医学
概化理论
肺癌
临床试验
纳入和排除标准
人口
癌症
重症监护医学
限制
家庭医学
替代医学
肿瘤科
内科学
病理
环境卫生
工程类
统计
机械工程
数学
作者
Patrick M. Forde,P. Bonomi,Alice T. Shaw,Gideon M. Blumenthal,Andrea Ferris,Chirag Patel,Allen S. Melemed,Upal Roy,Anuradha Ramamoorthy,Qi Liu,Timothy F. Burns,Justin F. Gainor,Christine M. Lovly,Zofia Piotrowska,Jonathan M. Lehman,Wendy Selig
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.cllc.2020.02.008
摘要
Abstract
Low rates of adult patient participation have been a persistent problem in cancer clinical trials and have continued to be a barrier to efficient drug development. The routine use of significant exclusion criteria has contributed to this problem by limiting participation in studies and creating significant clinical differences between the study cohorts and the real-world cancer patient populations. These routine exclusions also unnecessarily restrict opportunities for many patients to access potentially promising new therapies during clinical development. Multiple efforts are underway to broaden eligibility criteria, allowing more patients to enroll in studies and generating more robust data regarding the effect of novel therapies in the population at large. Focusing specifically on lung cancer as an example, a multistakeholder working group empaneled by the LUNGevity Foundation identified 14 restrictive and potentially outdated exclusion criteria that appear frequently in lung cancer clinical trials. As a part of the project, the group evaluated data from multiple recent lung cancer studies to ascertain the extent to which these 14 criteria appeared in study protocols and played a role in excluding patients (screen failures). The present report describes the working group's efforts to limit the use of these routine exclusions and presents clinical justifications for reducing the use of 14 criteria as routine exclusions in lung cancer studies, potentially expanding trial eligibility and improving the generalizability of the results from lung cancer trials.
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