Precision medicine
approach to cancer improves on older methods: study
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[May 19, 2016]
By Julie Steenhuysen
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Precision medicine, or
the practice of targeting biological markers on a patient's tumors,
proved significantly more effective at shrinking tumors and stalling the
progression of cancer in the first large-scale analysis of such
treatments.
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Researchers from the University of California-San Diego School of
Medicine pooled the results of 346 early-stage clinical trials
involving more than 13,000 patients that were published between 2011
and 2013.
Their findings were released on Wednesday and will be presented in
full at the American Society of Clinical Oncology meeting in Chicago
next month.
The precision medicine approach is part of a transition away from
treating cancer based on specific organs. Instead, it focuses on the
defective genes driving the disease, and uses that information to
determine which drugs, or combinations of drugs, could best attack
specific biological targets on tumors.
Although there has been ample anecdotal evidence that precision
medicine can have dramatic effects in some patients, there has been
scant evidence looking at the approach on a larger scale.
The new study found that patients whose treatment was selected based
on the molecular characteristics of their tumor had significantly
better outcomes.
"Our study suggests that, with a precision medicine approach, we can
use a patient's individual tumor biomarkers to determine whether
they are likely to benefit from a particular therapy, even when that
therapy is at the earliest stage of clinical development," said lead
study author Maria Schwaederle of UCSD's the Center for Personalized
Cancer Therapy.
The researchers found that tumors in patients who received targeted
treatments had shrinkage rates of 30.6 percent, compared with 4.9
percent in those who did not.
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Patients treated with a precision medicine approach also had a
longer time before the disease worsened, with median
progression-free survival of 5.7 months compared with 2.95 months
for those who were not.
"This strategy often results in good outcomes for patients, and I
hope it will encourage and reassure doctors and patients considering
enrollment in precision medicine-based (early-stage) trials,"
Schwaederle said in a statement.
(Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen; Editing by Nick Zieminski)
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