Improving Endpoints for Cancer Immunotherapy Clinical Trials
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The Cancer Research Institute (CRI) Cancer Immunotherapy Consortium (CIC), the leading global initiative in advancing the emerging field of immuno-oncology, has proposed criteria for improved endpoints for cancer immunotherapy trials, which were published online on September 8 in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
These improved clinical trial endpoints help to distinguish between the effects of chemotherapy and immunotherapy and address long-needed adjustments of standard endpoints such as survival and anti-tumor response. In addition, they introduce harmonization criteria for immune response assays to help establish immune response as a biomarker in clinical trials.
Over the last six years, the CIC has worked across the community of scientists involved with cancer immunotherapy within academia, industry, and regulatory agencies, and has developed these trial endpoint recommendations based on consensus workshops and clinical and laboratory data.
Through these ongoing initiatives, the CIC facilitates progress in the field of immuno-oncology and gets closer to fulfilling its mission of making cancer immunotherapies part of the standard of care in oncology.
Axel Hoos, M.D., Ph.D., co-chairman of the CRI Cancer Immunotherapy Consortium Executive Committee and the primary author of the article, says that the adjusted clinical trial endpoints as proposed in the article better account for the clinical kinetics of cancer immunotherapies and could help investigators better evaluate their clinical effectiveness.
“A series of broad initiatives undertaken by the CRI Cancer Immunotherapy Consortium and partnering organizations between 2004 and 2009 have resulted in a new development paradigm encompassing improved clinical trial endpoints,” Hoos says. “These recommendations included new immune-related response criteria (irRC), which we put forth in an article published in the journal Clinical Cancer Research in 2009 and which may lead to broader recognition of immunotherapeutic activity in early clinical studies.
Unlike chemotherapies, which act directly and rapidly on tumors, many cancer immunotherapies in development today aim to activate patients’ immune systems, with the goal of mobilizing the body’s natural defenses to search for, recognize, and eliminate target cancer cells. Considering the time it takes for treatment-induced immunologic responses to translate into clinical activity, the survival of patients may not be affected until some months after treatment started, says Hoos, adding that the kinetics observed for survival may require new statistical approaches for planning randomized trials.
“Overall survival rather than progression-free survival and radiographic response rate is becoming the ‘gold standard’ of clinical efficacy in cancer immunotherapy trials,” says Cancer Research Institute clinical investigator and Scientific Advisory Council member Jedd D. Wolchok, M.D., Ph.D., associate director of the Ludwig Center for Cancer Immunotherapy and director of immunotherapy clinical trials at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York and a coauthor on the JNCI review article.
With the JNCI article, the CRI Cancer Immunotherapy Consortium continues to provide high-quality practical recommendations for the growing immuno-oncology community, and offers long-needed new tools to help chart a path for the successful development of cancer immunotherapies.
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About the Cancer Immunotherapy Consortium of the Cancer Research Institute
The Cancer Immunotherapy Consortium (CIC), a program of the Cancer Research Institute, is an international association of more than eighty pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies and academic institutions that share a common interest in immunotherapy research and development.
CIC’s mission is to improve patient care by making cancer immunotherapies part of the standard-of-care in oncology. CIC provides a platform that allows its stakeholders to advance the field by working together to achieve solutions to scientific and developmental challenges creating a single and powerful voice within the biomedical research community. From these collaborative, community-wide efforts, CIC has developed and published a number of landmark recommendations for practical solutions to key challenges in the field, including the development of new immune related response criteria and clinical trial endpoints for evaluation of cancer immunotherapy impact on patient health. Founded in 2002 as the Cancer Vaccine Consortium (CVC), CIC amended its name in early 2010 to represent more accurately the broader diversity of the many promising clinical developments in immune-based treatment of cancer beside vaccines, including monoclonal antibodies and other modulators of immunity. For more information, visit http://www.cancerresearch.org/consortium
About the Cancer Research Institute
The Cancer Research Institute (CRI), established in 1953, is the world’s only non-profit organization that is dedicated exclusively to transforming cancer patient care by advancing scientific efforts that are leading to new and effective immune system-based strategies to treat, control, and prevent cancer. Guided by a world-renowned Scientific Advisory Council that includes four Nobel laureates and twenty-nine members of the National Academy of Sciences, CRI has invested nearly $200 million in support of research conducted by immunologists and tumor immunologists at the world’s leading medical centers and universities, and has contributed to many of the key scientific advances that have led to the recent explosion of interest in the potential for immunotherapy to change the face of cancer treatment. To accelerate the pace of progress in the field, CRI convenes and coordinates global collaborations among academics, industry scientists and decision makers, regulatory representatives, and health research associations focused on discovery, development, and refinement of new cancer immunotherapies. A founding visionary and scientific leader in tumor immunology, CRI is helping to shape the emerging field of immuno-oncology, and is ushering in a new era of medical progress to bring more treatment options to cancer patients sooner.
The Cancer Research Institute has one of the lowest overhead expense ratios among non-profit organizations, with more than 85 percent of its resources going directly to the support of its science, medical, and research programs. CRI meets or exceeds all 20 standards of the Better Business Bureau Wise Giving Alliance, the most comprehensive U.S. charity evaluation service, and has earned the GuideStar Exchange Seal, indicating our commitment to the transparency of our organizational information to donors, funders, those we serve, the public, and regulators. CRI has also received an ‘A’ grade for fiscal disclosure and efficiency from the American Institute of Philanthropy as well as top accolades from other charity watchdog organizations.
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Source: Cancer Research Institute
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