5 Unexpected Benefits of Participating in a Cancer Clinical Trial
From advancing cancer care for future generations to being monitored more closely for disease progression, there are plenty of reasons to consider joining a cancer clinical trial.
If your current treatment hasn’t put cancer in remission or halted its progress — or you’re interested in supplementing your care — you may want to consider participating in a cancer clinical trial.
In a cancer clinical trial, a new treatment is tested against a treatment currently on the market. The researchers compare treatments to see if the new drug is more effective at, for example, easing side effects, improving survival rates, or shrinking the growth of the tumor.
Clinical trials test the newest cancer treatments, giving participants access to regimens not yet available to the wider population. “We see a lot of patients who come in and say, ‘My doctor says there’s nothing else they can do to help me,’” says Shepard. “By participating in a clinical trial, they have access to a new way to treat the disease.”
Participating in a clinical trial can be time consuming. You may have to travel for testing and screenings by the research team or even stay overnight in a clinic. But there can be an upside to those requirements. Getting additional testing can help you and your care team keep a closer eye on the cancer’s progression and respond accordingly.
“As we learn a little bit more about how the drug works, there are oftentimes additional visits or people involved that can help monitor [a participant’s] progress,” says Shepard. As a result, “People have a little bit more monitoring on a clinical trial than they would otherwise.”
If you have advanced cancer, you may feel as if you’ve lost control over how you’re treating the disease to keep it from progressing. “By choosing to participate in a clinical trial, you may have a bit more say in terms of what you’re doing to fight your cancer,” says Shepard. You may find comfort in the fact that you are exploring all options available to you.
Keep in mind, too, that you won’t be taken off a medication that’s working for you. “We don’t withhold a treatment that we know will be beneficial for someone,” he says. Rather, a clinical trial for cancer will often compare two groups: one group of people on a current, cancer-approved treatment and the other on the new treatment being studied in addition to a current, cancer-approved treatment.
Clinical trials do often require some travel. But, “A lot of the sponsors of trials are now covering travel expenses, such as an overnight hotel stay and gas,” he says.
Even if a certain treatment doesn’t benefit you — and that’s always a possibility — that knowledge is helpful to oncologists, who will use it to make better recommendations to their patients, says Shepard.
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