Author Interviews, Cancer Research, JNCI, Lung Cancer, UT Southwestern / 02.10.2014
Prior Cancer Excludes Many Patients From Lung Cancer Trials
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Dr. David Gerber MD
Associate Professor of Internal Medicine
Division of Hematology and Oncology
Harold C. Simmons Cancer Center at UT Southwestern Medical Center
Medical Research: What are the main findings of the study?
Dr. Gerber: Fewer than 3% of adult cancer patients in the United States are enrolled in clinical trials. Increasingly numerous and stringent eligibility criteria are a major factor limiting participation in clinical trials. We examined the longstanding and widespread practice of excluding patients with prior cancer from oncology clinical trials. This policy presumably reflects concerns that a prior cancer would interfere with the conduct, outcomes, or interpretation of a clinical trial, although there is no clear evidence supporting that assumption.
We examined more than 50 National Cancer Institute (NCI)-sponsored lung cancer clinical trials. We found that 80% excluded patients with prior cancers. This exclusion criterion was applied broadly, including to more than two-thirds of trials with non-survival endpoints. We then examined national Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results (SEER)-Medicare linked data to estimate the proportion of patients who would be excluded from these trials due to prior cancer. We found that up to 18% of potential patients are excluded for this reason alone. In large phase 3 clinical trials, that corresponds to more than 200 patients.
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