Title: Plenary 1
1Plenary 1
- Empowerment Through Research
- Role of Patient Organizations
2Life Raft Group
- For patients with GIST (Gastrointestinal Stromal
- Tumor)
3Our MissionIs Survival
4Food for Thought
- Can we distinguish between acts of outrage that
make us feel good and acts of intervention that
actually change something ?
5Survival History of GIST
- Prior to the summer of 2000
- Most GIST patients were misdiagnosed
- The only effective treatment was surgery
- When surgery was no longer an option death was
inevitable - The summer of 2000 brought Gleevec, C-Kit
testing, and Hope - The appearance of resistance is a particularly
cruel setback - Our primary focus now is to find ways to overcome
this resistance
6Evolution of the Life Raft Group
- Informal Chat Group
- 501-C-3 Non-Profit Organization
- Extraordinary Growth
- Support and Information
- Advocacy
- Media and Outreach
- Cutting Edge Research
7Our Strategy
- To think smart enough to leverage our small
numbers and overcome the rarity of GIST - To use the combination of our own research, and
the ability to publish in our newsletter and on
our website, to carve out a seat at the decision
making table, preferably at the head of the table
8Traditional Research Approach
- Donate money to an institution in the name of
research, perhaps with a specific disease
designation - or
- General call for proposals from the research
community Individual projects are selected for
funding (typical government approach)
9Whats wrong with the traditional research
approach?
- High indirect costs from 50 to 75
- No overall strategic plan
- Poor accountability, sometimes none at all
- Individual research projects are not coordinated.
In fact they are competitive
10Whats wrong, continued
- There is little sense of urgency
- There are conflicts of interest between pharma.
companies, medical institutions and individual
researchers - And with patients needs for survival
11Lets summarize the traditional research approach
- Too costly
- Too slow
- Too inefficient
- In other words, not finding effective cancer
treatments fast enough to keep us alive - Do you remember the declaration of a war against
cancer by then President Nixon? - It was in 1971-35 years ago
12Can you imagine any other complex undertaking
being managed this way?
- Building a house?
- Conducting a symphony orchestra?
- Going to the moon?
- Constructing the first atomic bomb? I submit that
the world would still be nuclear free if we had
adopted the cancer research approach
13LRG Research Approach Our strategic thoughts
- We have very limited funds
- We have a strong sense of urgency driven by our
mission of survival - We believe that cures can only be achieved by a
profound change in the basic management of
research
14LRG Research Has Two Parallel Tracks
- GIST Treatment Resistance Initiative (topic of
the plenary session) - Patient Driven Research (topic of the workshop)
151. LRG GIST Treatment Resistance Initiative
- We intend to find the reasons for GIST treatment
resistance and the means to overcome them
16Our Mantra
- Excellence over Consensus
- Cooperation over Competition
- Strategy over Chaos
- Urgency over Lethargy
17LRG GIST Treatment Resistance
- Created a research team based upon value added
expertise and synergy, and a commitment to
principles of excellence and cooperation - Asked them to develop a strategic plan focused
upon overcoming treatment resistance and
committed two million dollars in seed money to
implement it - The entire plan can be found on our website
www.liferaftgroup.org
18LRG GIST Treatment Resistance
- Selected priority research project leaders and
awarded them an annual stipend for coordinating
research across institutional and national
boundaries - Issued first round grant awards
- Created two tissue banks
19Two Year Grant Awards
- Cristina Antonescu, MSK
- Peter Besmer, MSK
- Chris Coreless, OHSU/VA Hosp
- Maria Debiec-Rychter, Catholic Univ. Belg.
- Jonathan Fletcher, BW Hosp, Dana-Farber
- Michael Heinrich, OHSU/VA Hosp
- Matt van de Rijn, Stanford
- Brian Rubin, Univ. of Wash
20Tissue Banks
- Created two tissue banks, with emphasis upon
frozen tissues - At Memorial Sloan Kettering for pediatric GIST
- At Stanford University for adult GIST
21Added A Supportive Grants Structure
- Capped indirect costs at 0 for lt50,000 and 10
for over 50,000 - Streamlined the paper work
- Removed red flags that could slow down the
process, such as intellectual property rights - Strengthened and fast tracked the research
process with accelerated and supplemental funding - Awarded two year grants, with six month funding
cycles monitored by progress reports
22Our evaluation so far
April 18, 2006 Dear Norman, In the Life Raft
Group Research plan of action, one finds both
true dedication and conviction that can only
emerge from ones heart as well as efficiency and
professionalism It seems to me that this
combination is the best ground for successful
research and I would like to express my sincere
respect and admiration for your efforts and the
efforts of your group. I have no doubt that you
will succeed in making a significant contribution
to GIST research and provide a source of hope to
GIST patients whose disease is resistant to
existing therapies. Your truly, Dan Vasella,
M.D.
23Next Phase
- Create mechanisms for data and information
sharing - Create a clinical trials consortium
- Secure additional funding