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Home > News & Events > Press Releases > 2007 Press Releases > Press Release - April 30, 2007
Press Release - April 30, 2007

Improving Cancer Care for Future Generations
Clinical Trials: What's in them for me and my family?


Contact: Loretta Mouzon
(843)324-2566
LorettaMouzon@aol.com

Charleston, SC, (April 30, 2007)Clinical trials are essential to improving health care for all people. Clinical trials are research studies to test new drugs, devices or treatment strategies on humans. Volunteers are critical to helping researchers learn how safe and effective a new treatment will be.  The (MUSC) Medical University of South Carolina Hollings Cancer Center (HCC) wants potential volunteers to understand clinical trials and how their participation could improve cancer care for them, their families and future generations. “Clinical trials are extraordinarily important,” says Andrew S. Kraft, MD, Director of the Hollings Cancer Center. “We’re seeing an explosion of scientific discoveries that are opening up a range of opportunities for earlier diagnosis, fewer side effects and more effective treatments and improved prevention strategies. As physicians, the only way we can bring these new treatments to patients is through clinical trials.  Less than 1% of all adults with cancer in South Carolina are going into clinical trials; if we are going to fight this war on cancer, we need everyone’s participation.”
          To help people understand clinical trials, the HCC is hosting a cancer educational seminar Saturday, May 12 from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at Burke High School, 244 President Street. The seminar is free and open to the public.  Zora K. Brown, author, advocate for women’s health/ health disparities issues and three-time cancer survivor is the keynote speaker. Dr. Carlton D. Donald, Assistant Professor, Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at MUSC will answer the question – clinical trials: what’s in them for me and my family?
          Dr. Donald says, “In order to make a difference in cancer tomorrow, we have to take action today. It will require everyone taking part to make this a reality”. More minority participation is needed in clinical trials. It is important that people from all races participate in clinical trials because different ethnic groups often respond differently to drug therapies. Fear and distrust are among the reasons
African Americans cite for declining to volunteer for clinical trials. Many African Americans know the history of the Tuskegee Experiment or Tuskegee Syphilis Study. The legacy of the Tuskegee Experiment is complicated. For African Americans it is a legacy of distrust that not only keeps them from participating in clinical trials but also keeps many of them from participating in the medical system for basic, preventative health care. 
         Dr. Marvella E. Ford, Associate Director of Cancer Disparities at Hollings Cancer Center
says, “Even though the Tuskegee Experiment was a terrible event, it led to the creation of laws that protect the rights of all people who take part in clinical trials. These laws are designed to keep a study like the Tuskegee Experiment from happening again. All studies now require Institutional Review Board (IRB) approval before any participants are recruited”. The IRB is also sometimes called a Human Rights Board. The IRB is made up of physicians, ethicists, religious leaders and other community leaders who are required to look at studies that use human or animal subjects. The main responsibility of the IRB is to protect the public from harm and look carefully at each study’s methods to make sure the research is done in an ethical way.
         Terri Matson, Director of Clinical Trials for the Hollings Cancer Center says, “
We conduct clinical trials so that we can advance cancer care and hopefully one day find a cure.  The population affected by cancer is varied as cancer doesn’t discriminate by sex, age or race.  Our concern however, is that historically minority participation in clinical trials has been lower then we would like to see.  This is a problem because our research is not representative of the population affected by cancer.  In a field where we are now beginning to target treatments based on the patient’s genetics, it is more important then ever to ensure all populations, including minorities, are represented in cancer research”.
        Cancer is the second leading cause of death in South Carolina claiming more than 9,000 lives each year. More than 22,000 cases of cancer are diagnosed in the state annually. The vision of the Hollings Cancer Center
is to become recognized by the National
Cancer Institute as a leader in the understanding of cancer and translating this knowledge into exceptional clinical care, prevention and training the next generation of cancer physicians and researchers.
        To register for the free HCC cancer educational seminar, please contact Jim Etheredge at 843-792-8192 or at etherjam@musc.edu.  There is no cost for the seminar. Free breakfast and lunch will be provided.

About MUSC

Founded in 1824 in Charleston, The Medical University of South Carolina is the oldest medical school in the south. Today, MUSC continues the tradition of excellence in education, research, and patient care.  MUSC is home to over 3,000 students and residents, as well as nearly 10,000 employees, including 1,300 faculty members.  As the largest non-federal employer in Charleston, the University and its affiliates have collective budgets in excess of $1.3 billion per year.  MUSC operates a 600 bed medical center, which includes a nationally recognized Children’s Hospital and the Hollings Cancer Center.  www.musc.edu and hcc.musc.edu



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Page Last Updated:04/30/2007
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