Date reviewed: 8/9/2004 The NCI/VA Agreement on Clinical Trials: Questions and Answers
The National Cancer Institute (NCI) and the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) signed an Interagency Agreement in January 1997 that is intended to increase the access of eligible veterans to all phases of NCI-sponsored clinical trials and to provide VA clinical researchers with expanded opportunities to participate in clinical cancer research. According to the agreement, VA will provide coverage for eligible veterans to participate in a broad range of clinical trials across the country. The partnership paves the way for more NCI clinical trials to be carried out in VA facilities. In addition, VA will pay the medical care costs of veterans who enroll in NCI trials in non-VA facilities in selected cases. The agreement is part of an ongoing effort at NCI to ensure continued and expanded access to clinical trials by eliminating barriers to patient enrollment. This agreement also reflects VA’s recent efforts to expand its partnerships and formal relationships with non-VA health care related organizations. Clinical trials are research studies conducted with people who volunteer to take part. Each study answers scientific questions and tries to find better ways to prevent, screen for, diagnose, or treat a disease. People who take part in cancer clinical trials have an opportunity to contribute to knowledge of, and progress against, cancer. They also receive up-to-date care from experts. The NCI/VA Interagency Agreement covers the full range of NCI-sponsored clinical trials, including prevention, diagnostic, and treatment studies. Prevention clinical trials study ways to reduce the risk, or chance, of developing cancer. Most prevention trials are conducted with healthy people who have not had cancer. Some trials are conducted with people who have had cancer and want to prevent the return of cancer (recurrence) or reduce the chance of developing a new type of cancer. Diagnostic clinical trials study tests or procedures that could be used to identify cancer more accurately and at an earlier stage. Diagnostic trials usually include people who have signs or symptoms of cancer. Treatment clinical trials are conducted with people who have cancer. They are designed to answer specific questions about, and evaluate the effectiveness of, a new treatment or a new way of using a standard treatment. These trials test many types of treatments, such as new drugs, vaccines, new approaches to surgery or radiation therapy, or new combinations of treatments. Included in the NCI/VA agreement are phase I treatment trials, which test the safety of a treatment; phase II trials, which determine whether a treatment is effective in various kinds of cancer; and the larger phase III trials, which compare a widely accepted or “standard” treatment with a new treatment that appeared promising in phase II studies. NCI-sponsored trials, for the purpose of the agreement, are: Veterans covered are those who fall into the “mandatory” category under legislation passed by Congress. These include: Veterans will be able to enroll in trials at participating VA facilities and, in selected cases, in non-VA institutions. VA will define the circumstances under which patients can enroll in trials in non-VA facilities. VA Medical Centers Many VA medical centers around the country are already affiliated with NCI’s cooperative groups, the networks of institutions that carry out joint clinical trials. More are expected to participate in NCI cooperative group clinical trials as a result of the agreement. In addition, some VA medical centers that are affiliated with major academic medical centers are already participating actively in NCI-sponsored early clinical trials of new agents. This agreement calls for more extensive participation in the early clinical trials program by VA. Non-VA Medical Centers Under special circumstances, such as trials of particular importance to the VA or trials of rare tumor types, VA may offer mandatory veterans access to NCI-sponsored clinical trials in non-VA facilities. NCI maintains a database of clinical trials as part of its PDQ® system. PDQ provides comprehensive information on NCI-sponsored trials enrolling patients throughout the country. The database is updated monthly and provides the latest information on eligibility for clinical trials as well as physicians and hospitals participating in the trials. NCI has added a feature to PDQ that lets users search by VA facilities to identify the specific trials in which the facilities are participating. Information about how to search PDQ can be found on the Veterans Affairs and Department of Defense Beneficiaries page on the NCI’s Web site at http://www.cancer.gov/clinicaltrials/digestpage/VA-DOD on the Internet. Patients and the general public can call NCI’s Cancer Information Service at 1–800–4–CANCER (1–800–422–6237) to request a customized search of PDQ. Callers can ask, for example, for a search specific to a geographic location or a certain mode of treatment, as well as to the type and stage of cancer. In addition, NCI has developed a Web page that allows any user to search for clinical trials on the PDQ database directly (http://www.cancer.gov/clinicaltrials/). NCI and VA also will establish closer cooperation in planning future trials. The agreement can be accessed on the VA’s Veterans Health Administration Cancer Program Web page at http://www1.va.gov/cancer on the Internet. More information about clinical trials is available on the clinical trials page of NCI’s Web site at http://www.cancer.gov/clinicaltrials/ on the Internet. Related Resources
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