Home Press Releases Canada could be a world leader in precision medicine cancer treatments if governments remove barriers to access

Canada could be a world leader in precision medicine cancer treatments if governments remove barriers to access

by CONECTed
binder-press-release-canada-could-be-a-world-leader-in-precision-medicine-cancer-treatments-if-governments-remove-barriers-to-access

(Toronto, October 3, 2023) — With top cancer research institutes and a public healthcare system, Canada is poised to be a world leader in researching and providing innovative life-saving cancer treatments, called precision or targeted therapies. But this can only happen if federal, provincial and territorial governments remove barriers and allow more cancer patients access to both treatments and the tests necessary to determine if they are candidates for precision therapies.

This is the conclusion from a new report on precision medicines published by CONECTed, a network of oncology patient groups. The report, Getting Better, Faster: The Case for Optimizing Access to Precision Medicines in the Wake of the Revolution in Cancer Care provides 23 recommendations to overcome roadblocks for accessing care.

With cancer being the leading cause of death in Canada — accounting for about 28 per cent of all deaths — precision oncology treatments are desperately needed to reduce mortality and improve quality of life.

Precision medicine, a form of personalized medicine, uses diagnostics called biomarker testing which allows the cancer to be examined for genetic mutations that identify specific characteristics about a person’s tumour; the testing helps diagnose the cancer, plan individually tailored treatments and assess treatments or make a prognosis.

Precision medicine has resulted in significant advances in survival rates for many cancers, including chronic myelogenous leukemia, lung cancer, colorectal cancer and malignant melanoma.

Advanced staged cancer patients who receive personalized treatment based on their tumour’s biomarker results not only live longer but may well achieve a better quality of life due to fewer treatment serious side effects.

Unfortunately, not all patients have access to biomarker testing and, for those that do, not all results are being reported promptly to help inform clinical decisions in a timely manner. This means that patients do not know if precision medicine would help them. In addition, even those patients who do get biomarker testing in a timely manner often cannot access the treatments they need because public government reimbursement plans will not pay for them.

The role that precision medicine should play — ensuring the best treatment for the right patient when they need it — is still out of reach for so many.

“When I was diagnosed with melanoma in 2003, there were no treatment options. In 2007, melanoma was one of the first cancers to get precision medicine, saving my life, says Kathleen Barnard, Founder and President, Save Your Skin Foundation. “Precision oncology marks a major advancement in cancer treatment from the days of cut, burn and chemo,” she says. “It is like moving from oil lamps to high-efficiency light bulbs, transforming the way we diagnose and treat cancer, offering patients targeted therapies with fewer adverse side effects.” It’s wonderful to see these advances expanding into other cancers.”

“Canada is under resourced when it comes to making our clinical trial and approval processes work at the speed needed by patients, resulting in delays on a number of fronts. We need to better streamline and support our translational and clinical trial ecosystem in Canada,” says Dr. John Bell, Senior Scientist, OHRI, Professor of Medicine, uOttawa and Scientific Director, BioCanRx.

The report found that Canada’s fragmented health care delivery is another barrier because each province/territory makes its own decisions about which treatments to fund, leaving Canadians with unequal access to the medications they need with some cancer patients struggling to pay for life-saving therapies on their own.

Federal and provincial/territorial governments must work with cancer patient groups to assess health systems across the country to ensure alignment and prevent duplication and inefficiencies across the various systems, the report concludes.

The report also calls for a change in focus for health care funding: “Value-based health care is a new vision of the health care system in which the focus of every stakeholder is on improving value for patients relative to the dollars spent, providing better patient outcomes and a more cost-effective health care system,” says Dr. Sandy Sehdev, Medical Oncologist, The Ottawa Hospital Cancer Centre.

“Timely access to precision medicines can transform the lives of people in Canada with cancer. This report presents a realistic path forward for making the changes necessary for precision medicine to leap forward in Canada. It offers great promise not only for cancer patients and their families, but the health care system as a whole,” says Louise Binder, health policy consultant for Save Your Skin Foundation.

Background

The number of people diagnosed with cancer is rising each year. In 2021, it was estimated that in Canada, 44 per cent of men and 43 per cent of women would develop cancer in their lifetime, and about 26 per cent of men and 22 per cent of women were expected to die as a result.

Precision oncology uses precision diagnostics, often called companion diagnostics, to target treatment to a specific signature found in cancer cells. The most common treatments in precision oncology are small molecule drugs, biologics, monoclonal antibodies and immune-oncology.

For media interviews, contact:
Louise Binder
P: +1 (416) 457-3179
E: Louise.binder49@gmail.com

To read the report: https://conected.ca/wp-content/uploads/CONECTed-Getting-Better-Faster-Business-Case_FINAL.pdf

About CONECTed:

CONECTed is a network of national oncology patient groups involved in addressing issues within the healthcare system at the government level and in Health Technology Assessment both related to innovative medicines and other therapies. As new innovative medicines come to the Canadian market, questions about the sustainability of our health care system as a whole continue to take precedence over the conversation.

Our goal is to develop evidence-based solutions that improve access to innovative oncology therapies and approaches that promote high-quality care and improved patient outcomes. We focus on raising awareness about innovative medicines, fostering collaboration between patient groups and the medical community to addressing the changing needs of both parties and informing and consulting with governmental bodies on the value of innovative medicines.

For more information, visit www.conected.ca

-30-

Version français

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

This means that you are free to reprint this article for any non-profit or for-profit purpose, so long as no changes are made, and proper attribution is provided. Note: Only text is covered by the Creative Commons license; images are not included. Please credit the authors and QUOI Media Group when you reprint this content. And if you let us know that you’ve used it, we’ll happily share it widely on our social media channels: quoi@quoimedia.com.

You may also like