Commentary
Advances in Precision Oncology: Foreword
For > 90 years, the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has been in the vanguard of cancer research and treatment—improving the lives of...
Julie Graff is Section Chief of Hematology/Oncology at VA Portland Health Care System in Oregon. Grant Huang is Acting Deputy Chief Research and Development – Enterprise Optimization and Director, Cooperative Studies Program in the Office of Research and Development, Veterans Health Administration, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, Washington, DC. Julie Graff is also an Associate Professor of Medicine at Knight Cancer Institute, Oregon Health Sciences University in Portland.
Correspondence: Julie Graff (graffj@ohsu.edu)
Author disclosures
The authors report no actual or potential conflicts of interest with regard to this article.
Disclaimer
The opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of Federal Practitioner, Frontline Medical Communications Inc., the US Government, or any of its agencies.
PATCH depends upon pharmaceutical industry partners, as clinical trials of even 40 patients can require significant funding and trial resources to operate. Furthermore, many drugs of interest are not available outside of a clinical trial, and partnerships enable VA researchers to access these medications. PATCH also benefits greatly from foundation partners, such as the PCF, which has made POPCaP possible and will continue to connect talented researchers with VA resources. Finally, access to other publicly available research funds, such as those from VA Office of Research and Development, National Institutes of Health, and US Department of Defense (DoD) Congressionally Directed Research Program are needed for trials.
Funding for these trials remains limited despite public health and broader interests in addressing important questions. Accelerated accrual through PATCH may be an attractive partnership opportunity for companies, foundations and government funding agencies to support the PATCH efforts.
Both POPCaP and PATCH highlight the potential promise of precision oncology within the nation’s largest integrated health care system. The VHA patient population enables prostate cancer researchers to serve an important early target. It also provides a foundational platform for a broader set of activities. These include a tailored approach to identifying tumor profiles and other patient characteristics that may help to elevate standard of care for other common cancers including ones affecting the lungs and/or head and neck.
To this end, VA has been working with the National Cancer Institute (NCI) and DoD to establish a national infrastructure for precision oncology across multiple cancer types.12 In addition to clinical capabilities and the ability to run clinical trials that can accrue sufficient patients to answer key questions, we have developed capabilities for data collection and sharing, and analytical tools to support a learning health care system approach as a core element to precision oncology.
Besides having a research-specific context, such informatics and information technology systems enable clinicians to obtain and apply decision-making data rapidly for a specific patient and cancer type. These systems take particular advantage of the extensive electronic health record that underlies the VHA system, integrating real-world evidence into rigorous trials for precision oncology and other diseases. This is important for facilitating prerequisite activities for quality assessments for incorporation into databases (with appropriate permissions) to enhance treatment options. These activities are a key focus of the APOLLO initiative.13 While a more in-depth discussion of the importance of informatics is beyond the scope of this article, the field represents an important investment that is needed to achieve the goals of precision oncology.
In addition to informatics and data handling capabilities, VA has a longstanding tradition of designing and coordinating multisite clinical trials. This dates to the time of World War II when returning veterans had a high prevalence of tuberculosis. Since then, VA has contributed extensively to landmark findings in cardiovascular disease and surgery, mental health, infectious disease, and cancer. It was a VA study that helped establish colonoscopy as a standard for colorectal cancer screening by detecting colonic neoplasms in asymptomatic patients.14
From such investigations, the VA Cooperative Studies Program (CSP) has developed many strategies to conduct multisite clinical trials. But, CSP also has organized its sites methodically for operational efficiency and the ability to maintain institutional knowledge that crosses different types of studies and diseases. Using its Network of Dedicated Enrollment Sites (NODES) model, VA partnered with NCI to more effectively address administrative and regulatory requirements for initiating trials and recruiting veterans into cancer clinical trials.15 This partnership—the NCI And VA Interagency Group to Accelerate Trials Enrollment (NAVIGATE)—supports 12 sites with a central CSP Coordinating Center (CSPCC).
CSPCC provides support, shares best practices and provides organizational commitment at the senior levels of both agencies to overcome potential barriers. The goals and strategies are described by Schiller and colleagues.16 While still in its early stage as a cancer research network, NAVIGATE may be integrated with POPCaP and other parts of VA clinical research enterprise. This would allow us to specialize in advancing oncology care and to leverage capabilities more specifically to precision oncology. With an emphasis on recruitment, NAVIGATE has established capabilities with VA Informatics and Computing Infrastructure to quickly identify patients who may be eligible for particular clinical trials. We envision further refining these capabilities for precision oncology trials that incorporate genetic and other information for individual patients. VA also hopes to inform trial sponsors about design considerations. This is important since networked investigators will have direct insights into patient-level factors, which may help with more effectively identifying and enrolling them into trials for their particular cancers.
For > 90 years, the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has been in the vanguard of cancer research and treatment—improving the lives of...
For US Army veteran Tam Huynh, the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) precision oncology program has been the proverbial game changer....
The VA National Precision Oncology Program is one of the largest clinical DNA sequencing programs in the US with integrated consultation services...
A network of VA centers in conjunction with the PCF have developed precision oncology best practices for the treatment of advanced prostate cancer...
The Veterans Health Administration has launched initiatives to screen potential patients, to evaluate optimal treatment for participants with...
The following is a lightly edited transcript of a teleconference recorded in December 2018. It follows up on previous prostate-cancer...
CLL incidence by race and location