Dying To Find Out: The Cost of Time at the Dawn of the Multicancer Early Detection Era

Author:

Klein Eric A.1ORCID,Madhavan Sarina2ORCID,Beer Tomasz M.3ORCID,Bettegowda Chetan4ORCID,Liu Minetta C.5ORCID,Hartman Anne-Renee6ORCID,Hackshaw Allan7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. 1GRAIL, Inc, and Glickman Urological and Kidney Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio.

2. 2Harvard Medical and Business School, Boston Massachusetts.

3. 3Exact Sciences Corporation and OHSU Knight Cancer Institute, Portland, Oregon.

4. 4Department of Neurosurgery, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.

5. 5Natera. Inc and Mayo Clinic, Austin, Texas.

6. 6Adela, Inc, Foster City, California.

7. 7Cancer Research UK and UCL Cancer Trials Centre, University College London, London, United Kingdom.

Abstract

Abstract Cancer is a significant burden worldwide that adversely impacts life expectancy, quality of life, health care costs, and workforce productivity. Although currently recommended screening tests for individual cancers reduce mortality, they detect only a minority of all cancers and sacrifice specificity for high sensitivity, resulting in a high cumulative rate of false positives. Blood-based multicancer early detection tests (MCED) based on next-generation sequencing (NGS) and other technologies hold promise for broadening the number of cancer types detected in screened populations and hope for reducing cancer mortality. The promise of this new technology to improve cancer detection rates and make screening more efficient at the population level demands the development of novel trial designs that accelerate clinical adoption. Carefully designed clinical trials are needed to address these issues.

Funder

Harvard Medical School

Knight Cancer Institute, Oregon Health and Science University

Johns Hopkins University

Publisher

American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)

Subject

Oncology,Epidemiology

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