Colorado Cancer
Research Program
2253 South Oneida St.
Third Floor, Suite B
Denver, CO 80224
Phone: 303.777.2663
Fax: 303.777.2642
Toll-free: 888.785.6789 |
Everyday, medical research provides doctors with more
information about fighting cancer. Hope and promise come from scientific
discoveries. These discoveries are made available to people through
the process of cancer clinical trials and by the people who participate
in clinical trials.
What is a Clinical
Trial?
- Part of the research process that begins at the
laboratory.
- A research study conducted with actual people.
- A controlled and monitored study process under which
new drug treatments or new approaches for diagnosing, controlling
or preventing cancers are compared to what is currently available.
- A study designed to answer key scientific questions
that will advance medical knowledge.
- Always a voluntary choice for participation.
Why Are Cancer Clinical Trials
Important?
Most of today's standard care medicines are the results of
yesterday's clinical trials. Clinical trials...
- Provide the viable link between the advancements
made in medical science to the resulting improvements made in
standard care medicine.
- Demonstrate the effectiveness
of new approaches to treating a cancer, controlling
the side effects of chemotherapy, or preventing the
cancer altogether.
- Use an evidence-based
process to test and then make
conclusions of a drug or treatment's
safety and effectiveness.
Four Types of Cancer Clinical Trials.
1. Treatment Trials -
effort is to find superior drugs or test for better approaches in
using surgery or radiation for treating people who already have cancer
2. Prevention Trials -
test new approaches, such as certain medications, vitamins, minerals
or food supplements, which may lower a person's risk of a certain
type of cancer. These trials are for reducing the risk of developing
cancer in healthy people who do not have cancer, or preventing
the return of cancer in those who have already had cancer.
3. Diagnostic/Screening Trials -
compare new techniques for finding cancer, especially early-stage
cancers.
4. Supportive Care (also Quality
of Life) Trials - test new ways to
improve comfort and quality of life for people with cancer.
Some of these trials may also be referred to as "symptom
control" trials that address the pain and nausea that
often accompanies chemotherapy
How are Clinical Trials
Tested?
Clinical trials are conducted in phases. Rigorous testing at each phase is desired.
The answers received from Phase I determines whether the treatment will progress
to Phase II and then to Phase III. Each phase serves a specific purpose:
- Phase I -
This first point of testing is primarily concerned with safety
(how toxic is the treatment?) and the best way to deliver the
new treatment.
- Phase II -
This level tests effectiveness of a treatment
for specific tumor types. They are designed to
find out whether the agent has an anticancer
effect, whether it will reduce tumor size or
alleviate symptoms.
- Phase
III - For
treatment trials,
this phase compares
the new therapy with
the best available
treatment currently
known, i.e. is one
approach more effective
than another. In
cancer prevention
trials the agent
(drug, vitamin) compare
the outcome of one
agent to another,
or compare the results
of taking a drug
versus taking no
drug.
Where Are Cancer Clinical
Trials Conducted?
In the past, patients could access clinical trials only if they
lived near large teaching hospitals or major medical centers or
if they were able to travel long distances to these institutions.
Today, clinical trials are made accessible through
community-based cancer centers, community hospitals and physician
offices and local outpatient cancer clinics. These venues provide
cancer patients and individuals-at-risk for cancer greater opportunity
to access many of the same trials once available only through major
cancer centers.
Sponsored by both the federal government and/or private
industry, cancer clinical trials are conducted through a variety
of institutions:
- National Cancer Institute
(NCI) - Most often thought of as merely a funding source
that funds cancer research, the NCI, a federal government agency,
serves also as a resource and clearinghouse for patients, health
professionals and the general public. The NCI publishes vast
information on cancer, the cancer research it funds, and grant
funding opportunities. Cancer Information Service 1-800-4-CANCER.
- Cooperative Groups -
Throughout the United States and Canada approximately 11 cancer
cooperative groups conduct large-scale clinical trials. The
types of clinical trials offered through these cooperative
groups are varied: The Radiation Therapy Oncology Group trials,
for example, focus on single treatment modality, radiation
therapy. The National Surgical Breast and Bowel Project Group's
trials focus on treatment and prevention of breast and colon/rectal
cancers. The Eastern Cooperative Group, on the other hand,
is a multi-modality group offering trials that focus on multi-disciplinary
treatment that may include radiation therapy plus chemotherapy
and for all cancer sites. These cooperative group trials are
offered to and conducted by community cancer programs and community
hospitals, teaching hospitals, etc.
- Community Clinical Oncology
Programs - There are
60 NCI-designated community oncology programs
referred to as Community Clinical Oncology Programs
(CCOP). The Colorado
Cancer Research Program is
an NCI-designated CCOP that reaches out into
local communities to conduct cancer clinical
trials. CCOPs are located in 34 states, the District
of Columbia and Puerto Rico. These community-based
cancer programs offer large-scale cancer clinical
trials to people in local communities.
- Cancer
Centers -
Throughout the United States,
the NCI has designated approximately
60 institutions as Comprehensive
Cancer Centers. These Cancer
Centers are often located in
institutions of higher learning,
such as teaching hospitals and
medical centers that treat cancer
patients as well as participate
in research. Their research is
comprehensive - meaning it includes
basic laboratory research, clinical
research, and prevention and
control research.
- Pharmaceutical/Biotech
Companies -
More than 80 pharmaceutical/biotech
companies conduct
cancer clinical
trials research,
often early phase
and drug advancement
studies.
- Related
Links
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