Australian breast cancer trials




















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Become a corporate or community partner of Australian Breast Cancer Research. Align yourself with a worthy cause and support our mission towards a future free of breast cancer. Breast cancer is one of the most common cancers affecting families in Australia. This is why ongoing support from the community to enable lifesaving medical research is so important.

Our research focuses on translational outcomes, which means that discoveries made in the labs are converted as quickly as possible into therapies that help people suffering with breast cancer. New research aims to break down the stigma that all fat in our bodies is bad and potentially lead to a reduced risk of breast cancer in women. Chemotherapy is an effective way to treat many cancers, including breast cancer. But what happens when cells become resistant to the treatment?

New treatments or tests must be proven to be safe and effective through clinical trials before they become standard treatment. However it can take some time for the trial data to show the effectiveness of the drug in comparison to current standard therapy. A key concern some women have when thinking about whether or not to participate in a clinical trial is whether they will receive substandard treatment, or even no treatment, if they are allocated to the control group of the clinical trial.

The control group is the group that provides a comparison by not receiving the new treatment being tested in the trial. However, all clinical trials are very carefully regulated; if you are allocated to the control group, you will receive the current standard treatment i. While clinical trials are vital in improving the treatment and health outcomes of Australians affected by breast cancer, not all Australians have equal access to clinical trials. Participation in cancer clinical trials in Australia is generally low.

Women in rural or remote parts of Australia can have difficulty participating if clinical trials are only run in treatment centres located in major cities. Research indicates that people from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds may experience barriers to participation, for example language barriers. Women diagnosed with breast cancer who have other health conditions i. Men affected by breast cancer may also be excluded from participating in some clinical trials due to eligibility criteria.

Some clinical trials are run by researchers at universities, hospitals or private institutions and other are run by pharmaceutical companies. More than 14, women affected by breast cancer have participated in their clinical trial program.



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