European journal of cancer : official journal for European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) [and] European Association for Cancer Research (EACR)
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Comparative Study
"Good Old" clinical markers have similar power in breast cancer prognosis as microarray gene expression profilers.
We compared the power of gene expression measurements with that of conventional prognostic markers, i.e., clinical, histopathological, and cell biological parameters, for predicting distant metastases in breast cancer patients using both established prognostic indices (e.g., the Nottingham Prognostic Index (NPI)) and novel combinations of conventional markers. We used publicly available data on 97 patients, and the performance of metastasis prediction was represented by receiver operating characteristic (ROC) areas and Kaplan-Meier plots. ⋯ Given the time it may take before microarray processing is used worldwide, particularly due to the costs and the lack of standards, it is important to pursue research using conventional markers. Our analysis suggests that it might be possible to improve the combination of different conventional prognostic markers into one prognostic index.
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Recent progress in establishing a European network to conduct paediatric oncology phase I/II clinical trials calls attention to the challenges facing researchers developing new agents for children with cancer. These challenges include: ensuring that effective infrastructures are in place to safely and efficiently conduct early phase clinical trials in children while meeting all ethical and regulatory requirements associated with such trials; obtaining timely access to new agents from pharmaceutical sponsors for both preclinical testing and for phase I and phase II testing; and effectively prioritizing new agents for evaluation in children so that those agents most likely to benefit children with specific cancers are brought forward for clinical testing. The use of public funds to develop and maintain clinical trials infrastructures devoted to paediatric oncology drug development can help in addressing these challenges and can facilitate the timely paediatric evaluation of new agents, thereby contributing to the goal of identifying more effective treatments for children with cancer.