Jordan Hansford, Santosh Valvi, Jasper de Boer, Geoff McCowage, Dinisha Govender, Maria Kirby, David Ziegler, Neevika Manoharan, Timothy Hassall, Brandon Wainwright, Frank Alvaro, Paul J Wood, David Eisenstat, Dong Anh Khuong Quang, Misty Jenkins, Matthew Dun, Stephen J Laughton, Raelene Endersby, Andrew Dodgshun, Nicholas Gottardo
{"title":"“If you build it, they will come”: the convergence of funding, research and collaboration in paediatric brain cancer clinical trials","authors":"Jordan Hansford, Santosh Valvi, Jasper de Boer, Geoff McCowage, Dinisha Govender, Maria Kirby, David Ziegler, Neevika Manoharan, Timothy Hassall, Brandon Wainwright, Frank Alvaro, Paul J Wood, David Eisenstat, Dong Anh Khuong Quang, Misty Jenkins, Matthew Dun, Stephen J Laughton, Raelene Endersby, Andrew Dodgshun, Nicholas Gottardo","doi":"10.5694/mja2.52506","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Each year, approximately 1000 children in Australia and New Zealand, aged 0–14 years, are diagnosed with cancer. Despite paediatric cancer accounting for less than 1% of all cancer cases, the impact on their families and communities is profound and disproportionate.<span><sup>1-3</sup></span> Paediatric brain cancers are the most significant cause of cancer-related deaths within this age group, responsible for 40% of fatalities despite representing only 14% of diagnoses.<span><sup>2</sup></span> Although significant advances in paediatric cancer treatments have pushed overall cure rates above 80%, the outlook for many brain tumour types remains bleak.<span><sup>4</sup></span> Moreover, survivors often face lifelong clinical sequelae that severely diminish their quality of life,<span><sup>5</sup></span> with 60% of survivors unable to reach independence in adulthood.<span><sup>6</sup></span> This stark reality underscores the need for the expansion of clinical trials and integrated preclinical research aimed at improving outcomes for these individuals.</p><p>Conducting clinical trials in paediatric oncology faces many challenges, notably in regions with small populations spread across large geographic areas. Additional challenges include the rarity of each diagnosis, requiring international collaboration for patient accrual within feasible timelines.<span><sup>7-9</sup></span> The limited duration and availability of grant funding complicates this, as the time for patient accrual and the generation of meaningful outcome data often surpasses funding periods. The specificity of diagnoses and the need for complex, multi-agent therapies reduce the appeal of these trials to pharmaceutical companies, which favour single-drug therapies. This necessitates consistent funding to maintain a skilled workforce in clinical trial conduct and monitoring. In this context, the Australian and New Zealand Children's Haematology/Oncology Group (ANZCHOG) and the Australian Brain Cancer Mission (ABCM)<span><sup>10</sup></span> have been addressing these challenges. By strategically deploying funds and fostering collaborations, ABCM and ANZCHOG have tackled the barriers that hinder clinical trial execution. ABCM provides the financial support needed for partnerships and trial capacity enhancement. ANZCHOG leads in navigating the challenges of paediatric oncology trials, building a network that overcomes logistical and financial constraints to facilitate progress and discovery.</p><p>Initiated in 2017 with the targeted mission of enhancing brain cancer outcomes, the ABCM strategically mobilises resources, collaborations and research with the goal to double brain cancer survival rates.<span><sup>10</sup></span> This mission is supported by a detailed strategic framework, blending substantial financial backing with extensive stakeholder engagement and a co-funded model that unites government, philanthropic and private sectors. This strategy not only amplifies research funding but also fosters collaborative efforts across disciplines and borders, positioning it as a pioneering model for supporting rare cancers (Box 1).<span><sup>11</sup></span> Complementing this aim, the ANZCHOG Central Nervous System (CNS) Tumour Group was established to lead the prioritisation of research areas, creating a clinical trial development pipeline that encompasses the stages of identification, development and funding application for trials (Box 2). This vision aims to unlock new therapeutic avenues.<span><sup>12-16</sup></span> By harnessing a multidisciplinary approach and leveraging the ABCM, ANZCHOG's goal is to overcome the persistent challenges facing paediatric brain cancer treatment and research.</p><p>Limited funding for paediatric brain tumour research, alongside challenges in complex trial execution for rare diseases, has hindered progress in paediatric brain cancer. The ABCM's introduction of a focused funding model, that prioritises international collaboration, combined with ANZCHOG's strategic planning, marked a shift towards a unified strategy. The collaboration between ABCM and ANZCHOG CNS Tumour Group has led to the initiation of or expansion to additional sites of 11 clinical trials (Box 3). These trials, addressing various tumour types including newly diagnosed and recurrent cases, signify a move forward in the field, demonstrating the impact of collaborative efforts to surpass traditional research barriers.<span><sup>17</sup></span></p><p>The scope of these trials is broad, ranging from testing innovative treatments to improve cognitive and neurological benefits, as well as the quality of life of survivors. Each trial serves not only as a key source of insights into the disease mechanisms but also as a fundamental opportunity for direct patient benefit, potentially paving the way for the discovery of new therapeutic targets. An example of ABCM's impact is the conduct of trials such as SJ-ELiOT, which leveraged the mission's funding to translate Australian research through international collaboration into potential new treatments.<span><sup>17</sup></span> Additionally, the establishment of trials such as COZMOS (NCT03206021) and INFORM2 NivEnt (NCT03838042), funded through the ABCM, has been pivotal. COZMOS evaluated new combinational treatment protocols designed to improve survival rates for children with aggressive brain cancers, while INFORM2 NivEnt pioneers a precision medicine approach, tailoring treatments based on the genetic characteristics of individual tumours.</p><p>ANZCHOG's involvement in international consortia has significantly expanded, from our existing collaborations with international cooperative groups such as the Children's Oncology Group (COG)<span><sup>8</sup></span> and the International Society of Paediatric Oncology (SIOP),<span><sup>9</sup></span> with an additional six new partnerships (Box 3). This has allowed Australian and New Zealand children access to an increased number of global clinical trials, especially innovative early phase trials. This international dimension ensures that Australasian paediatric oncology remains at the forefront of global research efforts, benefiting from and contributing to worldwide advances in the field.</p><p>This portfolio of trials is a testament to the strategic planning of the ANZCHOG CNS Tumour Group and the ABCM. It underscores the critical importance of infrastructure funding in enabling the execution of complex clinical trials, and highlights the essential role of international collaboration in enhancing the scope and impact of research efforts. Through these collaborative initiatives, the barriers to clinical trial participation have been significantly lowered, allowing for broader access to innovative treatments. Also, high participation in clinical trials has led to the standardisation of treatment protocols, playing a key role in the improved survival rates seen in paediatric cancers.<span><sup>18</sup></span></p><p>Despite the strides made in paediatric brain cancer clinical trials, facilitated by the collaborative efforts of the ABCM and the ANZCHOG CNS Tumour Group, the path forward is fraught with operational and logistical challenges. Resource constraints remain a significant hurdle, with about 67% of clinical research staff funding derived from external, non-operational resources (ANZCHOG data), highlighting a dependency on philanthropy and external grants for sustainability.</p><p>The transient nature of funding, with a significant portion of clinical research associates and clinical research nurses operating on short term contracts, exacerbates the challenges of recruitment and retention, leading to an exodus to industry and hindering the agility and continuity of clinical trial operations. These challenges underscore the necessity for sustained and strategic funding mechanisms that go beyond the ABCM, to maintain the current momentum.</p><p>The need for diverse treatment options, particularly investigational therapies when standard care falls short, underscores the importance of sustained and increased investment in research and clinical trials. Such commitment is vital to fulfill community expectations for accessible clinical trials, especially for conditions with challenging prognoses, ensuring families can find hope without the burden of seeking treatments abroad. The achievements to date, underpinned by strategic collaboration and targeted funding, serve as an example of what is possible. To build on this progress, it is essential to navigate the existing challenges with innovative funding models, regulatory agility and strengthened international partnerships. The goal is to create a continuously funded ecosystem that not only advances paediatric brain cancer research but also inspires similar initiatives across the broader paediatric oncology community. This vision is both aspirational and achievable, with continuous investment acting as the catalyst for a new era of clinical trial success, ultimately transforming the lives of these children and families.</p><p>No relevant disclosures.</p><p>Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.</p>","PeriodicalId":18214,"journal":{"name":"Medical Journal of Australia","volume":"221 10","pages":"520-523"},"PeriodicalIF":6.7000,"publicationDate":"2024-11-07","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.5694/mja2.52506","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Medical Journal of Australia","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.5694/mja2.52506","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Each year, approximately 1000 children in Australia and New Zealand, aged 0–14 years, are diagnosed with cancer. Despite paediatric cancer accounting for less than 1% of all cancer cases, the impact on their families and communities is profound and disproportionate.1-3 Paediatric brain cancers are the most significant cause of cancer-related deaths within this age group, responsible for 40% of fatalities despite representing only 14% of diagnoses.2 Although significant advances in paediatric cancer treatments have pushed overall cure rates above 80%, the outlook for many brain tumour types remains bleak.4 Moreover, survivors often face lifelong clinical sequelae that severely diminish their quality of life,5 with 60% of survivors unable to reach independence in adulthood.6 This stark reality underscores the need for the expansion of clinical trials and integrated preclinical research aimed at improving outcomes for these individuals.
Conducting clinical trials in paediatric oncology faces many challenges, notably in regions with small populations spread across large geographic areas. Additional challenges include the rarity of each diagnosis, requiring international collaboration for patient accrual within feasible timelines.7-9 The limited duration and availability of grant funding complicates this, as the time for patient accrual and the generation of meaningful outcome data often surpasses funding periods. The specificity of diagnoses and the need for complex, multi-agent therapies reduce the appeal of these trials to pharmaceutical companies, which favour single-drug therapies. This necessitates consistent funding to maintain a skilled workforce in clinical trial conduct and monitoring. In this context, the Australian and New Zealand Children's Haematology/Oncology Group (ANZCHOG) and the Australian Brain Cancer Mission (ABCM)10 have been addressing these challenges. By strategically deploying funds and fostering collaborations, ABCM and ANZCHOG have tackled the barriers that hinder clinical trial execution. ABCM provides the financial support needed for partnerships and trial capacity enhancement. ANZCHOG leads in navigating the challenges of paediatric oncology trials, building a network that overcomes logistical and financial constraints to facilitate progress and discovery.
Initiated in 2017 with the targeted mission of enhancing brain cancer outcomes, the ABCM strategically mobilises resources, collaborations and research with the goal to double brain cancer survival rates.10 This mission is supported by a detailed strategic framework, blending substantial financial backing with extensive stakeholder engagement and a co-funded model that unites government, philanthropic and private sectors. This strategy not only amplifies research funding but also fosters collaborative efforts across disciplines and borders, positioning it as a pioneering model for supporting rare cancers (Box 1).11 Complementing this aim, the ANZCHOG Central Nervous System (CNS) Tumour Group was established to lead the prioritisation of research areas, creating a clinical trial development pipeline that encompasses the stages of identification, development and funding application for trials (Box 2). This vision aims to unlock new therapeutic avenues.12-16 By harnessing a multidisciplinary approach and leveraging the ABCM, ANZCHOG's goal is to overcome the persistent challenges facing paediatric brain cancer treatment and research.
Limited funding for paediatric brain tumour research, alongside challenges in complex trial execution for rare diseases, has hindered progress in paediatric brain cancer. The ABCM's introduction of a focused funding model, that prioritises international collaboration, combined with ANZCHOG's strategic planning, marked a shift towards a unified strategy. The collaboration between ABCM and ANZCHOG CNS Tumour Group has led to the initiation of or expansion to additional sites of 11 clinical trials (Box 3). These trials, addressing various tumour types including newly diagnosed and recurrent cases, signify a move forward in the field, demonstrating the impact of collaborative efforts to surpass traditional research barriers.17
The scope of these trials is broad, ranging from testing innovative treatments to improve cognitive and neurological benefits, as well as the quality of life of survivors. Each trial serves not only as a key source of insights into the disease mechanisms but also as a fundamental opportunity for direct patient benefit, potentially paving the way for the discovery of new therapeutic targets. An example of ABCM's impact is the conduct of trials such as SJ-ELiOT, which leveraged the mission's funding to translate Australian research through international collaboration into potential new treatments.17 Additionally, the establishment of trials such as COZMOS (NCT03206021) and INFORM2 NivEnt (NCT03838042), funded through the ABCM, has been pivotal. COZMOS evaluated new combinational treatment protocols designed to improve survival rates for children with aggressive brain cancers, while INFORM2 NivEnt pioneers a precision medicine approach, tailoring treatments based on the genetic characteristics of individual tumours.
ANZCHOG's involvement in international consortia has significantly expanded, from our existing collaborations with international cooperative groups such as the Children's Oncology Group (COG)8 and the International Society of Paediatric Oncology (SIOP),9 with an additional six new partnerships (Box 3). This has allowed Australian and New Zealand children access to an increased number of global clinical trials, especially innovative early phase trials. This international dimension ensures that Australasian paediatric oncology remains at the forefront of global research efforts, benefiting from and contributing to worldwide advances in the field.
This portfolio of trials is a testament to the strategic planning of the ANZCHOG CNS Tumour Group and the ABCM. It underscores the critical importance of infrastructure funding in enabling the execution of complex clinical trials, and highlights the essential role of international collaboration in enhancing the scope and impact of research efforts. Through these collaborative initiatives, the barriers to clinical trial participation have been significantly lowered, allowing for broader access to innovative treatments. Also, high participation in clinical trials has led to the standardisation of treatment protocols, playing a key role in the improved survival rates seen in paediatric cancers.18
Despite the strides made in paediatric brain cancer clinical trials, facilitated by the collaborative efforts of the ABCM and the ANZCHOG CNS Tumour Group, the path forward is fraught with operational and logistical challenges. Resource constraints remain a significant hurdle, with about 67% of clinical research staff funding derived from external, non-operational resources (ANZCHOG data), highlighting a dependency on philanthropy and external grants for sustainability.
The transient nature of funding, with a significant portion of clinical research associates and clinical research nurses operating on short term contracts, exacerbates the challenges of recruitment and retention, leading to an exodus to industry and hindering the agility and continuity of clinical trial operations. These challenges underscore the necessity for sustained and strategic funding mechanisms that go beyond the ABCM, to maintain the current momentum.
The need for diverse treatment options, particularly investigational therapies when standard care falls short, underscores the importance of sustained and increased investment in research and clinical trials. Such commitment is vital to fulfill community expectations for accessible clinical trials, especially for conditions with challenging prognoses, ensuring families can find hope without the burden of seeking treatments abroad. The achievements to date, underpinned by strategic collaboration and targeted funding, serve as an example of what is possible. To build on this progress, it is essential to navigate the existing challenges with innovative funding models, regulatory agility and strengthened international partnerships. The goal is to create a continuously funded ecosystem that not only advances paediatric brain cancer research but also inspires similar initiatives across the broader paediatric oncology community. This vision is both aspirational and achievable, with continuous investment acting as the catalyst for a new era of clinical trial success, ultimately transforming the lives of these children and families.
期刊介绍:
The Medical Journal of Australia (MJA) stands as Australia's foremost general medical journal, leading the dissemination of high-quality research and commentary to shape health policy and influence medical practices within the country. Under the leadership of Professor Virginia Barbour, the expert editorial team at MJA is dedicated to providing authors with a constructive and collaborative peer-review and publication process. Established in 1914, the MJA has evolved into a modern journal that upholds its founding values, maintaining a commitment to supporting the medical profession by delivering high-quality and pertinent information essential to medical practice.