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Candlelighters Childhood Cancer Foundation

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32 years of serving families information resource, referrals, and support. ... The childhood cancer population is a small community in number, but large in ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Candlelighters Childhood Cancer Foundation


1
Candlelighters Childhood Cancer Foundation
  • FDA
  • ODAC Subcommittee
  • October 17, 2002

2
Patient/Family Perspective
  • Not derived from a formal survey
  • Prospective survey possible
  • Shared perspective
  • Personal experience
  • parent of child with AML (1987)
  • professional interactions with thousands of
    families.

3
Constituency
  • Candlelighters National Office
  • 32 years of serving families information
    resource, referrals, and support.
  • 6,000 phone calls/year
  • 14,000 email queries/year
  • 155,000 web site visitors/year
  • (1.5 million hits).

4
Specific Inquiries
  • Approximately HALF queries
  • Clinical trial information, availability
  • Institutional referrals
  • Referral to disease specialists

5
HopeLink
  • HopeLink clinical trial search engine on website
    (www.candlelighters.org)
  • 385 childhood cancer trials listed, currently
    open for enrollment.
  • Comprehensive trial listings standard and
    medical formats
  • eligibility criteria
  • investigative site locations
  • contact information

6
Hope
  • When the doctor explained to us about Melissa's
    leukemia, he said that APML is incurable and its
    very rare and very deadly. Can you give us hope?

7
What do families want?
  • Magic bullet to cure child with resistant
    disease
  • Options for therapies
  • Neuroblastoma IV
  • Brain tumors
  • Metastatic solid tumors
  • AML

8
  • The childhood cancer population is a small
    community in number, but large in spirit and used
    to success. The clinical trial process is what
    has brought pediatric oncology the cures that
    give hope and help to parents and survivors, and
    has created a foundation of trust upon which to
    build improved and novel treatments.
  • Grace Monaco, Founder CCCF

9
Timing Access to New Drugs
  • Use of new drugs in recurrent/refractory cases
  • Accurate information built on foundation of
    trust
  • Relative safety.
  • Pre-clinical models, animal testing, adult
    testing.
  • Probable tumor response
  • Possible magic bullet/cure vs. actual small
    percentage response rate to Phase I trials.
  • Side effects of treatment
  • Impact on quality of life at probable end of
    life.

10
Balance in Decision Making
  • Feedback from families in phase 1 trial
    experiences (end of life)
  • Need for greater information
  • Issue of option of treatment-free death
  • Physician should discuss
  • Ending treatment does not mean You are a bad
    parent.
  • Ending treatment is not giving up.
  • No heroic requirement to go down fighting.

11
  • To keep the pediatric patient lot improving, the
    cures growing and the effects of therapy on
    quality
  • of life, particularly in the hard to handle
    cancers, we need to innovate within the careful,
    patient-centered model that pediatricians have
    always utilized.
  • Grace Monaco

12
Barriers to phase 1 pediatric
  • Industry often un-enthusiastic
  • Rare pediatric-specific tumor types
  • Small childhood populations
  • Problematic access to clinical trial
    information
  • Health insurance/billing concerns
  • Centralized trial information

13
Innovations Pediatric Tumors
  • Perception/action on phase 1 drugs may evolve
  • Disparate adult/child tumor types will show
    similar drug-responsive pathways
  • Adult CML vs. pediatric medulloblastoma Gleevec
  • Emphasis on cross-correlation of genome anatomies
    (adult, pediatric)
  • mRNA expression profiles
  • Genomic DNA somatic mutations
  • Ensure that pediatric tumors represented in
    Cancer Genome Anatomy Program (CGAP) and other
    genomic initiatives.

14
Adult phase 1 prior to kids?
  • There is no reason that the pediatric oncology
    community should wait for results from any adult
    trial before designing their own Phase Is and
    pilots for the use of new and old agents in
    pediatric oncology.
  • Grace Monaco

15
Adult phase 1 before kids?
  • In some cases?
  • Basis for dose initiation
  • reduce under-dosing/over-dosing of phase I trials
  • Safety testing

16
Small Pediatric Population
  • Formalize coordination of US Adult Cooperative
    Group Clinical Trial Studies and
    COG/Academic/Pharmacy Child Studies for
    Simultaneous Access
  • Yearly joint symposium on phase 1 trials
  • Address Phase 1/in conjunction with palliative
    care Discussions/documents/consents/assents
  • Address Emerging targeted pathways shared by
    tumors (sub-committees/consortia, data sharing)

17
Small Pediatric Population
  • IF pediatrics is to benefit from greater numbers
    of adult phase 1 trials
  • Need much better participation of adults in adult
    trials
  • US adult participation in cancer clinical trials
    5
  • Canadian adult participation 65
  • Canadian adult cancer patients gt90 adults
    treated at Comprehensive Cancer Centers

18
Innovations continued
  • I am writing on behalf on my friend's sick
    child. Could you please send me some information
    on international treatment resources available
    for a child who has leukemia, acute lymphoblastic
    form. This is a boy and he lives in Ukraine.
    Resources are limited there, but I heard that in
    Russia some clinics successfully treat this
    disease. If you need more information about him,
    please let me know. Please, help us to find a
    way to help the child.

19
Innovations continued
  • Increase collaborative international research
    through international clinical trial
    participation
  • (Internationally, only 1 in 5 children have
    access to childhood cancer treatment.)

20
Access to Information
  • Utilization of common, comprehensive
    child-specific clinical trial information service
    by academia, COG, individual institutions and
    industry.
  • Funding of such clinical trial information
    services (such as HopeLink).

21
"Life isn't measured by the number of breaths we
take, but by the moments that take our breath
away."
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