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    Home»Health»“Unethical”: New Evidence Casts Doubt on a Much-Hyped Blood Test for Early Cancer Detection
    Health

    “Unethical”: New Evidence Casts Doubt on a Much-Hyped Blood Test for Early Cancer Detection

    By BMJ GroupSeptember 9, 20242 Comments4 Mins Read
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    AI Cancer Detection Concept Art
    The BMJ has revealed significant concerns about the NHS trial of the Galleri cancer detection test, including its efficacy, trial ethics, and potential conflicts of interest, calling into question the test’s readiness for widespread use and underscoring the necessity for more stringent clinical research protocols. Credit: SciTechDaily.com

    The deal obligates the NHS to purchase millions of tests in return for a state-of-the-art facility. However, experts argue the arrangement represents “a clear example of public risk for private gain.”

    New findings reported by The BMJ raise questions about the reliability of a highly publicized blood test for the NHS that claims to identify over 50 different cancers.

    The test, called Galleri, has been hailed as a “ground-breaking and potentially life-saving advance” by its maker, the California biotech company Grail, and the NHS is currently running a £150m Grail-funded trial of the test involving more than 100,000 people in England, report Dr Margaret McCartney and investigative journalist Deborah Cohen.

    NHS England claims the test can identify many cancers that “are difficult to diagnose early,” such as head and neck, ovarian, and pancreatic cancers, and that if effective, could be used in a national screening program.

    Trial success would also hand Grail a lucrative deal with the NHS, which, if results are favourable, has agreed to buy millions of tests in exchange for a new state-of-the-art facility built by Grail in the UK. Although contract details remain confidential, a single test in the US currently retails for $950.

    But documents leaked to The BMJ suggest that the trial is not suitable to justify a national screening test, while experts believe that Galleri has been over-hyped and that the current trial is unethical.

    Even the chair of the UK National Screening Committee has privately voiced “serious concerns” to NHS England’s chief executive about the trial, according to emails seen by The BMJ.

    Trial Results and Ethical Concerns

    Interim results of the trial have not been published as expected this month. Instead, NHS England said the results were not “compelling enough” and a decision to roll out the test will wait until final trial results in 2026.

    But as the trial continues, Freedom of Information requests by The BMJ raise further concerns over the close relationship between key government figures and Grail, including meetings with ex-prime minister Lord Cameron and Nadhim Zahawi, then minister in the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy.

    An NHS England spokesperson said they believed that Grail was “now being subjected to one of the largest and most rigorous investigations done in any health-care system worldwide,” that no decision had been made and no further details were available.

    By contrast, an NHS England source, speaking to The BMJ anonymously, said “The clinical or scientific data doesn’t stack up, but that should have come first. This is not the way to do a trial – it should be done transparently. It’s not been thought through at all.”

    Added to these concerns, Grail is facing a class action lawsuit in the US. Embittered investors, faced with steep losses, claim the company exaggerated Galleri’s effectiveness in order to increase share price.

    Richard Sullivan, director of the Institute of Cancer Policy, King’s College London, says that Grail is “a clear-cut case of public risk and private profit.”

    Concerns surrounding the decision-making process around Grail also serve as a timely reminder to the new Health Secretary, Wes Streeting, whose stated aim is to make the UK a “life sciences and medical technology powerhouse,” note McCartney and Cohen.

    “The new government needs a more rigorous and transparent way of reviewing Medtech clinical research, especially when it involves such widespread access to NHS resources,” adds Sullivan. “They also need to change their language. It’s all promissory science and hype. This serves no public good whatsoever.”

    Reference: “Galleri promises to detect multiple cancers—but new evidence casts doubt on this much hyped blood test” by Margaret McCartney and Deborah Cohen, 7 August 2024, BMJ.
    DOI: 10.1136/bmj.q1706

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    2 Comments

    1. Sydney Ross Singer on September 9, 2024 3:25 pm

      I am a medical anthropologist researcher and author. Medical corruption is the rule, not the exception. It’s all about sales, not health. Medicine is run by psychopaths, and you can’t trust them. See my article, Animal Research: The Rot at the Core of Medicine. https://www.academia.edu/123055005/Animal_Research_The_Rot_at_the_Core_of_Medicine

      Reply
    2. r on September 10, 2024 5:43 pm

      Cameron and Zahawi. Tories at work again!

      Surprised that there may be a conflict of interest involving taxpayers; money?

      Reply
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