Slashing NCI’s Budget Would Hurt Industry Too, Critics Say
2/10/2007 Washington, D.C. Aaron Lorenzo BioWorld News (www.bioworld.com) The National Cancer Institute faces a funding cut in the coming fiscal year, per President Bush's proposed budget, and oncology drug developers are in for a pinch. Cancer study cooperative groups, which include researchers, cancer centers and community doctors who evaluate investigational and approved therapies, are expected to pare back their work significantly. The Coalition of Cancer Cooperative Groups, comprised of the 10 U.S. groups whose research is sponsored by the NCI, says up to 95 of their trials may have to be closed or delayed this year. That's nearly half of the studies they conduct annually, and such cuts would affect up to 3,000 patients. That's a sizable chunk of the 20,000 enrolled in their trials each year for access to investigational drugs, newer frontline treatment modalities and quality care. Such reductions, said Richard Schilsky, chairman of a study cooperative called Cancer and Leukemia Group B, "can trickle down" to biotech companies "in a fairly negative way." Because these groups enroll nearly half the patients in the U.S. who participate in cancer trials, there will be a direct impact on drug development firms. That's especially true of smaller firms with limited finances that make their investigational products available to the NCI for use in cooperative group testing. "Oftentimes these are Phase II, but also occasionally even Phase III studies," he told BioWorld Today, though he noted that Phase II trials are most likely to absorb the cuts. That translates to less [...]