The Commercial Appeal

Priorities set for Biden’s cancer initiative

- By Lauran Neergaard

Associated Press

A new report outlines a scientific road map for the White House’s cancer “moonshot” initiative — urging research to harness the power of immune-based therapy, and to better tailor treatment by helping more patients get their tumors geneticall­y profiled.

Those are among a list of recommenda­tions issued Wednesday by a panel of cancer experts and patient advocates advising the moonshot project on ways to speed progress against the nation’s No. 2 killer.

Also on the list: Learning what drives childhood cancer, finding ways to minimize the side effects of treatment, and making better use of some proven anti-cancer strategies. For example, about 3 percent of colorectal cancers are fueled by certain inherited genetic mutations — and the report proposes a pilot project to test all newly diagnosed patients so the relatives of those who harbor the defects could learn if they, too, are at risk.

The recommenda­tions mark “a bold but feasible scientific proposal,” said Dr. Doug Lowy, acting director of the National Cancer Institute, who will send the panel’s report to Vice President Joe Biden’s cancer moonshot task force.

Biden proposed the moonshot idea after his son, Beau, died of brain cancer in 2015. President Barack Obama has requested about $1 billion over two years for the project. Whether Congress provides funding will determine how Wednesday’s recommenda­tions move forward.

The goal: Target research areas that specialist­s find most promising.

Immunother­apy, for example, is transformi­ng care for some hard-to-treat kinds of cancer, and often is less toxic than standard chemothera­py. But scientists don’t understand why it works for some patients and not others. To try to uncover why, the report urges creating a national clinical trial network for immunother­apy.

Likewise, scientists have long known that genetic difference­s inside tumors help explain why one person’s cancer is more aggressive than another’s, and why treatments work better for one patient than the next. Increasing­ly, major cancer centers are “profiling” patients’ tumors to help guide treatment.

The moonshot report recommends creating a national network to give more patients around the country access to tumor profiling. Those patients also would be able to share their genetic data with researcher­s, and volunteer for cutting-edge clinical trials of treatments that match their genetics.

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