J. Pouwels, S. Soidinsalo, Heidi M. Haikala, P. Jaakola, T. Jalava, H. Joensuu, M. Mustonen, P. Korhonen, P. Kovanen, A. Lehtonen, J. Mattson, O. Monni, J. Westermarck, J. Klefström
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background. Cancer clinical trials seek to determine the safety and efficacy of new treatment modalities. Due to the impact of cancer clinical trials on health care, economic activity and cancer research, many large-scale efforts have been undertaken around the world to create clinical trial-facilitating environments. The Nordic countries (Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Iceland and Finland) are among the countries with the highest 5-year net survival for cancer patients, which is a testimony to their high standard of early diagnosis, cancer care and functional public health care system. However, the contribution of the Nordic countries to the international cancer clinical trial landscape has remained largely unexplored. Methods. We mined www.clinicaltrials.gov for cancer clinical trials starting between the 1st of January 2000 and the 31st of December 2017. Trials were designated Cancer Clinical Trials if the trial indication contained one of 17 cancer-specific words (e.g. “cancer”, “neoplasia”, “malignancy”). The trial databases of all European Free Trade Association (EFTA; the EU, Switzerland, Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein) countries was downloaded and subsequently mined for specific terms, i.e. cancer indication, study location and intervention type. A trial was counted for every country with a study center and thus the same trial can be counted for multiple countries. Results. Here, we present an analysis of the cancer clinical trial landscape in the EFTA and the Nordic countries. While in the EFTA the number of cancer clinical trials strongly increased from 2000-2014, that number has not grown between 2014 and 2017, unlike in the USA or China. Comparison of the number of cancer clinical trials in different EFTA countries showed strong variation, and indicated that Sweden, Finland and Norway have been involved in far fewer cancer clinical trials than expected for countries of their economic size or socio-economic status. Denmark is the only Nordic country to perform much better than the EFTA average. Discussion. We show that despite a high standard of care, most Nordic countries are lagging behind in cancer clinical trials compared to countries of similar socio-economic stature. This low number of cancer clinical trials may slow down uptake of new cancer drugs to routine care, prevent patients from receiving state-of-the-art therapies, increase health care costs, and inhibit scientific progress and commercial activity. We provide recommended actions to increase the number of cancer clinical trials, with special focus on Finland as part of the national growth strategy in the health sector. Note: This abstract was not presented at the meeting. Citation Format: Jeroen Pouwels, Sebastian Soidinsalo, Heidi Haikala, Panu Jaakola, Tarja Jalava, Heikki Joensuu, Mika Mustonen, Pasi Korhonen, Panu Kovanen, Anne Lehtonen, Johanna Mattson, Outi Monni, Jukka Westermarck, Juha Klefstrom. The cancer clinical trial landscape in the EU and the Nordic countries [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2019; 2019 Mar 29-Apr 3; Atlanta, GA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2019;79(13 Suppl):Abstract nr LB-251.
背景。癌症临床试验旨在确定新的治疗方式的安全性和有效性。由于癌症临床试验对医疗保健、经济活动和癌症研究的影响,世界各地已经进行了许多大规模的努力来创造促进临床试验的环境。北欧国家(挪威、瑞典、丹麦、冰岛和芬兰)是癌症患者5年净生存率最高的国家之一,这证明了它们的早期诊断、癌症护理和功能性公共卫生保健系统的高标准。然而,北欧国家对国际癌症临床试验的贡献在很大程度上仍未被探索。方法。我们从2000年1月1日至2017年12月31日之间的癌症临床试验中挖掘www.clinicaltrials.gov。如果试验指征包含17个癌症特异性词汇之一(如“癌症”、“肿瘤”、“恶性肿瘤”),则试验被指定为癌症临床试验。所有欧洲自由贸易联盟(欧洲自由贸易联盟)试验数据库;下载了欧盟(EU)、瑞士、挪威、冰岛和列支敦士登(Liechtenstein)国家的数据,然后根据具体条件进行挖掘,即癌症适应症、研究地点和干预类型。每个有研究中心的国家都计算一次试验,因此可以计算多个国家的同一试验。结果。在这里,我们对欧洲自由贸易联盟和北欧国家的癌症临床试验情况进行了分析。虽然欧洲自由贸易联盟的癌症临床试验数量从2000年到2014年大幅增加,但与美国或中国不同,2014年至2017年期间,这一数字没有增长。对不同欧洲自由贸易联盟国家癌症临床试验数量的比较显示出很大的差异,并表明瑞典、芬兰和挪威参与的癌症临床试验远远少于其经济规模或社会经济地位国家的预期。丹麦是唯一一个表现远高于欧洲自由贸易联盟平均水平的北欧国家。讨论。我们表明,尽管有高标准的护理,大多数北欧国家在癌症临床试验方面落后于具有类似社会经济地位的国家。如此少的癌症临床试验可能会减缓新的癌症药物在常规护理中的应用,使患者无法接受最先进的治疗,增加医疗保健费用,并抑制科学进步和商业活动。我们提供了增加癌症临床试验数量的建议行动,特别关注芬兰,将其作为卫生部门国家增长战略的一部分。注:本摘要未在会议上提交。引文格式:Jeroen Pouwels, Sebastian Soidinsalo, Heidi Haikala, Panu Jaakola, Tarja Jalava, Heikki Joensuu, Mika Mustonen, Pasi Korhonen, Panu Kovanen, Anne Lehtonen, Johanna Mattson, Outi Monni, Jukka Westermarck, Juha Klefstrom。欧盟和北欧国家的癌症临床试验前景[摘要]。摘自:2019年美国癌症研究协会年会论文集;2019年3月29日至4月3日;亚特兰大,乔治亚州。费城(PA): AACR;癌症杂志,2019;79(13增刊):摘要nr LB-251。