Clinical Cancer Advances 2012: Annual Report on Progress Against Cancer From the American Society of Clinical Oncology

Author:

Roth Bruce J.1,Krilov Lada1,Adams Sylvia1,Aghajanian Carol A.1,Bach Peter1,Braiteh Fadi1,Brose Marcia S.1,Ellis Lee M.1,Erba Harry1,George Daniel J.1,Gilbert Mark R.1,Jacobson Joseph O.1,Larsen Eric C.1,Lichtman Stuart M.1,Partridge Ann H.1,Patel Jyoti D.1,Quinn David I.1,Robison Leslie L.1,von Roenn Jamie H.1,Samlowski Wolfram1,Schwartz Gary K.1,Vogelzang Nicholas J.1

Affiliation:

1. Bruce J. Roth, Washington University in St Louis, St Louis, MO; Lada Krilov, American Society of Clinical Oncology, Alexandria, VA; Sylvia Adams, New York University; Carol A. Aghajanian, Peter Bach, Stuart M. Lichtman, and Gary K. Schwartz, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY; Fadi Braiteh and Nicholas J. Vogelzang, US Oncology Research, Comprehensive Cancer Centers of Nevada; Wolfram Samlowski, US Oncology Research, Nevada Cancer Institute, Las Vegas, NV; Marcia S. Brose, University of...

Abstract

A MESSAGE FROM ASCO'S PRESIDENTI am delighted to present you with “Clinical Cancer Advances 2012: Annual Report on Progress Against Cancer From the American Society of Clinical Oncology.” The American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) uses this opportunity each year to share the steady progress occurring in our understanding and treatment of cancer. For 2012, we offer again an inspiring perspective on clinical cancer advances over the past year, but with a cautionary note: if current threats to federal funding materialize, future progress in cancer research will be seriously undermined.Continued progress against cancer. As you read the following pages of this report, I hope you will share my unabashed enthusiasm—and pride—in how far we have come. To appreciate what this progress has meant to the millions of people who receive a cancer diagnosis each year, consider the following: (1) two of three people in the United States live at least 5 years after a cancer diagnosis (up from roughly one of two in the 1970s); (2) the nation's cancer death rate has dropped 18% since the early 1990s, reversing decades of increases; and (3) individuals with cancer are increasingly able to live active, fulfilling lives because of better management of symptoms and treatments with fewer adverse effects.Importance of clinical cancer trials. These dramatic trends—and the advances highlighted in this report—would have been unthinkable without the engine that drives life-saving cancer treatment: clinical cancer research. Advances in technology and in our knowledge of how patient-specific molecular characteristics of the tumor and its environment fuel the growth of cancer have brought new hope to patients. Clinical trials are the key to translating cutting-edge laboratory discoveries into treatments that extend and improve the lives of those with cancer.But progress is only part of the story. Cancer remains a challenge, with many cancers undetected until their latest stages and others resisting most attempts at treatment. Tragically, cancer still kills more than 500,000 people in the United States every year, and its global burden is growing rapidly.Bridges to better care. To conquer cancer, we need to build bridges to the future—bridges that will get scientific advances to the patient's bedside quicker, bridges that will enable us to share information and learn what works in real time, and bridges that will improve care for all patients around the world.At ASCO, we recognize the unique role that oncologists must play. ASCO's “Accelerating Progress Against Cancer: Blueprint for Transforming Clinical and Translational Cancer Research,”1published last year, presents our vision and recommendations to make cancer research and patient care vastly more targeted, more efficient, and more effective. We have also launched a groundbreaking initiative, CancerLinQ, that aims to improve cancer care and speed research by drawing insights from the vast pool of data on patients in real-world settings.Renewing a national commitment to cancer research. We are on the threshold of major advances in cancer prevention, detection, and treatment—but only if, as a nation, we remain committed to this critical endeavor.The federally funded cancer research system is currently under threat by larger federal budget concerns. Clearly, Congress faces a complex budget environment, but now is not the time to retreat from our nation's commitment to conquering a disease that affects nearly all of us. Bold action must be taken to ensure that we can take full advantage of today's scientific and technologic opportunities.Please join me in celebrating our nation's progress against cancer and in recommitting ourselves to supporting cancer research. Millions of lives depend on it.Sandra M. Swain, MDPresidentAmerican Society of Clinical Oncology

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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