach beyond their own data

Dr. Rishabh Jain shows a different kind of influence: high-reach curation. His “most important trials of #ASCO26” threads pull 50K–98K impressions and 60–160 retweets, putting trials like LIBRETTO-432 in front of the whole community. Amplifiers like this don’t generate the primary data — they decide what the field sees.

Dr Rishabh Jain · @drrishabhonco  |  97,591 impressions · May 15, 2026
“THE 15 MOST IMPORTANT TRIALS OF #ASCO26 … PLENARY GAME-CHANGERS … LIBRETTO-432: Adjuvant selpercatinib in RET+ NSCLC. Precision medicine officially enters curative-intent RET disease.”
View source tweet on X →

4. The international voices — the ones a US-name search misses

Easy to overlook from a US desk: international voices who shape a trial’s conversation in their region. Dr. Hidehito Horinouchi (Japan) on CROWN’s 7-year ALK+ update, Dr. Yakup Ergün on ALINA, and Dr. Noemi Reguart (Spain) on HARMONi-6 each carry real reach a US-name search never surfaces — and they shape how each readout lands across their regions.

Hidehito Horinouchi, MD · @hhorinouchi  |  5,694 impressions · May 29, 2026
“BREAKING CROWN: Lorlatinib vs Crizotinib in ALK+ NSCLC — mPFS NR (HR 0.19), 7-yr PFS 55% vs 3%, no new intracranial progression after 30 months.”
View source tweet on X →

5. The skeptics — and an open role

Skeptics shape the debate as much as boosters — pressing on endpoints, surrogate measures, and what a result actually means in clinic. But the field’s two most-networked skeptics have both stepped out of the independent-academic role. Dr. Jack West joined Summit Therapeutics as VP of Clinical Development — working on ivonescimab, the very PD-1/VEGF bispecific behind HARMONi-6 above — so that incisive voice now speaks from industry. And Dr. Vinay Prasad served as the FDA’s CBER Director and Chief Medical & Scientific Officer before returning to UCSF in 2026. That leaves a real question for the field: who fills the high-reach, independent-skeptic role now? Whoever does will quietly shape how the next wave of lung cancer clinical trial readouts is received — we name the independent academics already stepping in, with their data, in the companion piece: Who Fills the Lung-Cancer Trial Skeptic Role?

H. Jack West, MD · @jackwestmd  |  10,706 impressions · Feb 19, 2024
“Shouldn’t the question be whether proactive Rx improves OS compared to getting the same best Rx only if/when relapse occurs… PFS as a primary endpoint in this setting is such a low bar as to be ~preordained, but ≠ truly clinically significant.”
View source tweet on X →

Why peer amplification beats follower count

Follower count is a vanity number; amplification is a behavior. When peers retweet and quote a KOL, they’re vouching — and that’s how an idea actually spreads through the lung community. Dr. Liu (1,856), Dr. Singhi (648), Dr. Manochakian (546), Dr. Calles (489) and Dr. Naidoo (410) lead on amplification, which is why their framing of a trial tends to become the field’s framing. Mapping amplification tells you not just who is loud, but who is listened to.

Why KOL Pulse: a raw X search misses trial-focused voices, international voices, amplifiers, and skeptics — and can’t show how sentiment actually moves. KOL Pulse maps all of it: real engagement, peer amplification, and whose voice shapes each trial’s reception — the structure beneath the follower counts.

What the map reveals

Read together, the data shows influence in lung cancer isn’t a popularity ranking — it’s a structure. A connecting hub (Dr. Liu) links most trials; trial-focused voices like Dr. Singhi shape sentiment on a single study more than anyone else; amplifiers decide what the field actually sees; international voices carry how a readout lands in their regions; and the skeptic role that pressure-tests every result is, right now, in flux. For anyone who follows the field — the opinion leaders shaping it and the teams who engage them alike — that map is the difference between “who has a big following” and “whose voice actually moves opinion on this trial.”

Frequently asked questions

Who are the most influential lung-cancer KOLs on X?

By real engagement across 15 lung trials, the top physician voices include Dr. Stephen V. Liu (~599K impressions), Dr. Eric Singhi (~544K, MARIPOSA), Dr. Rami Manochakian, Dr. Jarushka Naidoo, Dr. Antonio Calles, and Dr. Hidehito Horinouchi.

What is peer amplification and why does it matter?

Amplification is how often a KOL’s posts are retweeted and quoted by peers — a vouching behavior that measures real influence and idea-spread far better than follower count.

What’s a ‘trial-focused voice’?

A KOL whose engagement concentrates on one study — like Dr. Eric Singhi on MARIPOSA — making them the voice that most shapes that trial’s conversation, regardless of overall follower count.

What is a trial micro-network?

A tight cluster of physicians who engage with each other around one specific trial. The broad lung network contains many such micro-networks, each with its own most-engaged voice — e.g. Eric Singhi’s MARIPOSA cluster. A network visualization, like the KOL Pulse ELCC 2026 graph, makes these clusters visible in a way a ranked list cannot.

Does high engagement always mean a KOL is shaping the conversation?

No. Engagement attributed to an account can reflect a PI or presenter whose talk the field is discussing — e.g. Dr. Roy Herbst on ADAURA, whose footprint is two presenter announcements. That’s meaningful (they’re the authoritative PI), but it’s distinct from a voice actively shaping sentiment. A real engagement view — who authored what, and how often — separates the two.

Who are the lung-cancer skeptic voices now?

The field’s two most-networked skeptics have stepped out of the independent-academic role: Dr. Jack West joined Summit Therapeutics (VP of Clinical Development, working on ivonescimab), and Dr. Vinay Prasad served as the FDA’s CBER Director and Chief Medical & Scientific Officer before returning to UCSF in 2026. That leaves an open, high-reach independent-skeptic role — one worth watching closely.

How can you see who shapes a trial’s reception?

Rank the voices on a trial by real engagement and peer amplification, not follower count. That surfaces who actually shapes sentiment on that study — the hub, the trial-focused voice, the amplifier, and the skeptic — turning a static name list into a live influence map of the conversation.

The lung-cancer trials behind this network

Lung
MARIPOSA
Amivantamab + lazertinib · 1L EGFR NSCLC
View trial profile →
Lung
FLAURA2
Osimertinib + chemo · 1L EGFR NSCLC
View trial profile →
Lung
LAURA
Consolidation osimertinib · stage III EGFR NSCLC
View trial profile →
Lung
CROWN
Lorlatinib 7-yr · 1L ALK+ NSCLC
View trial profile →
Lung
ADRIATIC
Consolidation durvalumab · LS-SCLC
View trial profile →
Lung
AEGEAN
Perioperative durvalumab · resectable NSCLC
View trial profile →
Lung
CheckMate-77T
Perioperative nivolumab · resectable NSCLC
View trial profile →
Lung
ADAURA
Adjuvant osimertinib · EGFR NSCLC
View trial profile →

Catch the live congress chatter

Congress
ASCO 2026
Live lung KOL coverage — top abstracts & trial buzz
View live coverage →
Congress
ELCC 2026
European thoracic KOL influence network
View the network →
Map the lung-cancer KOL networks

Compiled and reviewed by the KOL Pulse research team, led by Brian Shields, Founder, KOL Pulse. Engagement, impressions, and verbatim quotes are real figures from the KOL Pulse database, aggregated across 15 lung-cancer trials. Last updated June 2026.