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President's Theme 2020-2021

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Randall A. Oyer, MD, was named the Association of Community Cancer Centers (ACCC) President for 2020-2021 at the ACCC 46th Annual Meeting & Cancer Center Business Summit held March 4-6 in Washington, D.C.

ACCC invites each president to select a theme for their year in office that addresses a timely issue in cancer care through the creation of programs and resources. Dr. Oyer announced that the theme of his presidency will be “Community Oncology Can Close the Gap in Cancer Research.”

“Over the past year ACCC has heard from our members that there are gaps in community research,” said Dr. Oyer. Respondents to ACCC’s “2019 Trending Now in Cancer Care Survey” identified their top three challenges to offering patients with cancer clinical trials as staff resources and training (53%), program infrastructure (50%), and lack of patient understanding of the clinical trials process (46%). Citing these survey findings, Dr. Oyer remarked: “We have a serious imbalance in our clinical trials work. Our patients are in the community, yet the trials are at academic medical centers. And I believe that ACCC is uniquely situated to close this gap.”

Among the plans to achieve this goal outlined by Dr. Oyer were the following:

  • Creating a multidisciplinary taskforce to identify staff/program/patient education resources needed to accelerate implementation of clinical trials in ACCC member practices and programs
  • Bringing together experts at the 2020 ACCC Institute for the Future of Oncology forum to share best practices and learn more about challenges and barriers to clinical trials adoption
  • Developing a series of articles, blogs, and podcasts on effective practices in clinical trials accrual and management.

“We would like to improve our care and access for traditionally underserved communities. We would like to increase sensitivity, awareness, and understanding of the needs specific to geriatric oncology. And we would like to bring precision medicine into the community by understanding how to use the new precision diagnostics and radiology techniques to make sure that our patients have access to these services.”

The resources and tools that will be developed in conjunction with Dr. Oyer’s President’s Theme will be posted to this webpage as they are available.

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ACCC Community Oncology Research Institute

The Association of Community Cancer Centers (ACCC) has established the ACCC Community Oncology Research Institute (ACORI) to build on its existing mission to close the gap in cancer research through optimal oncology partnerships.
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ASCO President Lori J. Pierce, MD, discusses the ASCO-ACCC Collaboration during her #ASCO21 President's Address.

ASCO-ACCC Initiative to Increase Racial and Ethnic Diversity in Clinical Trials

ACCC and ASCO are collaborating to increase cancer clinical trial participation among patients from underrepresented racial and ethnic groups. The two organizations are currently recruiting 40 oncology research programs to be part of a pilot program testing a site assessment tool and/or an implicit bias training program.
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From Oncology Issues

  •  Community Oncology Can Close the Gap in Cancer Research
    Amanda Patton, MA
    One of the ways in which community oncology is helping to close gaps in cancer research is through participation in the National Cancer Institute Community Oncology Research Program clinical trials. The Lahey Health Cancer Institute, a part of the Beth Israel Lahey Health System, continues to expand access to clinical trials and, in particular, the NCI National Clinical Trials Network into the community by partnering with affiliated community hospitals.
  •  Trending Now in Cancer Care
    Alexandria Howson, PhD
    Rather than fielding its annual Trending Now in Cancer Care survey while cancer programs were experiencing unprecedented challenges due to the extended public health emergency, ACCC chose to facilitate conversations with its members to capture the lived experiences of the most pertinent issues impacting oncology practice and care delivery.
  •  Community Oncology Can Close the Gap in Cancer Research
    Amanda Patton, MA
    This is the story of how a large independent practice in northwest Arkansas has nurtured its research program over several decades and is now able to offer patients access to phase I, II, and III trials close to home and their families.

Another Health Disparity: Clinical Trials


February 28, 2020
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Improving patient access to clinical trials has long been a vexing issue for clinicians and patient advocates. Although trials are the backbone of cancer research, participation rates have remained unchanged in recent decades. As a result, more attention is being paid to the lack of diversity in clinical trial populations.

The National Coalition for Cancer Survivorship (NCCS) held its 2019 Cancer Policy Roundtable in Washington, D.C. late last year. It featured a cross-disciplinary panel comprised of patient advocates, a cancer survivor, researchers in health services and disparities, and a physician, all of whom addressed disparities in access to clinical trials and strategies for improvement.

Joseph Unger, PhD, MS, a biostatistician and health services researcher at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, introduced the current clinical trial landscape. Dr. Unger said that healthcare professionals typically hold the general belief that 2 to 3 percent of patients with cancer participate in clinical trials. But his research indicates that, in fact, 8.1 percent of patients with cancer take part in trials.

Dr. Unger’s study aimed to define and quantify the factors that create barriers to clinical trial participation. He said these barriers can include transportation difficulties, comorbid conditions, fear, and distrust of the medical establishment. He suggested that researchers, clinicians, and advocates start by addressing these barriers if they want to substantially increase trial participation rates among minority groups.

Patients at the roundtable shared their own challenges when looking for, applying to, or participating in clinical trials. Sharon Rivera-Sanchez—a clinical trial participant and founder of Saving Pennies 4 a Cure—shared her story about participating in clinical trials after she was diagnosed with triple-negative breast cancer. “I participated in two clinical trials; both I found on my own,” said Rivera-Sanchez. When asked how she found her first clinical trial, she responded, “Good Morning America,” eliciting surprise from the group. Rivera-Sanchez explained that the television show’s anchor just happened to be interviewing a physician who was promoting a new trial for triple-negative breast cancer patients.

Rivera-Sanchez left her first clinical trial because traveling to Los Angeles from her home in Richmond, Virginia, was too much of a burden. Afterward, she found a trial in Pennsylvania that, although closer to her, still required an eight-hour round-trip drive. Rivera-Sanchez’s description of her experience with clinical trials and the passion for patient advocacy they engendered in her set the mood for the remainder of the roundtable discussion.

Reaching Out

Rather than focusing on smaller, provider-based improvements (e.g., having one-on-one discussions with patients about clinical trials), the roundtable panelists discussed how larger institutions can address trial participation disparities.

Drawing on her own experience, Rivera-Sanchez said that many patients who are interested in clinical trials search online before speaking to their doctors. After her own diagnosis, Rivera-Sanchez said she turned to social media and the internet for information, even before her first consultation with her oncologist. She suggested that reaching patients via these channels can be more effective than traditional phone calls and mailings.

Panelists agreed that the circumstances of lower-income patients and language barriers can create significant obstacles to trial participation. The legacy of historical abuses in the medical research community—of which the Tuskegee syphilis experiment is the most-cited example—contribute to general distrust of the medical establishment by racial minorities. Glenn Ellis Sr., medical ethicist and president of  Strategies for Well-Being, added that the way research is most often conducted can also be problematic. “There’s something structurally wrong with how we are doing research,” said Ellis, explaining that the structure and preconditions of trials often limit or eliminate participation by minority groups.

The panelists agreed that “regulation from the top down” can be unhelpful when trying to broaden clinical trial access. Tighter regulations on clinical trial design can add additional barriers to patient recruitment, such as longer washout periods or treatment delays. Dana L. Dornsife, a panelist and chairman of Lazarex Cancer Foundation, suggested leveraging industry competition by motivating companies to promote diverse enrollment and creating stronger requirements for diversity reporting.

The roundtable closed with panelists warning against the assumption that those underrepresented in clinical trials experience disparities mainly due to poverty and/or a lack of education. This creates a false narrative, they agreed. Designers of clinical trials must be careful to take into account the many ways in which some groups are excluded from trials if they truly want to diversify the populations in those trials.

Clinical trials are crucial to cancer research and are often the standard of care for patients with cancer, but for patients in rural areas, accessing clinical trials can pose significant geographic and financial barriers. On a recent episode of CANCER BUZZ, we talk to one health system that has harnessed its passion and creativity to work around obstacles and ensure its rural patients have access to cutting-edge cancer treatments.

 

Clinical Trial Resources

  • Virtual Navigation to Clinical Trials
    Jan 4, 2019

    In the current oncology clinical trials landscape, many barriers remain to clinical trial enrollment that affect both the oncologist and the patient. Among these are trial locations, strict eligibility requirements, insufficient resources to support appropriate clinical trial education and screening, as well as patient and provider attitudes about trials.

  • IO Trials Are Accruing: Where Are the Patients?
    Sep 10, 2018

    Research nurse Joannne Riemer, RN, BSN,  started her position at Johns Hopkins Medical Institution in 2010. Within six months, she was working with checkpoint inhibitors. From her vantage point in clinical trials research, she discusses the many changes in IO clinical trials patient selection over the last eight years. 

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COVID-19 Resources

HHS-60x60combatCOVID.hhs.gov provides important information and links to access the most current treatment guidelines and inpatient and outpatient clinical trials.

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