Ray-Coquard Isabelle, Pujade Lauraine Eric, Le Cesne Axel, Pautier Patricia, Vacher Lavenue Marie Cecile, Trama Annalisa, Casali Paolo, Coindre Jean Michel, Blay Jean Yves
GINECO/TMRO Network, Centre Léon Bérard & Université Claude Bernard, Lyon, France.
Assistance Publique Hopitaux de Paris & Université Paris Descartes Paris France, France.
Eur J Cancer. 2017 May;77:90-98. doi: 10.1016/j.ejca.2017.02.006. Epub 2017 Apr 3.
Rare adult cancer (RAC) is characterised by an incidence of less than six cases per 100,000 people per annum; 4,300,000 patients in the European Union are living with rare cancer (22% of all new human cancers). These cancers are linked with worse survival rates than 'frequent' tumours (5-year survival: 47% for RAC against 65% for 'common' cancers), mainly because of: (1) delays in obtaining an accurate diagnosis, (2) inadequate treatments given in curative phases and (3) restricted opportunities for patients to participate in clinical trials because of the lack of support for dedicated trials for this disease group from both academic and industrial sponsors. Although quantitative studies to measure the socioeconomic burden of RACs as a whole are still lacking, the increasing fragmentation of all cancers into molecular subgroups implies a substantial increase in the number of RACs and their associated socioeconomic burden. To answer this urgent and growing need, some countries, cooperative groups, and cancer institutes delineated national and/or regional organisations to promote quality management for RACs. Currently, the European Union (EU) is supporting an official EU call to organise a European network dedicated to RACs. The goals will be to pool the vast knowledge and expertise of the 67 EU clinical reference centres and to cover ten rare adult solid cancer domains across more than 18 countries in order to deploy an integrated, EU-wide capacity towards accelerated innovative treatments and care for RACs while empowering patients. This article will summarise these experiences and the potential benefit for patients.
罕见成人癌症(RAC)的特征是年发病率低于每10万人6例;欧盟有430万患者患有罕见癌症(占所有新发人类癌症的22%)。与“常见”肿瘤相比,这些癌症的生存率更低(5年生存率:RAC为47%,“常见”癌症为65%),主要原因是:(1)准确诊断延迟;(2)治疗阶段给予的治疗不足;(3)由于学术和行业赞助商缺乏对该疾病组专门试验的支持,患者参与临床试验的机会有限。尽管目前仍缺乏衡量RAC总体社会经济负担的定量研究,但所有癌症日益细分为分子亚组意味着RAC的数量及其相关社会经济负担将大幅增加。为满足这一紧迫且不断增长的需求,一些国家、合作组织和癌症研究机构划定了国家和/或地区组织,以促进RAC的质量管理。目前,欧盟正在支持一项官方的欧盟呼吁,以组织一个致力于RAC的欧洲网络。目标是汇集67个欧盟临床参考中心的大量知识和专业技能,覆盖18个以上国家的十个罕见成人实体癌领域,以便在增强患者权能的同时,在全欧盟范围内部署加速创新治疗和护理RAC的综合能力。本文将总结这些经验以及对患者的潜在益处。