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Framingham, MA – August
24, 2006 – Breakthroughs in the fight against cancer happen every day,
it is a rapidly changing field that offers new hope to people who have
cancer. New prevention measures and treatment
methods are being identified, and new medications, procedures, and
therapies are constantly being developed.
Such
discoveries are often made thanks to clinical research trials. In fact,
most current treatments and protocols began as clinical trials.
Clinical trials look for better ways to prevent, screen for, diagnose,
and treat cancer, as well as betters ways to control symptoms of the
disease. Locally, cancer patients at MetroWest Medical Center (MWMC)
have access to a wide range of national clinical trials offering
practices not yet available to the general public.
“Advancements
in medicine and science frequently stem from new ideas and approaches
developed through research,” said Director of MetroWest Medical
Center’s Cancer Care Center. “A clinical trial involving human beings
is one of the final steps in a long, carefully orchestrated research
process. Laboratory results do not always transfer precisely to the
human population … therefore, when laboratory findings point to
promising results, the next logical step is to test the findings on
humans in a safe, controlled approach.”
At
MetroWest Medical Center, physicians are able to enter eligible
patients in some of the country’s top oncology clinical trials. MWMC’s
affiliation with Boston’s Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center adds to
the number and types of trials available to residents of the MetroWest
area. These trials target a variety of cancers, including lung, breast,
and rectal cancers.
Not
every clinical study results in a new and better cancer treatment, and
not every patient is eligible to take part in a clinical trial. Every
participant may not always benefit personally from being included in a
clinical trial. There is no guarantee, but the potential and the
possibility is there. And the hope is there.
“It
is important to remember that the researchers involved in a study have
strong reason to believe that the treatment being offered is as good
as, or better than, current treatments.” "Whether a study determines
that a potential treatment is more successful than current treatments
or that it is not, the outcome always tells us something important,
something constructive. Without human clinical trials, there would be
no way to determine the viability of new treatments.”
The
decision to participate in a clinical trail should be weighed
carefully. It is a decision that must be made between an informed
patient and physician. For more information about the clinical trials
offered through MetroWest Medical Center, call 508-383-8529. A physician referral is necessary.
MetroWest
Medical Center’s Cancer Care Center provides state-of-the-art
prevention, diagnostic, treatment, and support services for local
cancer patients and their families, including access to an extensive
range of both treatment and prevention trials conducted by nationally
recognized research groups. These groups include Cancer and Leukemia
Group B (CALGB), Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG), Eastern
Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG), and the National Surgical Adjuvant
Breast & Bowel Project (NSABP).
MWMC
was one of the initial sites selected by the National Cancer Institute
(NCI) to participate in both the Clinical Trails Support Unit (CTSU)
and National Cancer Institute Central Investigational Review Board
Project (NCICIRB).
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