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01
Oct
2013

An action plan to tackle critical gaps in breast cancer research

Around 185,000 lives could be lost by 2030 if critical gaps in breast cancer research are not urgently addressed

Charity hopes breast cancer could be overcome within 40 years but greater investment, collaboration and renewed focus is vital

 

Tuesday 1 October 2013

 

Research facilitated by leading research charity, Breast Cancer Campaign, has identified the ten critical gaps that exist in breast cancer research, which, if not urgently addressed, could see the loss of around 185,000* lives by 2030.

This landmark research, published today (1 October) in the international journal, Breast Cancer Research, entitled: Critical research gaps and translational priorities for the successful prevention and treatment of breast cancer, is a unique collaboration of over 100 internationally recognised scientists, clinicians and healthcare professionals.

Co-authored by Professor Sue Eccles, The Institute of Cancer Research, and Professor Alastair Thompson, University of Dundee, the Gap Analysis 2013 is the most comprehensive review of breast cancer research to have ever taken place and provides us with what we need to know and what we need to do to overcome – prevent, cure and outlive – breast cancer by 2050.

 

The top ten gaps have been identified and prioritised in key areas, such as genetics, prevention, diagnosis, treatment and support, which, if overcome, will have a significant impact on the lives of those affected. Critical gaps include:

  1. Understanding how genetic changes lead to the development of breast cancer.
  2. Identifying sustainable lifestyle changes, such as diet and exercise, which can reduce a woman’s risk of breast cancer, as well as improving risk-reducing drugs (chemoprevention) for women at increased risk of the disease. 
  3. Targeting breast screening to those who will most benefit, by finding accurate and practical ways to calculate someone’s individual risk of developing breast cancer.
  4. Understanding the molecules and processes that encourage different types of breast cancer to grow, and those that allow breast tumours to become resistant to treatments and spread throughout the body.
  5. Understanding how cancer cells with different characteristics form within a tumour, why cancer cells sometimes go into hibernation, and why some breast cancers are resistant to treatment from the outset whereas others become resistant over time.
  6. Developing tests to predict how well patients will respond to chemotherapy or radiotherapy.
  7. Understanding how to use combinations of drugs and other therapies to improve and tailor treatment for each individual.
  8. Developing better ways of using imaging to diagnose breast cancer, track how the disease responds to treatments and monitor its spread throughout the body.
  9. Providing effective and practical support to help people deal with the emotional impact of breast cancer and the side effects of treatment.
  10. Collecting tumour tissue and blood samples donated by breast cancer patients at different stages of their disease, alongside detailed anonymous information about each patient, to help study the disease and develop new treatments.

 

In addition, the paper identifies five key strategic solutions to these gaps to help treat and support those impacted by breast cancer and ultimately help more women to prevent and overcome the disease:

  1. Reverse the decline in resources targeted towards breast cancer research. Funding must be increased and strategically directed to enhance our current knowledge, develop the talent pool, and apply evidence-based findings to improve clinical care.
  2. Develop a fully cohesive and collaborative infrastructure to support breast cancer research, including access to appropriate, well-annotated clinical material such as longitudinal sample collection with expert bioinformatics support and data sharing.
  3. Find better ways to study breast cancer and test treatments in the laboratory, and identify accurate methods to use in clinical practice to predict how patients respond to treatments.
  4. Encourage collaboration between researchers in different scientific fields, including computer technology, physics and engineering, and support clinicians to do research.
  5. Improve clinical trial design to better meet the complexity of modern treatment options and involve patients in the design process.

 

The findings have informed Breast Cancer Campaign’s new action plan, Help us find the cures, which sets out its hopes and ambitions for the future for the prevention and treatment of breast cancer and how the scientific community, funding organisations, industry, policy makers and Government must now join forces to address the gaps. The charity aims to raise £100 million over the next decade to make this happen.

The plan sets out eight key ambitions for overcoming breast cancer by 2050, which as a result of the Gap Analysis the charity believes is now possible, if increased investment, focus and collaboration can be achieved. These are:

  • Risk and prevention: By 2025 individual breast cancer risk will be more precisely predictable and up to 20% of all breast cancers will be prevented.
  • Unlocking Genetics: By 2030 all patients will benefit from individual care and treatment made possible by understanding all of the genetic variables relating to breast cancer 
  • Early and effective diagnosis: By 2025, over 60% of breast cancers will be diagnosed before they are symptomatic
  • Understanding breast cancer biology: By 2030 what causes different tumours to grow and progress will be identified enabling us to select the best treatment for every patient
  • Improving Treatment: By 2025, improved treatments for breast cancer will reduce mortality from breast cancer by half
  • Tackling secondary breast cancer: By 2020, 25% fewer people will develop secondary breast cancer and by 2030 more than half of those who develop secondary breast cancer will survive beyond 5 years.
  • Living with and beyond breast cancer: By 2025 all those diagnosed with breast cancer, and the people close to them, will receive individually tailored information and support to meet their needs to help them live with and manage the consequences of breast cancer and its treatment.
  • Biobanking and enabling research: By 2023 a fully cohesive and collaborative global infrastructure to support breast cancer research will be in place, including the provision of tissue samples and bioinformatics, speeding up the pace of discovery and translation into patient benefit.

Breast cancer in the most common cancer in the UK, with around 50,000 women diagnosed each year. It is the second biggest cause of death from cancer in women, with around 12,000 losing their lives from the disease.

Corresponding author, Professor Sue Eccles, The Institute of Cancer Research said: “We’ve known for some time that breast cancer is not just one disease but our understanding has increased enormously in the five years since the first Gap Analysis in 2008. We now know that breast cancer cells can have different characteristics, even within the same tumour, and these can also change over time. This makes it much more complex to research and is why we need greater collaboration between multi-disciplinary teams and an improved infrastructure, to ensure we are getting the data and tissue samples needed to advance our research knowledge.”

Corresponding author, Professor Alastair Thompson, University of Dundee said: “The impact of the Gap Analysis could be immediate as it gives us scientific rationale to change clinical practice. For example, currently, metastatic disease is not biopsied in order to tailor treatment, but this could change the way one in six women are treated and provide hope to women with secondary breast cancer, with limited treatment options.”

Baroness Delyth Morgan, Chief Executive, Breast Cancer Campaign said: “If we don’t act now, by 2030 around 1.2** million women will be living with or after a breast cancer diagnosis and around 185,000 lives could have been lost to breast cancer. We want future mothers, daughters and wives to have their breast cancer prevented, cured or for them to outlive the disease, and hope that together we can achieve this by 2050.”

Help us find the cures: An action plan to tackle critical gaps in breast cancer research has been published through the support of Asda’s Tickled Pink campaign.

 

Media contacts

Breast Cancer Campaign Press Office: 020 7749 4115, Out of hours 07436 107914

Sarah Davis: 0207 749 3727 or 07885 427 454

Claire Learner: 020 7749 3705 or 07736 313 698

 

Notes to editors

For a copy of the Gap Analysis 2013 paper or infographics used in Help us fund the cures, please contact the Breast Cancer Campaign press office 0207 749 4115

From 1 October 2013, the Gap Analysis article is available to download at Breast Cancer Research at www.breast-cancer-research.com  

*Projected total number of female deaths from breast cancer in the UK from 2014-2030. Calculated by the Statistical Information Team at Cancer Research UK, September 2013 based on data from Sasieni P, et al. Cancer mortality projections in the UK to 2030 (unpublished). Analyses undertaken and data supplied upon request; September 2012. Similar data can be found on the Cancer Research UK Cancer Statistics Website

**Projected breast cancer prevalence in the UK in 2030. Maddams J, Utley M, Møller H. Projections of cancer prevalence in the United Kingdom, 2010-2040. British Journal of Cancer 2012; 107: 1195-1202.

Breast cancer is the most common cancer in the UK and accounts for nearly one in three of all cancers in women

Breast Cancer Campaign seek out the best research, bringing the brightest minds together sharing knowledge to produce better, quicker results to overcome and outlive breast cancer

As of September 2013, the charity currently funds 105 projects worth £18.2 million in over 30 locations across the UK and Ireland

In the UK, around 50,000 new cases of breast cancer are diagnosed each year - that’s around 135 a day.

The Breast Cancer Campaign Tissue Bank, the UK’s first ever national breast cancer tissue bank is a unique collaboration with four leading research institutions to create a vital resource of breast cancer tissue for researchers across the UK and Ireland. Visit breastcancertissuebank.org

Visit breastcancercampaign.org or follow us at twitter.com/bccampaign

To date, Breast Cancer Campaign has received over £10million from Asda’s Tickled Pink campaign. This has helped fund 80 research projects in 23 locations across the UK, so scientists can continue to make life-changing discoveries for women with breast cancer and has solely funded seven scientific fellowships. Asda has also donated £3million to date towards the Breast Cancer Campaign Tissue Bank.

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