{"id":1523,"date":"2012-03-02T16:29:28","date_gmt":"2012-03-02T16:29:28","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/touchoncology.com\/fifty-years-of-progress-against-cancer-the-european-organisation-for-research-and-treatment-of-cancer-celebrates-its-achievements\/"},"modified":"2019-03-27T16:23:36","modified_gmt":"2019-03-27T16:23:36","slug":"fifty-years-of-progress-against-cancer-the-european-organisation-for-research-and-treatment-of-cancer-celebrates-its-achievements","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/touchoncology.com\/%speciality%\/journal-articles\/fifty-years-of-progress-against-cancer-the-european-organisation-for-research-and-treatment-of-cancer-celebrates-its-achievements\/","title":{"rendered":"Fifty Years of Progress Against Cancer \u2013 The European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer Celebrates its Achievements"},"content":{"rendered":"

The European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) was founded in 1962 as an international organisation under Belgian law by eminent European oncologists working in the main areas of cancer research. Originally named the Groupe Europ\u00e9en de Chimioth\u00e9rapie Anticanc\u00e9reuse (GECA), the organisation changed its name in 1968 and has been known as the EORTC ever since. Under its unifying structure, dedicated networks of researchers and clinicians have convened to conduct clinical and translational cancer research that has had a profound effect on cancer treatment not only in Europe, but worldwide. A large number of currently available standard cancer treatments are a direct consequence of this continued and collaborative effort. On these pages we present a general overview of some of its most significant achievements as it celebrates 50 years of progress against cancer.<\/p>\n

Multimodal Cancer Treatment<\/h5>\n

The EORTC has been able to improve the standard of cancer treatment by testing more effective therapeutic strategies based on combinations of drugs and\/or surgery and\/or radiotherapy that are already in use and also through the development of new drugs and other innovative approaches.
\nPostoperative concurrent administration of high-dose cisplatin with radiotherapy was found to be more efficacious than radiotherapy alone in patients with locally advanced head and neck cancer without causing undue numbers of late complications.1<\/sup> In patients with prostate cancer at high risk of developing metastases, immediate androgen suppression with a luteinizing hormone reducing hormone agonist given during external irradiation and for three years afterwards improves 10-year disease-free survival and overall survival (OS) without increasing late cardiovascular toxicity.2<\/sup>
\nCompleteness of surgical staging in patients with early-stage ovarian cancer was found to be associated with better outcomes, while a significant survival benefit has been shown for stage IIIC\u2013IV ovarian cancer patients who undergo interval debulking surgery.3\u20136<\/sup> Neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by interval debulking surgery is a good alternative to primary debulking surgery in these patients.
\nA number of EORTC trials have helped to optimise local control of breast cancer. For example, the efficacy of breast conserving surgery followed by radiotherapy was shown to be equivalent to that of mastectomy as a loco-regional treatment for operable breast cancer.7,8<\/sup> In patients with stage I\/II breast cancer, an additional boost dose of radiation to the tumour bed following breast conserving surgery reduces the risk of local recurrence, especially in patients aged <50 years.9,10<\/sup> The beneficial effect of radiotherapy in reducing the overall numbers of invasive and non-invasive recurrences in the ipsilateral breast after breast-conserving surgery has also been demonstrated.10<\/sup>
\nAnother EORTC trial showed that adjuvant chemotherapy with the combination of procarbazine, lomustine and vincristine (PCV) after radiotherapy in malignant brain tumour patients, which was once considered standard treatment, was indeed toxic and brought insufficient benefit to the patient.11<\/sup>
\nBrain metastases are frequent in small cell lung cancer, and two EORTC trials have led the way in the use of prophylactic cranial irradiation with results that have made a real impact on the management of this disease and have prolonged survival.12,13<\/sup> One of these trials established the role of prophylactic cranial irradiation in advanced stage small cell lung cancer leading the way in the prevention of brain metastases, while the other trial determined the standard dose of prophylactic irradiation to be delivered to the brain.<\/p>\n

Optimisation of Existing Cancer Treatments<\/h5>\n

Optimising treatments for patients with cancer has always been a central objective of the work of the EORTC.
\nIn 1989, pioneering work in the field of organ preservation led to a larynx preservation strategy in patients with hypopharyngeal cancer.14<\/sup> Overall survival rates were similar for this larynx preservation strategy and conventional total laryngectomy treatment, while allowing two-thirds of patients to retain their larynx.
\nIn successive clinical trials conducted over more than 50 years, continuous progress has been registered in the development of treatment strategies for Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma.15<\/sup> These trials have not only improved treatment efficacy, they have also identified clinical and biological parameters that could be used to adapt the treatment strategy. Because patients enrolled in these EORTC clinical trials were followed-up on a regular basis until death, analysis of the fate of patients after each successive specific treatment has been used to develop strategies that maximise the yield of long-term responses and minimise short- and long-term toxicities in subsequent trials (see Figure 1<\/i>).
\nThe greatly improved outcomes brought about by the initial trials meant that later trials could aim mainly at reducing (late) treatment toxicity while maintaining excellent disease control. For example, restricting radiotherapy to the involved node was developed for patients with early stage Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma. Moreover, the growing evidence of late effects following radiotherapy also acted as a spur to reduce doses of radiation as much as possible.16<\/sup>
\nThe introduction of a new and significantly more efficient therapy in the treatment of childhood lymphoid malignancies was the result of an EORTC trial.17<\/sup> This trial demonstrated the superior clinical efficacy of Escherichia coli asparaginase<\/i> over Erwinia chrysanthemi<\/i> asparaginase in the treatment of childhood lymphoid malignancies during induction and reinduction, and this therapy is now a universal component of acute lymphoplastic leukaemia (ALL) treatment and is used in many paediatric regimens for ALL.<\/p>\n

New Drug Development<\/h5>\n

The EORTC has also contributed to the development of improved drugs for treating cancer. Studies with imatinib (Glivec; Novartis) led to a dramatic improvement in overall survival in patients with metastatic gastrointestinal stromal tumours.18<\/sup>
\nBased on the results of an EORTC clinical trial, temozolomide (Temodar; Merck) was approved by the FDA for the treatment of adult patients with newly diagnosed glioblastoma multiforme.19<\/sup>
\nCarboplatin plus paclitaxel is the standard treatment for patients with non-small cell lung cancer, a treatment that was licensed following the landmark EORTC 08975 trial.20<\/sup> One EORTC study set a new standard of treatment for patients with acute myelogenous leukaemia and found that the long-term efficacy of chemotherapy is enhanced through the use of mitoxantrone or idarubicin instead of daunorubicin.21<\/sup>
\nThe US FDA approved pegylated interferon \u03b1-2b (Sylatron; Merck) for the treatment of melanoma patients with microscopic or gross nodal involvement within 84 days of definitive surgical resection including complete lymphadenectomy based on the EORTC 18991 trial.22<\/sup>
\nMedical management of myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) remains a challenge, but in a clinical trial conducted by the EORTC together with the German MDS Study Group, it was shown that treatment with decitabine (Dacogen; Eisai), a drug that inhibits DNA methylation, significantly prolonged progression-free survival (PFS) in older, higher risk MDS patients.23<\/sup> A significant improvement in patient quality of life (QoL) was also observed.<\/p>\n

Supportive Therapy<\/h5>\n

The work of the EORTC also encompasses treatments given to improve the management of complications associated with cancer treatment, such as infections and, in particular, Gram-negative sepsis and fungal infections.
\nA landmark study showed that infections due to Gram-negative bacilli could be managed best with a beta-lactam antibiotic and an aminoglycoside.24<\/sup> They further showed that continuing the aminoglycoside was not always necessary, thereby reducing the risk of toxicity.
\nIn fungal infections, voriconazole (Vfend; Pfizer) was established as the drug of choice for treating invasive aspergillosis given its improved response, survival and severe side effect profile by comparison with amphotericin B. It is the benchmark against which other drugs are measured to establish an indication for treating invasive aspergillosis.25<\/sup><\/p>\n

Imaging<\/h5>\n

Incorporation of imaging technologies into clinical trials will enhance the delivery of appropriate treatments to patients. The EORTC has developed an Imaging Platform which will enable the development of imaging methodologies and cancer clinical trial designs and ultimately redefine standards for high level clinical trials in cancer.
\nIn positron emission tomography (PET) imaging, optimal image quality is essential to ensure that acquired patient images are acceptable and interpretable by any clinician in another hospital. An EORTC, EANM (European Association of Nuclear Medicine), and EARL (EANM Research Ltd.) quantitative PET Imaging accreditation program has been established to set a minimum standard for acquisition and interpretation of PET scans within EORTC clinical trials.26<\/sup><\/p>\n

Personalised Medicine<\/h5>\n

Genetic markers set the stage for personalised medicine and enable clear identification of patients who could benefit from a more intense treatment.
\nIt was an EORTC trial that established the first predictive marker, the methylation status of the MGMT (O6-methylguanine\u2013DNA methyltransferase) promoter, for helping to identify an individualised patient treatment based on the specific genetics of the brain tumour.27<\/sup> Methylation of the MGMT promoter adversely affects DNA repair and is linked to longer survival in patients with glioblastoma treated with temozolomide. The results of this trial enhanced the international recognition of European neuro-oncology research.
\nIn women undergoing treatment for ovarian cancer, serum levels of CA125 often rise several months prior to clinical\/symptomatic relapse; however, in an MRC\/EORTC trial no evidence of a survival benefit or better QoL based on raised CA125 level alone was found. Routine measurement of CA125 during the follow-up of ovarian cancer patients who attain a complete response after first-line treatment is not believed to be of value, therefore.28<\/sup>
\nUntil recently, the genes involved in the development of myelodysplastic syndrome remained largely unknown, although numerous chromosomal aberrations have been described. In a translational research study, several mutations were detected which could be indicative of early events during the evolution of this disease.29,30<\/sup>
\nThe evaluation of response to treatment in children with ALL has been significantly advanced by studying genetic markers of this disease.31<\/sup>
\n<\/p>\n

Management and Assessment of Quality of Life in Cancer Clinical Trials<\/h5>\n

The EORTC has positioned itself as an international leader in methodological research in the measurement of health-related QoL in oncology, setting global standards for translation, cross cultural adaption and computer-adaptive testing at the individual patient level and as a prognostic factor.
\nQuality of life studies overseen by EORTC have led the way in showing how QoL data can be collected on an international basis and how the results can be used to influence clinical practice.32,33<\/sup> The results of QoL studies integrated into over 120 clinical trials have informed practice in the treatment of numerous diseases such as brain, breast, melanoma, lung and ovarian cancers.
\nThe organisation\u2019s efforts also led to a new situation in which children with ALL are now cured with a high rate of success while avoiding undesirable acute and long-term side effects associated with irradiation of the central nervous system (CNS).34<\/sup> The deleterious side effects and long-term neurological deficits observed in survivors prompted investigators to seek other ways to reduce the risk of CNS relapse by avoiding the use of radiotherapy. In studies they found that radiotherapy could be safely spared in some groups of patients when replaced by adequate systemic and CNS-directed chemotherapy.
\nThe key development in QoL studies over the last two decades has been the validation of EORTC QLQ-C30, a general cancer QoL questionnaire, and its incorporation into cancer clinical trials. Evidence indicates that this measurement system is now the most frequently-used QoL questionnaire in cancer clinical trials worldwide.35<\/sup><\/p>\n

Classifications and Guidelines<\/h5>\n

The European guidelines for the treatment of mycosis fungoides and Sezary syndrome, and the WHO\u2013EORTC classification for cutaneous lymphomas have enabled a more uniform diagnosis, and hence a more uniform treatment, of patients with cutaneous lymphomas.36,37<\/sup> The WHO\u2013EORTC classification represented major progress in defining this type of cancer and enabled a more reliable distinction between indolent and more aggressive types to be made as well as facilitating the selection of radiotherapy or systemic chemotherapy for first-line treatment. These guidelines and classification have been revised recently.38,39<\/sup>
\nThe EORTC has substantially contributed to the development of definitions for diagnosis and treatment of fungal disease, and to the development of the European Conference on Infections in Leukemia (ECIL) guidelines.40<\/sup> The latter were created in order to elaborate existing guidelines for the management of infections in patients with leukaemia and those who had undergone stem cell transplants. As a result of an increasing life expectancy, the incidence of cancer cases in the older population is rising. Cancer diagnoses are 11 times more frequent in persons aged over 65 years than in younger people. The EORTC has developed specific methodology for clinical trials in the elderly41<\/sup> and has, in addition, established a standardised Elderly MinDS with the purpose of harmonising the collection of data relevant to the elderly. This should enable cross study\/practice comparisons in the future.42<\/sup>
\nSentinel node tumour burden has become an important stratification tool for new adjuvant studies in melanoma. Description of tumour burden using the Rotterdam Criteria and the microanatomic location of the are the most important prognostic factors for melanoma specific survival.43<\/sup> Using these guidelines, patients with minimal sentinel node tumour burden might therefore be safely spared routine completion lymph node dissection.<\/p>\n

International Cooperation<\/h5>\n

The EORTC has played an indispensible role in actions aimed at streamlining, simplifying and harmonising the legal environment in Europe with regard to the conduct of cancer clinical trials. These efforts are in progress with the Directorate General Health and Consumers. Moreover, the organisation has a common scientific agenda with US-based co-operative groups supported by the National Cancer Institute, with the National Cancer Institute of Canada, the Australian co-operative Groups and a number of national academic groups in individual European countries. Currently 20 intergroup trials are open, and the EORTC is the leading organisation in eleven of them.
\nFor example, EORTC trial 22981\/26981 led to a global platform of four large Phase III trials in patients with brain tumours, and involved EORTC, the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group, the North Central Cancer Treatment Group and the National Cancer Institute of Canada. The MINDACT trial, for patients with breast cancer, is co-ordinated by EORTC and run under the BIG\/TRANSBIG networks. It aims to provide confirmatory evidence that patients with a low recurrence risk signature (obtained using MammaPrint: Agendia; Irvine, CA) may be spared chemotherapy and its burdensome side effects without negative repercussions on survival rates. MINDACT involves sites in the Netherlands, France, Germany, Belgium, Spain, Italy, the UK, Slovenia and Switzerland, and has recruited over 6,600 patients in 111 institutions. The first results are expected in approximately three years.<\/p>\n

Looking Forward<\/h5>\n

Over the past 50 years, EORTC research has resulted in new benchmark treatments for patients with cancer. The organisation plans to continue to further its mission to develop, conduct, coordinate and stimulate translational and clinical research in Europe to improve the management of cancer and related problems by increasing survival rates and patient QoL.
\nFurther therapeutic advances will most likely arise from a clinical trial platform that incorporates strong translational research, imaging, biobanking, quality assurance in radiotherapy and in surgery, and research studies aimed at understanding the biology of the disease. This will lead to the development of specific treatments for a fragmented disease that was previously seen as a single entity.
\nThis effort will involve the formation of partnerships with a variety of stakeholders, certainly with other academic groups and learned societies, but also patient organisations, cancer leagues, regulatory agencies and the pharmaceutical industry. In this way, EORTC will ensure that it continues to provide improved treatments for patients with cancer. \u25a0<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

The European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) was founded in 1962 as an international organisation under Belgian law by eminent European oncologists working in the main areas of cancer research. Originally named the Groupe Europ\u00e9en de Chimioth\u00e9rapie Anticanc\u00e9reuse (GECA), the organisation changed its name in 1968 and has been known as the […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_relevanssi_hide_post":"","_relevanssi_hide_content":"","_relevanssi_pin_for_all":"","_relevanssi_pin_keywords":"","_relevanssi_unpin_keywords":"","_relevanssi_related_keywords":"","_relevanssi_related_include_ids":"","_relevanssi_related_exclude_ids":"","_relevanssi_related_no_append":"","_relevanssi_related_not_related":"","_relevanssi_related_posts":"","_relevanssi_noindex_reason":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"acf":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/touchoncology.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1523"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/touchoncology.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/touchoncology.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/touchoncology.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/touchoncology.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1523"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/touchoncology.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1523\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":28006,"href":"https:\/\/touchoncology.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1523\/revisions\/28006"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/touchoncology.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1523"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/touchoncology.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1523"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/touchoncology.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1523"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}