Clinical investigators in oncology are increasingly interested in using molecular analysis of cancer tissue to understand the biologic bases of response or resistance to novel interventions and to develop prognostic and predictive biomarkers that will guide clinical decision making. Some scientific questions of this nature can only be addressed, or may best be addressed, through the conduct of a clinical trial in which research biopsies are obtained from all participants. However, trial designs with mandatory research biopsies have raised ethical concerns related to the risk of harm to participants, the adequacy of voluntary informed consent, and the potential for misunderstanding among research participants when access to an experimental intervention is linked to the requirement to undergo a research biopsy. In consideration of the ethical and scientific issues at stake in this debate, the Cancer and Leukemia Group B Ethics Committee proposes guidelines for clinical trials involving mandatory research biopsies. Any cancer clinical trial that requires research biopsies of participants must be well designed to address the scientific question, obtain the biopsy in a way that minimizes risk, and ensure that research participants are fully informed of the risks, rationale, and requirements of the study, as well as of treatment alternatives. Further guidelines and discussions of this issue are specified in this position paper. We feel that if these principles are respected, an informed adult with cancer can both understand and voluntarily consent to participation in a clinical trial involving mandatory research biopsy for scientific end points.
The expression of the MDR1 gene was studied by Northern blot analysis in leukaemic cell specimens obtained from 74 patients with acute myelogenous leukaemia (AML). No relationship was found between MDR1 RNA levels and FAB type of leukaemia or patient age. Transcript levels tended to be highest in the leukaemic cells of patients with a history of toxic exposure or preleukaemia compared with 'standard risk' patients at diagnosis but the differences were not significant (P = 0.07). Patients whose leukaemic cells contained high MDR1 transcript levels were difficult to induce into remission and, if remission was induced, the remissions were short. Hence high levels of MDR1 expression may explain, at least in part, the ineffectiveness of anthracycline antibiotic containing treatment regimens in some patients with AML.
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