National

Cancer Care Should Focus On Patients Rather Than Commerce: Lancet Comment

According to the Comment, industry's control of the research agenda has created a system that💖 is predominantly focused on new cancer medicines at the expense of investigating new🐻 approaches to surgery, radiotherapy, palliative care, and prevention. 

A revolutio♉nary new cancer treatment has just 🐽had a 100per cent success rate in healing patients
info_icon

Cancer care and in🦹novation should be focused on outcomes that matter to patients rather than the commercial bottom line, say cancer experts in a Comment published in The Lancet On♊cology journal.

According to the Comment, industry's control of the research agenda has created a system that is predominantly focused on new cancer medicines at the expense of investigating new approaches to surgery, radiotherapy, palliative care, and prevention. The authors, consisting of global oncologists and patient advocates, also establish core guidelines for the 𝐆development of a new patient-centred movement in cancer care - Common Sense Oncology.

They claim that there has been a shift o𓂃ver the past few decades from predominantly publicly funded clinical trials designed to answer questions important to patients, to industry-funded trials which aim to achieve regulatory approval or commercial advantage. "While many cancer treatments make a real difference in the lives of our patients, there are growing concerns that some new treatments do not help patients live longer or feel better," said Professor Christopher Booth, from Queen's University in Kingston, Canada.

The Comment also highlights how a substantial proportion of industry revenue is used for marketing campaigns aimed at influencing patients, policy-makers, and oncologists irrespective of clinical need🐷. The authors hope to educate and empower the next generation of oncologists to push the field to do better for patients via three key areas.

These include ensuring clinical trials use and report outcomes that matter to patients, and fostering critical thinking among oncologists to make sound clinical decisions aligned with outcomes that matter to patients Improving patient, public, and policy-maker understanding o𒅌f cancer treatment options is another area.

"Common Sense Onco🦩logy is a global initiative that prioritises people over profits and promotes shared decision-making with patients," Booth said. "Our vision is that pati🉐ents have access to cancer treatments that provide meaningful improvements in outcomes that matter -- irrespective of where they live,” the researcher added.