280 likes | 436 Views
Our Mission Remains The Same. Survival. Continuing To Find New Drugs And Better Ways of Using Them. Targeted ResearchLife Raft Group Patient Data-basesTimely, International Treatment Surveillance Routine Mutational Testing and Record Keeping InitiativeComprehensive Clinical Site PlanningNext S
E N D
1. Executive Director ReportSeptember 16, 2006 The State of the Life Raft Group and our battle to ensure the survival of patients with GIST
2. Our Mission Remains The Same Survival
3. Continuing To Find New DrugsAnd Better Ways of Using Them Targeted Research
Life Raft Group Patient Data-bases
Timely, International Treatment Surveillance
Routine Mutational Testing and Record Keeping Initiative
Comprehensive Clinical Site Planning
Next Step: Clinical Trials Consortium
4. Making Sure That No One Dies Because They Cannot Access Life-Saving Treatment Behind the scenes intervention
Focused Advocacy
Medicare: We successfully fought to have Gleevec included as a covered prescription drug and are fighting to eliminate the Medicare prescription donut hole
Placebos: We continue to oppose the use of placebos in clinical trials when a terminally ill patient has no other treatment options but the trial drug
5. Intervention Case Study A member of the Life Raft Group reached out to us in desperation. He was resistant to Gleevec and needed to start Sutent. The problem was that he had been waiting for several months for his medical center to begin a clinical trial that would permit him to have access to this drug.
We were asked to write a letter to the head of the hospital. This is what happened.
6. 1. Our Letter to the Hospital Director Dear Dr. ____
“…(Patient’s) medical condition is deteriorating rapidly as you go through your internal procedures….In other words, he is dying as you, and your staff, are working on the paperwork for this trial…..The progression of life threatening illnesses like GIST may not…wait for the normal deliberative process….and may require that a responsible person intervene…I take personal responsibility for holding you accountable to that end…We shall be covering this story in our Newsletter…”
7. 2. The Hospital Director Responds “Dear Mr. Scherzer,
I received with astonishment your letter…it seems that what you are really after ….is circumventing legal procedures and trying to influence legal judgment…Furthermore, I consulted with our legal advisors and we are all in the view that your letter should it get published constitutes…slander…Our institution shall take all necessary legal measures in that event…”
8. 3.Within 24 hours the patient concerned wrote to me “ Dear Norman,
The good news reached us just now!!!!! Your letter…has done it…although Dr. ___ is upset…This news was given to us today by an official of the ….Cancer Association, calling from home…If you manage to move Dr. ___, I am sure you could move the Rocky mountains to Egypt. ..May god bless you….”
9. Making Sure that No One Dies Because of Ignorance Life Raft Group Monthly Newsletter: Content is aimed at both patient and medical professional
Pamphlets and Educational Materials
GIST
Pediatric GIST
Connecting the Dots (In Progress)
Accessing Treatment (In Progress)
Websites
Life Raft Group
Global GIST Network
LRG Medical Professional Meetings
10. Making Sure that No One Dies Because of Ignorance: Pediatric GIST Virtual Pediatric GIST Center of Excellence
Bringing together the best specialists in Oncology, Surgery and Pathology
Creating an International Pediatric GIST Review Board
Pediatric GIST Medical Data-base and Tissue Bank
Next Step: A Physical Pediatric GIST Center of Excellence and Support for Patient Referrals
11. Ensuring that No One Has to Face GIST Alone Life Raft Group Online Communities
Main Life Raft Group Listserv
Pediatric GIST Listserv
Other Specialized Listservs
Global GIST Network, including foreign language listservs
Life Raft Group Newsletters and Websites
International GIST Specialist Directory
12. Ensuring that No One Has to Face GIST Alone-2 Local Life Raft and Sister Groups Around the World
Patient Meetings
One to One Consults
Strategic Networks, In addition to the Global GIST Network
With medical and research institutions around the world
With other patient organizations
13. Life Raft GroupInternal Research: Based Upon Patient Input Treatment Efficacy, including actual drug dosage levels
Side Effects
New Priorities:
Preventive Treatment
Survivor Profiles
Pediatric GIST, including drug dosage tolerance levels
14. LRG’s New Medical Database
16. We have not made enough progress with the traditional approach to research Too many are still dying
17. Change in the US Death Rates by Cause, 1950 & 2001 Compared to the rate in 1950, the cancer death rate was 0.2% higher in 2001, while rates for other major chronic diseases decreased during this period. Compared to the rate in 1950, the cancer death rate was 0.2% higher in 2001, while rates for other major chronic diseases decreased during this period.
18. Traditional Research Approach Donate money to an institution in the name of research, perhaps with a specific disease designation
or
General call for proposals from the research community: Individual projects are selected for funding (typical government approach)
19. What’s wrong with the traditional research approach? High overhead costs: from 50 to 75%
No overall strategic plan; lack of coordination
Little accountability
Lack of urgency
20. How Does Life Raft Group Directed Research Differ From The Traditional Approach?
21. We Reduced High Overhead Costs
22. We Replaced A Lack of Strategy and Coordination We assumed a leadership role
We brought together the best scientists in the world
We told them that if they created a coordinated strategic plan, and agreed to cooperate, that we would fund it.
23. Our Research Team Created A Strategic Plan We committed two year grant awards to implement it
We published the plan on our website: www.liferaftgroup.org
24. We Committed Two Year Grant Awards Cristina Antonescu, Memorial Sloan Kettering
Peter Besmer, Memorial Sloan Kettering
Chris Coreless, OHSU/VA Hosp
Maria Debiec-Rychter, Catholic Univ. Belgium
Jonathan Fletcher, B&W Hosp, Dana-Farber
Michael Heinrich, OHSU/VA Hosp
Matt van de Rijn, Stanford University
Brian Rubin, Univ. of Wash (moving to Cleveland Clinic)
25. We Funded Two Tissue BanksTo Support The Search For A Cure
At Memorial Sloan Kettering for pediatric GIST
At Stanford University for adult GIST
26. We Introduced Accountability to the Research Grant Process We created six month funding cycles and required a satisfactory progress report to justify further funding
We are prepared to shift funds from less promising to more promising areas
27. We introduced a sense of urgency to the search for a cure for GIST We created incentives to reward and accelerate progress by building in accelerated and supplemental funding of promising breakthroughs
28. GIST Is The Perfect Model For Demonstrating How To Cure Other Cancers Relatively simple and increasingly understood mechanism of cancer mutations
Growing list of targeted drugs to address these mutations
Innovative research strategy
29. With Your Help We Can
Find a Cure For Cancer