Cancer Research UK and the Medical Research Council (MRC) have jointly launched a Stratified Medicine Consortium to help personalise bowel cancer treatment by matching patients to the most effective therapies.
The £5 m S-CORT Consortium will use the latest genome-based technology to uncover the complex biology of bowel cancer in samples collected from over 2,000 patients from large clinical trials. Researchers will use this information to precisely match the right treatment to the right patient. This approach will help better predict how different patients respond to treatment, allowing the most effective therapies to be delivered to newly-diagnosed bowel cancer patients. These insights should help doctors decide which patients receive the chemotherapy drug oxaliplatin, what type of radiotherapy they are offered, and may also help surgeons to remove as little of the bowel as possible.
More than 41,500 people are diagnosed with bowel cancer each year in the UK and treatment varies based on the type and size of the tumour, whether the disease has started to spread (metastasise), and on the health and fitness of each patient. This programme of research will identify and use new ways to predict the patient’s response to treatment based on the genetic makeup of their tumour, as well as helping doctors decide how to treat patients more effectively.
Professor Tim Maughan, Cancer Research UK clinician at the University of Oxford and head of the S-CORT Consortium, said: “Bowel cancer survival has more than doubled in the last 40 years. But there’s still a lot more work to do. Recognising this challenge, we have brought together key partners from the UK and Europe in this consortium. Based on strong evidence from our previous work and generating new data from over 2000 individuals, we’ll identify ways to tailor treatment and ensure patients receive the drugs and other therapies that will benefit them the most, and make a significant difference to their chances of beating this common disease.”
Professor Mark Lawler, chair of Translational Cancer Genomics, Queen’s University Belfast, said: “This precision medicine approach can maximise the effectiveness of both existing and brand new treatments while helping to minimise side effects, to improve survival and quality of life for our patients. Additionally, our health economic analysis will allow us to measure the benefit we can deliver for the NHS and the UK economy.”