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Malignant

How Bad Policy and Bad Evidence Harm People with Cancer

By (author) Vinayak K. Prasad
Format: Hardback
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, MD, United States
Published: 21st Apr 2020
Dimensions: w 153mm h 236mm d 33mm
Weight: 550g
ISBN-10: 1421437635
ISBN-13: 9781421437637
Barcode No: 9781421437637
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Synopsis
How hype, money, and bias can mislead the public into thinking that many worthless or unproven treatments are effective. Each week, people read about new and exciting cancer drugs. Some of these drugs are truly transformative, offering major improvements in how long patients live or how they feel-but what is often missing from the popular narrative is that, far too often, these new drugs have marginal or minimal benefits. Some are even harmful. In Malignant, hematologist-oncologist Dr. Vinayak K. Prasad writes about the many sobering examples of how patients are too often failed by cancer policy and by how oncology is practiced. Throughout this work, Prasad illuminates deceptive practices which * promote novel cancer therapies long before credible data are available to support such treatment; and * exaggerate the potential benefits of new therapies, many of which cost thousands and in some cases hundreds of thousands of dollars. Prasad then critiques the financial conflicts of interest that pervade the oncology field, the pharmaceutical industry, and the US Food and Drug administration. This is a book about how the actions of human beings-our policies, our standards of evidence, and our drug regulation-incentivize the pursuit of marginal or unproven therapies at lofty and unsustainable prices. Prasad takes us through how cancer trials are conducted, how drugs come to market, and how pricing decisions are made, asking how we can ensure that more cancer drugs deliver both greater benefit and a lower price. Ultimately, Prasad says, * more cancer clinical trials should measure outcomes that actually matter to people with cancer; * patients on those trials should look more like actual global citizens; * we need drug regulators to raise, not perpetually lower, the bar for approval; and * we need unbiased patient advocates and experts. This well-written, opinionated, and engaging book explains what we can do differently to make serious and sustained progress against cancer-and how we can avoid repeating the policy and practice mistakes of the past.

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Malignant is punchy and persuasive, and the author is clearly in command of his subject matter. Prasad offers valuable advice on how to keep up with research as well as the appropriate way to analyse clinical trial reports.
-Talha K Burki, The Lancet Hematology Aimed at general readers (including patients), oncology trainees and experts in health-care policy, it informs and disturbs throughout.
-Andrew Robinson, Nature Patients should ask their oncologist how good the cure is: do I really live longer and better than doing "nothing"? Let them start by asking whether their doctor has read Prasad's book.
-Zurich Weekly News Review [Malignant is] so applicable to the issues of the pandemic . . . Because what we're seeing is a research infrastructure that is not set up to do rapid evaluation, and to be resilient and to respond to a health crisis.
-Marty Makary, MD, MPH, MedPage Today