| Literature DB >> 26635899 |
Andrea DeCensi1, Mangesh A Thorat2, Bernardo Bonanni3, Samuel G Smith4, Jack Cuzick5.
Abstract
The global cancer burden continues to rise and the war on cancer can only be won if improvements in treatment go hand in hand with therapeutic cancer prevention. Despite the availability of several efficacious agents, utilisation of preventive therapy has been poor due to various barriers, such as the lack of physician and patient awareness, fear of side effects, and licensing and indemnity issues. In this review, we discuss these barriers in detail and propose strategies to overcome them. These strategies include improving physician awareness and countering prejudices by highlighting the important differences between preventive therapy and cancer treatment. The importance of the agent-biomarker-cohort (ABC) paradigm to improve effectiveness of preventive therapy cannot be overemphasised. Future research to improve therapeutic cancer prevention needs to include improvements in the prediction of benefits and harms, and improvements in the safety profile of existing agents by experimentation with dose. We also highlight the role of drug repurposing for providing new agents as well as to address the current imbalance between therapeutic and preventive research. In order to move the field of therapeutic cancer prevention forwards, engagement with policymakers to correct research imbalance as well as to remove practical obstacles to implementation is also urgently needed.Entities:
Keywords: SERMs; aspirin; biomarkers; breast cancer; cancer; drug repurposing; preventive therapy
Year: 2015 PMID: 26635899 PMCID: PMC4664508 DOI: 10.3332/ecancer.2015.595
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecancermedicalscience ISSN: 1754-6605
Figure 1.Combination strategy to reduce breast cancer burden worldwide.
Barriers to preventive therapy and strategies to overcome these barriers.
| Barriers | Strategies to overcome barriers |
|---|---|
| Physicians’ lack of knowledge/prejudices. | Increasing physician awareness and countering prejudices. |
| Individual’s lack of knowledge. | Improving physician–patient communication and information sharing; educational interventions. |
| Individual’s fear of side effects. | Exploring re-purposing of commonly used agents with well-documented safety profile. |
| Underestimation of benefits and/or overestimation of harms. |
Acknowledging different needs of risk prediction for different diseases and agents. Refining risk prediction and risk communication. Development of biomarkers that can be frequently monitored by non-invasive means. |
| Adverse effects of agents. | Exploring strategies to reduce adverse effects, e.g., dosing |
| Lack of well-proven agents for several cancers. | Increased focus on preventive research, particularly in academia. |
| Licensing and off-label use issues. | Policy engagement. |
Figure 2.Key elements for cancer prevention: the ABC paradigm. (From De Censi A, Discussion abstract LBA504, ASCO June 5, 2011 [51].)