 |
Clinical Research
All prominent stem-cell transplant programs are involved
with clinical research. The goal of that research
is to make stem-cell transplantation more effective
and safer, to find new indications for the procedure,
and to learn more precisely how bone marrow cells
(stem cells) work. You probably will be asked to participate
in some of the studies currently ongoing within IBMT.
In this page we will try to explain what the different
types of study are, and what you should know to make
an informed decision.
Randomized Clinical Trials
When a new therapy (drug or procedure) has
shown real promise, it is important to determine
whether this new therapy is more effective
than the existing ("standard") therapy. This
is studied through a randomized clinical trial,
also called a "phase III study".
Since participating physicians might be
biased towards one of the therapies, it is
important that patients be assigned by chance
to the two treatment arms ("randomized").
In case of a drug, often the physician who
treats the patient is not aware whether the
patient receives the new or the old drug,
again to avoid bias in reporting the effects.
This is called the physician is "blinded".
For emergency matters, a research pharmacist
is always aware which drug the patient is
receiving. Such phase III studies are generally
considered the definitive test whether a new
therapy is superior. For drugs, blinded randomized
clinical trials are the standard to obtain
approval as a new drug from the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA). Before official FDA
approval has been obtained, new ("experimental")
drugs are only available as part of studies.
To make a decision about participation in
a phase III study, it is good to realize that
this is not a test between a good and a bad
therapy. To make it to a phase III study,
an experimental drug (or procedure) must have
shown real promise in earlier studies (phase
I and II). The decision is whether to participate
in a comparison between a standard therapy
and a therapy which is hopefully better, but
might prove to be slightly worse than the
standard therapy. Your physicians will provide
you with the information they have, but obviously
they do not know the future outcome of the
study.
At times, randomized clinical trials do
not involve a new drug or procedure,
but compare two therapies which both are considered
standard-of-care. In such situations, nobody
can claim that their therapy is better, although
many physicians will have a preference for
one or the other therapy. That preference
has to do with personal experience, style
of practice etc., but has no true scientific
basis; it is a bias!
Randomized clinical studies can be initiated
either by individual researchers or centers,
by a group of collaborating centers (eg, Southwestern
Oncology Group), or by drug companies. To
fulfill the requirements of such studies,
extensive records will have to be kept on
each patient, and additional laboratory tests
are often necessary. Before agreeing to participate,
you should ask questions about what additional
tests will be necessary and whatever other
questions you may have. All data collected
about your participation in these studies
will be confidential, and submission of data
will never mention your name.
Phase II Studies
When a new drug has been developed, it is
important to test it for activity under a
number of different conditions. For example,
a new anti- cancer drug should be tested against
different types of cancer to see where the
drug is most effective. Once this has been
determined, phase II studies try to answer
the question exactly how active the new drug
is in this particular setting. In the example
of the new anti-cancer drug, how active exactly
is this drug against breast cancer, which
appeared to be the most promising tumor in
the earlier studies? To find the answer, many
patients with breast cancer are treated with
the experimental drug, to determine the percentage
of responders and the extent of the response.
In situations such as breast cancer, where
active drugs are already available, patients
are only eligible for phase-II studies after
they have failed standard therapy. In situation
where no acceptable standard therapy is available,
phase-II studies sometimes are first-line
therapy.
Patients considering participation in phase-II
studies should be aware that they will receive
treatment with a promising drug, but that
complete data on the chance for benefit and
on the risks are not available yet.
Phase I Studies
Very early clinical testing of a new drug
will involve treatment of patients to determine
the side effects of the drug, the maximum
dose tolerated, and a first impression about
the beneficial effects of the drug. With anti-cancer
drugs, this means treating patients with a
wide array of tumors, to determine whether
any tumors have a better chance of responding.
Since no beneficial effect can be predicted,
only patients whose cancers are not responding
to standard therapies are invited to participate.
Both possible benefit and possible risks are
quite uncertain. Before deciding to participate
in phase I studies, you should obtain information
about the known risks of this drug, and about
other experimental treatments. Not trying
additional treatment is an option you should
also consider!
Some patients are nervous about participation
in clinical studies. They may well feel like
"guinea pigs" and are afraid that their best
interests will not be taken into account.
These emotions are understandable, but ill-founded.
All progress made in the field on cancer came
from the testing of new drugs that proved
more effective than older ones. Further progress
will depend on patients willing to be active
participants in the evaluation of the new
generation of drugs. Similarly, randomized
studies are the only way to select the optimal
therapy from among several good therapies.
In many instances, randomized clinical trials
are the standard of care. All research studies
of IBMT are under the supervision of an Institutional
Review Board, which consists of a group of
physicians and laypersons who review each
study to guarantee that the interests of the
patients are protected.
Nevertheless, patients should never feel
coerced to participate in a clinical study.
You have a right to be included in clinical
studies, not an obligation! If you decide
not to participate in studies proposed to
you, you will receive the same high standard
of care from IBMT physicians and nurses as
patients who elect to participate. Patients
can receive excellent care without ever being
part of a research study.
Even if you choose not to participate is any studies, IBMT will
still collect data on your therapy, your response and the outcome
of the treatment. IBMT is under the obligation to submit outcome
data to several agencies. IBMT is accredited by the Foundation
for Accreditation of Hematopoietic Cell Therapy (FAHCT). In fact,
IBMT was among the first four programs in the country to obtain
accreditation from this prestigious body. Submission of outcome
data to transplant registries is required by FAHCT (http://www.unmc.edu/Community/fahct/).
Similarly, for unrelated donor transplants, outcome data have
to be submitted to the National Marrow Donor Program (NMDP). Finally,
many large insurance companies require submission of data on all
transplants performed in order for a center to obtain "center
of excellence" status. For all these submissions, patients will
be identified with a "unique patient number" only, and never by
name!
If you have remaining questions or concerns,
please discuss them with the IBMT physician,
clinic nurses, or the transplant coordinator.
The patient advocate is the person with the
specific role to protect your interests.
|