New alliance to develop programme of lung cancer trials

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stethoscope and x-ray

Leading research institutions and hospitals across London have announced plans to transform lung cancer care with a programme of clinical trials.

The initiative is being backed by the Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, and England’s Chief Medical Officer, Professor Dame Sally C Davies.

The launch of the London Lung Cancer Alliance aims to deliver dramatic benefits for patients in London, nationally and worldwide – through collaboration, coordination and an ambition to give every patient access to a trial suitable for them.

Member organisations plan a programme of research that will ultimately make trials of cutting-edge personalised therapies available to up to 3,000 patients a year newly diagnosed with lung cancer across the capital.

Lung cancer is the second most commonly diagnosed cancer in the UK after breast cancer, with 42,000 new cases in 2010. Survival rates in the UK are distressingly low and worse than in much of Europe.  Less than 10 per cent of patients are still alive five years after diagnosis.

The Alliance forms a roll call of leading London research institutions and hospitals:

Patients with lung cancer across London will be included in the unique research programme, which will cover the entire lung cancer pathway from the identification and screening of those at risk through to end-stage disease. The London Lung Cancer Alliance will also link up with five other cities across the UK.

This alliance gives us an outstanding opportunity for our leading scientists to work together across the capital to change the face of lung cancer in the UK, and to translate these discoveries into life-saving care for our patients.

– Professor Michael Seckl

Department of Surgery and Cancer

Researchers will genetically profile tumours and test a panel of targeted therapies – many previously untried in lung cancer - in those with particular molecular defects. They will also develop ‘liquid biopsy’ blood tests for patients who are too ill to biopsy, or to monitor whether drugs are working and assess for signs of resistance.

Under the plans, all patients within a six-million catchment area in London, along with those in Newcastle, Southampton, Liverpool, Cardiff and Edinburgh, will eventually be offered gene testing of their cancers at diagnosis. As many patients as possible will then be offered one of a panel of targeted therapies matched to their cancer’s particular molecular defects.

Professor Alan Ashworth, Chair of the London Lung Cancer Alliance and Chief Executive of The Institute of Cancer Research, said: “For far too long the prospects for patients with lung cancer have been bleak. But now we have an opportunity to change that as new genetic techniques for studying tumours open up the prospect of trialling novel targeted therapies for lung cancer.

“The London Lung Cancer Alliance has brought together leading organisations across London with the aim of applying state-of-the-art technology to radically shake up the way we treat lung cancer. We believe that this new alliance will genuinely improve the prospects for lung cancer patients.”

Professor Michael Seckl, Head of Molecular Oncology at Imperial College London and an oncology consultant at Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, said: “This alliance gives us an outstanding opportunity for our leading scientists to work together across the capital to change the face of lung cancer in the UK, and to translate these discoveries into life-saving care for our patients.”

Boris Johnson, The Mayor of London, said: “London is a global leader in medical research and the life sciences, with world-class hospitals and other institutions investigating treatments for lung cancer. By working together they are multiplying the knowledge and expertise required to develop trials of therapies targeting a disease that affects far too many people living in the capital.”

Professor Dame Sally C Davies, Chief Medical Officer for England, said: “The launch of this Alliance heralds a brighter future for lung cancer patients across London and more widely and is just the kind of collaborative initiative that we're keen to see National Institute for Health Research infrastructure support. It is only by academia, the NHS and industry working together that we can make real progress against diseases such as lung cancer, where low expectations and poor survival rates have become entrenched.”

All the organisations in the London Lung Cancer Alliance have pledged to allocate funding for the infrastructure required by the initiative, with further funding to be sought from a series of grant-giving bodies, including the Government.

The Alliance plans to work with pharmaceutical companies to make existing targeted cancer therapies available to be tested in lung cancer for the first time.

Some of these drugs are targeted at molecular defects that may only be present in a small proportion of lung cancers, which is why it is so important to include such large numbers of patients in the trial programme.

And by providing access to a wide range of treatments, it should be possible to match many patients in the trial programme to a potentially effective drug.

The Alliance also plans to focus on screening, early detection and prevention of lung cancer across high-risk groups, including patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).

(Based on a news release from the Institute of Cancer Research)

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Sam Wong

Sam Wong
School of Professional Development

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