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What Are Clinical Trials?

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Title: What Are Clinical Trials?


1
Cancer Clinical Trials
The Basics
2
What Are Cancer Clinical Trials?
  • Research studies involving people
  • Try to answer scientific questions and find
    better ways to prevent, diagnose, or treat cancer

3
Why Are Cancer Clinical Trials Important?
  • Cancer affects all of us
  • Each year in the U.S.A
  • More than half a million people are expected to
    die of cancer more than 1,500 people a day
  • 1 of 4 deaths is from cancer
  • More than 1 million new cancer cases are expected
    to be diagnosed

4
Why Are Cancer Clinical Trials Important?
  • Clinical trials translate results of basic
    scientific research into better ways to prevent,
    diagnose, or treat cancer
  • The more people that take part, the faster we
    can
  • Answer critical research questions
  • Find better treatments and ways to prevent cancer

5
Do Many People Participate in Cancer Clinical
Trials?
  • Only 3 percent of U.S. adults with cancer
    participate in clinical trials

6
Types of Cancer Clinical Trials
  • Treatment trials
  • Prevention trials
  • Early-detection trials/screening trials
  • Diagnostic trials
  • Quality-of-life studies/supportive care studies

7
Clinical Trial Phases
  • Phase 1 trials
  • How does the agent affect the human body?
  • What dosage is safe?

8
Clinical Trial Phases
  • Phase 2 trials
  • Does the agent or intervention have an effect on
    the cancer?

9
Clinical Trial Phases
  • Phase 3 trials
  • Is the new agent or intervention (or new use of a
    treatment) better than the standard?
  • Participants have an equal chance to be assigned
    to one of two or more groups

10
Randomized Trials
  • Participants have an equal chance to be assigned
    to one of two or more groups
  • One gets the most widely accepted treatment
    (standard treatment)
  • The other gets the new treatment being tested,
    which researchers hope and have reason to believe
    will be better than standard treatment

11
Randomization
12
Why Is Randomization Important?
  • So all groups are as alike as possible
  • Provides the best way to prove the effectiveness
    of a new agent or intervention

13
Cancer Treatment Trials
  • What new treatments can help people who have
    cancer?
  • What is the most effective treatment for people
    who have cancer?

14
Cancer Treatment Trials
  • Placebos are almost never used
  • Placebos are used only when no standard treatment
    exists
  • Patients are told of this possibility before
    deciding to take part

15
Cancer Prevention Trials
  • Evaluate the effectiveness of ways to reduce the
    risk of cancer
  • Enroll healthy people at high risk for developing
    cancer

16
Cancer Prevention Trials
  • Action studies
  • (doing something)
  • Agent studies
  • (taking something)also called
    chemoprevention studies

17
Chemoprevention Trials
  • Phase 3 chemoprevention trials compare a
    promising new agent with either a
  • Standard agent
  • Placebo

18
Clinical Trial Protocol
  • A recipe or blueprint
  • Strict scientific guidelines
  • Purpose of study
  • How many people will participate
  • Who is eligible to participate
  • How the study will be carried out
  • What information will be gathered about
    participants
  • Endpoints

19
Benefits of Participation
  • Possible benefits
  • Patients will receive, at a minimum, the best
    standard treatment
  • If the new treatment or intervention is proven to
    work, patients may be among the first to benefit
  • Patients have a chance to help others and improve
    cancer care

20
Risks of Participation
  • Possible risks
  • New treatments or interventions under study are
    not always better than, or even as good as,
    standard care
  • Even if a new treatment has benefits, it may not
    work for every patient
  • Health insurance and managed care providers do
    not always cover clinical trials

21
Patient Protection
  • There have, unfortunately, been past abuses in
    patient protection
  • Federal regulations ensure that people are told
    about the benefits, risks,
    and purpose of research before they agree to
    participate

22
How Are Patients Rights Protected?
  • Informed consent
  • Scientific review
  • Institutional review boards (IRBs)
  • Data safety and monitoring boards

23
How Are Patients Rights Protected?
  • Informed consent
  • Purpose
  • Procedures
  • Risks and potential benefits
  • Individual rights

24
How Are Patients Rights Protected?
  • Scientific review
  • Institutional review boards (IRBs) are required
    by Federal law for trials that are
  • Federally funded
  • Subject to FDA regulation

25
How Are Patients Rights Protected?
  • Data and safety monitoring boards
  • Ensure that risks are minimized
  • Ensure data integrity
  • Stop a trial if safety concerns arise or
    objectives have been met

26
Why Do So Few Cancer Patients Participate in
Clinical Trials?
  • Sometimes patients
  • Dont know about clinical trials
  • Dont have access to trials
  • May be afraid or suspicious of research
  • Cant afford to participate
  • May not want to go against physicians wishes

27
Why Do So Few Cancer Patients Participate in
Clinical Trials?
  • Doctors might
  • Lack awareness of appropriate clinical trials
  • Be unwilling to lose control of a persons care
  • Believe that standard therapy is best
  • Be concerned that clinical trials add
    administrative burdens

28
NCI Information Resources
  • NCI Web sitewww.cancer.gov
  • Cancer Information Service
  • 1-800-4-CANCER
  • TTY- 1-800-332-8615
  • www.cancer.gov/cis

29
IOWA ONCOLOGY RESEARCH ASSOCIATION
30
Iowa Oncology Research Association
  • Established in 1977 as CGOP
  • Became a member of NCCTG in 1978
  • Designated a CCOP in 1983

31
Affiliate Sites
  • Mason City
  • Ottumwa
  • Ames

32
Clinical Trials
  • Chemotherapy
  • Radiation Therapy
  • Immunotherapy
  • Surgery
  • Correlative Studies
  • Cancer Control
  • Cancer Prevention

33
Cooperative Group Memberships
  • North Central Cancer Treatment Group
  • Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group
  • National Surgical Adjuvant Breast Bowel
    Project
  • Southwestern Oncology Group

34
Protocol Development
  • Protocol concept developed by cooperative group
    committees
  • Often distributed to participating investigators,
    CRAs, nurses for peer review
  • Submitted to NCI for review

35
Implementation Of Study
  • Distributed to affiliate sites via weekly emails
  • Optional participation
  • Factors affecting local participation
  • Eligibility criteria
  • Competing studies
  • Test requirements
  • Local IRB review

36
Patient Recruitment
  • Treatment and control studies Oncology patients
    referred by local physicians
  • to IORA
  • Cancer prevention studies Various recruitment
    efforts utilized

37
Drug Procurement
  • Drugs ordered from sponsoring cooperative group
  • or
  • Drugs ordered from Pharmaceutical Management
    Branch (PMB) of NCI

38
Randomization / Registration
  • Fax
  • Online
  • All randoms / registrations require at minimum a
    completion of eligibility criteria checklist

39
Quality Assurance
  • Pathology review
  • Radiation therapy review
  • Surgery review

40
Quality AssuranceContinued
  • Data Safety Monitoring Policies
  • Data Safety Monitoring Board (DSMB)
  • Site Audits

41
Adverse Event Reporting
  • Common Toxicity Criteria (CTC)
  • Adverse Event Expedited Reporting System (AdEERS)

42
BRAIN TUMORS
43
RECURRENT BRAIN TUMORS
  • NCCTG N0272 Phase II Trial of STI571 in
    Treatment of Recurrent Oligodendroglioma Mixed
    Oligoastrocytoma
  • NCCTG N0572 Phase I/II Trial of Sorafenib
    CCI-779 in Recurrent Glioblastoma
  • NCCTG N0779 Phase II Study of Vorinostat (SAHA)
    in Combination with Bortezomib (PS-341) in
    Patients with Recurrent Glioblastoma Multiforme

44
METASTATIC BRAIN TUMORS
  • NCCTG N0574 Phase III Randomized Trial of the
    Role of Whole Brain Radiation Therapy in Addition
    to Radiosurgery in Patients with 1-3 Cerebral
    Metastases

45
BREAST CANCER
46
ADJUVANT TREATMENT
  • CALGB C40101 Phase III, Randomized, 2 x 2
    Factorial Study of Cyclophosphamide Doxorubicin
    (CA x 4 Cycles) vs Paclitaxel (4 Cycles) as
    Adjuvant Therapy for Breast Cancer in Women with
    0-3 Positive Axillary Nodes
  • ECOG E5103 A Double-Blind, Phase III Trial of
    Doxorubicin Cyclophosphamide Followed by
    Paclitaxel with Bevacizumab or Placebo in
    Patients with Lymph Node Positive High-Risk
    Lymph Node Negative Breast Cancer

47
ADJUVANT TREATMENT
  • ECOG PACCT-1 Program for the Assessment of
    Clinical Cancer Tests Trial Assigning
    Individualized Options for Treatment
  • SWOG S0221 Phase III Trial of Continuous Schedule
    of AC G vs Every 2 Week Schedule AC, Followed
    by Paclitaxel Given Either Every 2 Weeks or
    Weekly for 12 Weeks as Post-Operative Adjuvant
    Treatment in High Risk Node Negative or Node
    Positive Breast Cancer

48
ER / PR POSITIVE
  • NSABP B-42 A Clinical Trial to Determine the
    Efficacy of 5 Years of Letrozole Compared to
    Placebo in Patients Completing 5 Years of
    Hormonal Therapy Consisting of an AI or Tamoxifen
    Followed by an AI in Prolonging Disease-Free
    Survival in Postmenopausal Women with Hormone
    Receptor Positive Cancer
  • CALGB C40503 Endocrine Therapy in Combination
    with Anti-VEGF Therapy Randomized,
    Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Endocrine
    Therapy Plus Bevacizumab for Women with Hormone
    Receptor Positive Advanced Breast Cancer

49
WHOLE VS PARTIAL BREAST IRRADIATION
  • NSABP B-39 Randomized Phase III Study of
    Conventional WBI vs PBI for Women with Stage 0, I
    or II Breast Cancer

50
HER2 Positive
  • NCCTG N063D ALTTO Adjuvant Lapatinib and/or
    Trastuzumab Treatment Optimization Study
    Randomized, Open-Label, Phase III Study of
    Adjuvant Lapatinib, Trastuzumab, Their Sequence
    Their Combination in Patients with HER2 Positive
    Primary Breast Cancer

51
METASTATIC / RECURRENT
  • ECOG E1104 Phase I/II Study of SAHA in
    Combination with Herceptin in Patients with
    Advanced Metastatic and/or Local Chest Wall
    Recurrent HER2 Amplified Breast Cancer
  • ECOG E1105 Randomized Phase III Double-Blind,
    Placebo-Controlled Trial of First-Line Chemo
    Trastuzumab With or Without Bevacizumab for
    Patients with HER2 Overexpressing Metastatic
    Breast Cancer

52
METASTATIC / RECURRENT
  • NCCTG N0539 Phase II Trial of Fulvestrant
    Bevacizumab in Patients with Metastatic Breast
    Cancer Previously Treated with an Aromatase
    Inhibitor
  • SWOG S0500 Randomized Phase III Trial to Test the
    Strategy of Changing Therapy vs Maintaining
    Therapy for Metastatic Breast Cancer Patients Who
    Have Elevated Circulating Tumor Cell Levels at
    First Follow-up Assessment

53
OVARIAN FUNCTION SUPPRESSION
  • IBCSG 2402 Ovarian Function Suppression
    Exemestane as Adjuvant Treatment for
    Premenopausal Women with Endocrine Responsive
    Breast Cancer
  • CALGB C40302 Endocrine Therapy With or Without
    Inhibition of EGF HER2 Growth Factor Receptors
    Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled
    Phase III Trial of Fulvestrant With or Without
    Lapatinib for Post-Menopausal Women With
    Hormone-Receptor Positive Advanced Breast Cancer

54
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