Oncology Clinical Trials in India Challenges and Benefits

Oncology clinical trials in India in the last ten years has been a phenomenal increase and emerged as one of the major global destinations for clinical trials. Changed intellectual property regimen after WTO has been the principal mover of the occurrence, and maximizing profits rather than serving any considerate motives forms the main ideology of the rise of oncology clinical trial in India.

Challenges:

Regulation:

The complexity of the guidelines in heavily regulated clinical industry, addition of new rules and variations between different regulatory bodies causes constraints and predictable concern among professionals in this field. Increasingly emerging markets of clinical trials in new countries requires thorough understanding of whole new sets of requirements.

Infrastructure:

One of the major reasons for not being able to implement screening programmer in India has been lack of workforce - physicians, health workers, technical staff and pathologist to review pathological material.

Clinical Research:

There is a need to develop proper clinical research environment. This includes exposing graduate and postgraduate medical students, community physicians and medical college teachers about translation clinical research, and developing adequate infrastructure.

Spiralling Costs:

Tight timelines and increasing complexity results in cost of trials to be all-time high and puts more pressure on the resources required to implement and control every step.

Delay in Diagnosis:

Late presentation which in turn is due to low level of awareness in the population and among community physicians, lack of screening programs, lack of diagnostic facilities locally and vast distances to travel to reach a major tertiary cancer center, financial constraints and stigma associated with the diagnosis.

Benefits:

• Opportunity to access new drugs/treatments.
• Free treatment of cancer.
• Close supervision during treatment.
• Chance to participate in advancement of medical science.