Research Highlights from the ASCO Quality Care Symposium, with Merry Jennifer Markham, MD, FACP, and Neeraj Agarwal, MD
Cancer.Net Podcast09/03/19 • 14 min
ASCO: You’re listening to a podcast from Cancer.Net. This cancer information website is produced by the American Society of Clinical Oncology, known as ASCO, the world’s leading professional organization for doctors who care for people with cancer.
The purpose of this podcast is to educate and to inform. This is not a substitute for professional medical care and is not intended for use in the diagnosis or treatment of individual conditions. Guests on this podcast express their own opinions, experience, and conclusions. The mention of any product, service, organization, activity, or therapy should not be construed as an ASCO endorsement. Cancer research discussed in this podcast is ongoing, so the data described here may change as research progresses.
Monika Sharda: Hi, I'm Monica Sharda, an editor on the Cancer.Net team and your host for today's podcast. In this episode, we're going to discuss 2 studies on patient experiences with clinical trials that will be presented at ASCO's 2019 Quality Care Symposium. This annual meeting brings together health care experts to share strategies for cancer care issues and integrate these methods into patient care. I have with me 2 oncology experts who will help us understand these studies and why they're important. Our first guest, Dr. Merry-Jennifer Markham is a hematologist at the University of Florida in Gainesville. Welcome, Dr. Markham.
Dr. Markham: Hi, hi. Thanks for having me.
Monika Sharda: And we also have with us Dr. Neeraj Agarwal, who is a medical oncologist at the University of Utah's Huntsman Cancer Institute. Thanks for being with us, Dr. Agarwal.
Dr. Agarwal: A pleasure. Thank you.
Monika Sharda: So before we delve into the studies, I want to make sure we explain what clinical trials mean for any listeners who may not be familiar with the term. Can you provide a brief explanation of what a clinical trial is and how they're used in cancer care?
Dr. Agarwal: Yeah, of course. So if we look at the definition of National Cancer Institute, how the clinical trial is defined that is a type of research study that test how well new medical approaches work in our patients. And these studies test new methods of screening, prevention, diagnosis, or treatment of a disease. These are often called as prospective clinical studies, but I make it simple for my patients. I tell them that to me the definition of a clinical trial is how to get cutting edge technology, which can be a treatment or a device, to my patients 5 years before FDA approval of that drug or a device. How to expedite availability of those cutting-edge technology to my patients is the definition I use for clinical trials.
Monika Sharda: Thanks. That's a great way to put it. So let's start by discussing the study that comes out of Seattle, Washington where researchers looked at whether participating in a clinical trial helped people with metastatic non-small cell lung cancer live longer. Can you tell us a little bit about how the study was conducted, Dr. Agarwal?
Dr. Agarwal: Yes, and this study, as you mentioned, was conducted in Seattle Cancer Alliance consisting of University of Washington and Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, both based in Seattle, Washington. What the researchers did, they looked back at the records of patients with non-small cell lung cancer or simply advanced lung cancer who were treated in their institutions between January 2007 and December 2015. And they included 371 patients. One-third of those patients, almost 30% of patients were enrolled on 1 or more clinical trials. And other patients were not enrolled in the clinical trials. And they compared, basically, those patients. They looked at the survival of patients who were able to get on a clinical trial versus who did not. And very interestingly, patients who were enrolled on a clinical trial, their median survival was twice as much as those who did not get to enroll on a clinical trial. The overall survival in patients who were on clinical triasl who got to get treated on a clinical trial—at least one clinical trial—was 838 days compared to patients who did not go on a clinical trial who only lived for 454 days. This is even more interesting is because the researchers compared the patient's disease characteristics, demographic characteristics, and they made sure that patients were evenly distributed from those characteristics. It’s not that patients who had more aggressive disease or who had a higher history or longer history of smoking, they got to be under control arm, which is that they did not get on the clinical trial. So patients in both groups were evenly matched for demographic and disease characteristics. So this basically tells me that if you get to enroll on a clinical trial, the overall survival is higher than if you do not.
Monika Sharda: And do we know why that might be? Why patients that were enrolled in clinical trials tended to ...
09/03/19 • 14 min
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