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Analysis

Much Touted For Cancer, 鈥楶recision Medicine’ Often Misses The Target

Although MaryAnne DiCanto benefited from standard cancer treatments, her husband says, none of the targeted therapies recommended through genetic testing extended her life. Over 2陆 years, her doctor sent seven of her blood and tissue samples to specialized labs for 鈥渘ext-generation sequencing,鈥 which can quickly scan hundreds of genes. (COURTESY OF SCOTT PRIMIANO)

Facing incurable breast cancer at age 55, MaryAnne DiCanto put her faith in 鈥減recision medicine鈥 鈥 in which doctors try to match patients with drugs that target the genetic mutations in their tumors. She underwent repeated biopsies to identify therapies that might help.

鈥淪he believed in it wholeheartedly,鈥 said her husband, Scott Primiano of Amityville, N.Y., a flood-insurance broker. 鈥淵ou live on hope for so long, it鈥檚 hard to let go.鈥

Around this point in the average news story, readers would learn how DiCanto 鈥 mother to a blended family of five 鈥 took a chance on an experimental drug that no one expected to work.

She would be the scrappy protagonist whose determination to 鈥渒eep fighting鈥 enabled her to beat the odds 鈥 allowing us to celebrate the triumph of modern science and worry a bit less about our own mortality.

But there鈥檚 a serious problem with talking about precision medicine for cancer this way.

It misleads the public.

In spite of DiCanto鈥檚 high hopes, none of it helped. DiCanto died last year at age 59.

Doctors and hospitals love to talk about the patients they鈥檝e saved with precision medicine, and reporters love to write about them. But the people who die 鈥 patients like DiCanto, who succumb to advanced cancer despite the advanced testing 鈥 still vastly outnumber the rare successes.

鈥淭here are very few instances in which we can look at a genomic test and pick a drug off the shelf and say, 鈥楾hat will work,鈥欌 said Dr. Nikhil Wagle, a cancer specialist at Boston鈥檚 Dana-Farber Cancer Institute who helped develop precision-medicine tests. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 our goal in the long run, but in 2018 we鈥檙e not there yet.鈥

Reflecting on his family鈥檚 experience with 鈥減recision鈥 treatment, Primiano said, 鈥淵ou think it鈥檚 going to be more precise, like a laser versus a shotgun. But it鈥檚 still a shotgun.鈥

There has been real progress, of course.

MaryAnne DiCanto(Courtesy of Scott Primiano)

Testing for genetic mutations has become the standard of care in lung cancer, melanoma and a handful of other tumor types. But the number of people with advanced cancer eligible for these approaches is just to experts estimate. These targeted therapies help about half of patients who try them, said Dr. Vinay Prasad, an associate professor at Oregon Health and Science University.

Targeted therapies tend to be less successful in patients like DiCanto, who have exhausted all standard treatments. In a large study published last year in , precision medicine failed to help 93 percent of the 1,000 patients who signed up for the study.

At the most recent meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology 鈥 the largest cancer meeting in the world 鈥 researchers presented four precision-medicine studies. Two were The other two weren鈥檛 much better, failing to shrink tumors and of the time.

The studies received almost no news coverage.

Some experts, including Dr. David Hyman of New York鈥檚 Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, say that such testing should be available to everyone with advanced cancer, because no one can predict which individual might have a rare mutation that can be targeted with a new or experimental drug. When patients respond to these drugs, they tend to do very well, and some survive much longer than expected.

But Hyman acknowledged that many people who pursue precision medicine will be disappointed, because testing won鈥檛 lead to a new treatment. Precision medicine 鈥渋s not addressing the needs of the majority of cancer patients,鈥 he said.

Many of the doctors I interview as a health care reporter are uncomfortable talking about patients who don鈥檛 survive.

While acknowledging that not all patients are helped by tumor sequencing, they quickly pivot to talking about people they鈥檝e saved. They rush past the disappointing present and fast-forward to a future in which every patient gets the treatment she or he needs. If you don鈥檛 listen carefully, you could easily be led to believe those future cures are already here.

There are very few instances in which we can look at a genomic test and pick a drug off the shelf and say, 鈥楾hat will work.鈥

Dr. Nikhil Wagle, cancer specialist at Boston鈥檚 Dana-Farber Cancer Institute

Hospitals promote their precision-medicine programs by of long-term . Companies such as , and 鈥 which sell the tests that look for cancer mutations 鈥 highlight only the best-case scenarios on their websites. In drug company marketing, patients are cheerleaders for the

Against this backdrop of hope and desperation, how are patients supposed to make informed decisions?

DiCanto gave precision medicine everything she had, including biopsies from her lungs and liver, where her cancer had spread. Over 2陆 years, her doctor sent seven blood and tissue samples to specialized labs for 鈥渘ext-generation sequencing,鈥 which can quickly scan hundreds of genes. The tests aim to locate a cancer鈥檚 Achilles鈥 heel 鈥 a genetic vulnerability that can be targeted with a drug.

MaryAnne DiCanto preps for a biopsy. Doctors took samples of cancer cells from her lung, liver and blood.(Courtesy of Scott Primiano)

DiCanto鈥檚 first genomic test matched her to a newly approved drug she would have tried anyway, Primiano said. When it stopped working, she had another biopsy.

That time, tests matched her to a different drug approved for breast cancer. But it proved so toxic that it 鈥渘early killed her,鈥 Primiano said.

Additional tests matched DiCanto to drugs available only in clinical trials. Eligibility criteria for clinical trials are notoriously strict, however, and often exclude people who鈥檝e been heavily treated with other medications. DiCanto wasn鈥檛 eligible for any of them. Even when patients are eligible for trials, They鈥檙e just too frail and sick to travel to the metropolitan areas where most trials are run.

Although DiCanto benefited from standard cancer treatments, none of the targeted therapies recommended through genetic testing extended her life, Primiano said.

鈥淪he didn鈥檛 give up,鈥 Primiano said. 鈥淗er body gave up. Her body just couldn鈥檛 take it anymore.鈥

Primiano said patients should remember that precision medicine is in its infancy. Although scientists have identified tens of 鈥 changes from normal DNA that could play a role in cancer 鈥 doctors have only a few dozen drugs with which to target them. In the majority of cases, genetic mutations are of 鈥渦nknown significance鈥; they鈥檙e essentially useless, because scientists don鈥檛 know if they affect how patients respond to drugs.

Even when drugs are a good match for a specific mutation, they don鈥檛 always work. A that works in melanoma, for example, doesn鈥檛 help people with colorectal cancer 鈥 even when patients have the exact same mutation, said Wagle, a member of the medical advisory board for a patient advocacy group in which DiCanto was active.

MaryAnne DiCanto and her husband, Scott Primiano, spoke with Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton about health care costs during the 2016 campaign. Primiano says Clinton stayed in contact with DiCanto throughout her treatment and called on the day she died to thank her.(Courtesy of Scott Primiano)

Paying for tests and treatment poses its own hurdles. Insurers often tell patients that next-generation sequencing is unproven. Even when insurers agree to cover the testing, they won鈥檛 necessarily cover nonstandard or experimental treatments that sequencing companies recommend.

Primiano, a insurance broker, said his family was able to handle the costs: $500,000 out-of-pocket on his wife鈥檚 cancer care over 13 years. But managing his wife鈥檚 cancer 鈥渨as a full-time job 鈥 doing the research, finding the clinical trials, dealing with the insurance companies, managing the money.鈥

He worries about people with fewer resources, especially patients tempted to drain their savings account to pay for a treatment with little to no chance of working.

The very words 鈥減recision medicine鈥 suggest a high rate of success, Primiano said. While its successes should be celebrated, its failures must be acknowledged and tallied, reminding us how much is left to learn. When patients and their families have so much on the line, they deserve to understand what they鈥檙e paying for.

鈥淟et鈥檚 not pretend this is something it isn鈥檛,鈥 Primiano said. 鈥淚鈥檓 not saying we shouldn鈥檛 try it. I just don鈥檛 want people to have false hope.鈥

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