Cancer researchers push to unlock biospecimen sharing for faster drug discovery
A coalition of 53 cancer researchers and patient advocates identifies major barriers preventing hospitals and clinical trials from sharing tumor samples and patient data—roadblocks that slow the development of targeted cancer treatments. Removing these obstacles could accelerate personalized medicine and reduce time-to-market for new therapies.
Originaltitel: Enhancing Clinical Cancer Research Through Sharing of Data and Biospecimens
This Special Communication describes obstacles to sharing data and biospecimens and proposes strategies to enhance access and collaboration. ImportanceMolecular analyses of biospecimens collected from study participants are essential for identifying biomarkers that can tailor treatments to specific subsets of patients who are most likely to benefit. Sharing of data and biospecimens from clinical trials enables personalized, patient-centric use of cancer therapies and accelerates the development of new treatments.ObjectiveTo describe obstacles to sharing data and biospecimens and to propose strategies to enhance access and collaboration.Evidence ReviewThis is a Special Communication authored by 53 academic investigators and patient representatives from the breast cancer community with extensive experience in conducting clinical and translational research. The article also evaluates the impact of biomarker research on specifying responsive subpopulations in the 29 registrational clinical trials that have led to approval of a new drug for treatment of breast cancer between 2017 and 2024.FindingsClinical trial participants are increasingly asked to provide tissue and/or body fluid biospecimens for biomarker research that is typically controlled by the sponsoring pharmaceutical company, but published biomarker studies are rare. Among 29 breast cancer registrational studies reported in the past 8 years, none resulted in biomarker research that restricted a drug's approved indication. Herein, strategies to maximize the value of clinical data and biospecimens contributed by participants are proposed, thereby supporting the shared goals of the pharmaceutical industry and academia to improve patient care. These strategies include (1) establishing coleadership structures involving academia and patients in clinical trial design and conduct, (2) ensuring that informed consent forms state that data and biospecimens will be shared with academia for future research, (3) requiring the sharing of clinical data as a condition for regulatory approval, and (4) enabling access to biospecimens and translational research data for independent studies on biomarkers that may indicate drug efficacy and toxicity.Conclusions and RelevanceData and biospecimen sharing from registrational trials has been suboptimal. Improving clinical data, biospecimens, and biospecimens' related data sharing requires concrete actions and a multidimensional stakeholder approach to accelerate the impact of clinical cancer research on the quality of patient care.