Transcript
Page 1: The basics of clinical trials

The  basics  of    clinical  trials  

 10  October  2014  

 

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What  is  a  clinical  trial?

A  clinical  trial  is  a  research  study,  relying  upon  human  volunteers,  that  allows  scien7sts  to  inves7gate  and  answer  specific  medical  ques7ons    

Yesterday’s  research  leads  to    today’s  treatments  and    

tomorrow’s  cures.  

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What  do  trials  accomplish?

Trials  test  new  ways  to…  

¢  Prevent  breast  cancer  ¢  Diagnose  breast  cancer  ¢  Treat  or  cure  breast  cancer  ¢  Improve  quality  of  life  during  and  aAer  treatment  

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What  do  clinical  trial  “phases”  mean?

•  Ensuring  safety  •  IdenEfying  side  effects  •  Confirming  dosage  

Each  clinical  trial  is  classified  into  one  of  4  phases,  depending  on  what  it  is  tesEng:  

•  Further  evaluaEng  safety  •  TesEng  effecEveness  of  a  treatment  

•  Confirming  effecEveness  •  Comparing  to  current  standard  treatments  •  Monitoring  side  effects  

•  Monitoring  long  term  effects  •  IdenEfying  new  uses  of  the  treatment  

Phase  1  

Phase  2  

Phase  3  

Phase  4  

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The  doctor  (Principal  Inves7gator,  or  PI)  in  charge  of  the  trial  is  responsible  for  a  trial  protocol  which  includes:    ¢  Why  the  trial  is  required  ¢  Who  is  eligible  to  par7cipate  ¢  How  many  pa7ents  are  needed    ¢  What  drugs,  if  any,  will  be  given;  

how  much  and  when  ¢  What  tests  will  be  done,  

and  when  ¢  What  pa7ent  informa7on  will  

be  collected  

How  is  a  trial  defined?

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¢  Poten7ally  eligible  pa7ents  are  iden7fied  ¢  They  receive  detailed  informa7on  from  their  doctors  about  the  trial  ¢  They  are  asked  to  sign  an  “Informed  Consent”  form  to  show  that  they  have  been  properly  informed  about  the  study  

What  happens  next?

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How  are  paEents  recruited?

¢  Pa7ents  are  chosen  based  on  factors  including  age,  gender,  type  and  stage  of  breast  cancer,  treatment  history  and  other  medical  condi7ons  

¢  Some7mes  pa7ents  must  be  recruited  from  many  countries  in  order  to  ensure  that  enough  people  will  par7cipate  so  that  the  study  will  have  sta7s7cal  validity  

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¢  All  Phase  3  trials  (and  some  in  Phase  2)  use  randomiza7on  by  computer  to  put  pa7ents  into  groups  receiving  different  treatments  

¢  One  group  (the  control  group)  receives  the  current  standard  of  care  ¢  One  or  more  groups  receive  the  therapy  being  tested,  some7mes  in  different  combina7ons  

Do  all  paEents  receive  the  same  treatment?

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How  long  does  a  trial  last?

¢  Researchers  monitor  pa7ents  for  weeks,  months  or  years,  depending  on  the  trial  protocol  

¢  Some  trials  follow  pa7ents  for  more  than  10  years,  for  example  to  track  long-­‐term  pa7ent  safety  

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The  typical  life  of  a  trial

Recruitment  

Study  

Follow-­‐up  

Review  

Protocol  

Final  Results  

6  months  –  10  years  

6  months  –  10  years  

6  months  –  5  years  

EnEre  duraEon  of  trial  

Interim  Results  

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What  are  the  risks  and  benefits  of  parEcipaEng  in  a  trial?

Benefits  include:    ¢  Access  to  promising  new  treatments  not  available  outside  the  trial  

¢  More  individualized  medical  aXen7on,  such  as  addi7onal  tests  and  check-­‐ups  

¢  Contribu7on  to  improved  treatments  for  future  pa7ents  

Risks  include:  

¢  Experimental  treatment  could  prove  ineffec7ve  

¢  Treatment  side  effects  ¢  Addi7onal  7me  required        at  the  hospital  for  tests  and  check-­‐ups  

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Why  support  clinical  trials?

¢  Clinical  trials  provide  us  with  the  knowledge  we  need  to  treat  breast  cancer  beXer  

¢ Now  is  the  7me  for  scien7sts  to  make  significant  progress  in  answering  ques7ons  about  how  to  treat  and  cure  breast  cancer  

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Support  trials  and  enable  progress  towards  a  cure  for  breast  cancer

Today’s  donaEons  support  tomorrow’s  trials  and    

future  cures.  

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Sources

For  more  informaEon:    www.bigagainstbreastcancer.org  www.breastcancertrials.org  www.breastcancer.org/treatment/clinical_trials    www.cancer.gov/clinicaltrials  www.cancer.org/treatment/treatmentsandsideeffects/clinicaltrials/  www.cancerresearchuk.org/about-­‐cancer/trials/  www.clinicaltrials.gov        


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