Absolutely scandalous: Experts raise concerns over unapproved cancer test used in trial – The Age

The committees current research expert is Dr Isaac Golden, a homeopath and national secretary of the anti-fluoridation Health Australia Party. Dr Golden has no involvement in the clinical trial and The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald are not aware of any complaints made about it.

The National Institute of Integrative Medicine, based in Hawthorn, offers treatments including intravenous vitamin therapy, hyperbaric oxygen and hyperthermia therapy, while the research department studies chronic fatigue and medical cannabis.

Associate Professor Karin Ried, the trials principal investigator and the institutes director of research, told The Age that the number of cells found is directly related to the progression, or risk, of cancer.

Its basically validated worldwide, she said. I call it a photograph of the inside. You can find out why Im feeling so sick. We know it works. Were just using it as a research trial because we dont have accreditation at this point.

According to her biography on the Institutes website, Dr Ried holds qualifications in chemistry, genetics and public health.

Professor John Rasko,who studies CTC tests as director of the Li Ka Shing Gene and Cell Therapy Initiative at the University of Sydney, said an accurate test for circulating tumour cells was a long-held dream but no such test has ever been approved for use in Australia.

It is an unvalidated assay that has not been rigorously established. This raises serious ethical questions about using an unvalidated test to give medical advice, Professor Rasko said. Any pay-to-participate clinical trial of an unproven clinical test is almost always unethical in my opinion.

Professor John Rasko studies CTC tests as director of the Li Ka Shing Gene and Cell Therapy Initiative at the University of Sydney.Credit:Wolter Peeters

C. Glenn Begley, a world leading cancer trials expert and former head of cancer research at major biotech Amgen, said: Based on what is disclosed publicly, it would appear that these investigators are using an unapproved, non-validated test ... This raises a concern that legitimate, approved treatment options might be withheld from those individuals.

New screening tests are often subjected to clinical trials to see if they work. But because it is not clear if the screening method being tested can accurately detect cancer, patients are generally not told their results, Professors Rasko and Begley said.

Professor Ried confirmed that as part of the institutes clinical trial the results of the screening tests are shared with a volunteers doctor.

If its an oncologist, a specialist, a GP, its a doctor whos going to have the conversation with the patient. We never give the patients the results directly.

Any treatment decisions were then made by the doctor, not the researchers, she said.

Professor Ried said if a volunteer who had chemotherapy scheduled had a CTC test and discovered the number of circulating tumour cells was low, it was plausible patients could discuss with their doctors delaying the scheduled treatment.

A spokeswoman for the National Health and Medical Research Council said asking patients to pay to be part of a clinical trial, and sharing the results of that trial, were not direct breaches of research ethics.

It is not within the remit of the NHMRC to investigate allegations concerning any individual clinical trial or any other research, she said.

Concerned clinicians would be advised to contact the approving human research ethics committee or relevant regulatory bodies.

The trial, which has now been running for almost seven years, has led to several publications. Comparable trials do occasionally run for that length of time.

Volunteers were advised about taking garlic and green tea if cancer markers were found.Credit:iStock

A 2017 paper from the trial notes that all patients with detected CTC were advised about integrative lifestyle changes and immune-stimulating therapies, including curcumin, green tea, garlic extract, vitamin D, grape seed, lycopene, citrus pectin, medicinal mushroom extract, black cumin seed, artemisinin, and other immune stimulating nutrients.

Professor Rasko said that advice raised serious ethical questions. None of these agents are approved for use in cancer, he said.

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In a statement, National Institute of Integrative Medicine spokesman Professor Ian Brighthope said the CTC test was a screening test, not a diagnostic test, that aims to provide a biomarker for the early detection of cancer and can be used by a patients treating doctor as part of their individual treatment plan.

We are proud to contribute to the scientific evidence base showing integrative medicine can help address complex illnesses and improve health outcomes for Australians.

The trials existence demonstrates how weak Australias clinical trial regulations are, Professor Vaux said.

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Absolutely scandalous: Experts raise concerns over unapproved cancer test used in trial - The Age

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