The Porto European Cancer Research Summit 2021

Ulrik Ringborg, Anton Berns, Julio E. Celis, Manuel Heitor, Josep Tabernero, J. Schüz, Michael Baumann, Rui Henrique, Matti Aapro, P. Basu, Regina Beets-Tan, Benjamin Besse, Fátima Cardoso, Fátima Carneiro, G. van den Eede, Alexander Eggermont, Stefan Fröhling, Susan Galbraith, E. Garralda, Douglas HanahanThomas Hofmarcher, Bengt Jönsson, Olli Kallioniemi, Miklós Kásler, Eva Kondorosi, Jan Korbel, Denis Lacombe, José Carlos Machado, J. M. Martin-Moreno, Francoise Meunier, Péter Nagy, Paolo Nuciforo, S. Oberst, Júlio Oliveiera, Maria Papatriantafyllou, Walter Ricciardi, A. Roediger, Bettina Ryll, Richard Schilsky, Grazia Scocca, R. Seruca, Marta Soares, Karen Steindorf, Vincenzo Valentini, Emile Voest, Elisabete Weiderpass, Nils Wilking, Amanda Wren, Laurence Zitvogel

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    6 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Key stakeholders from the cancer research continuum met in May 2021 at the European Cancer Research Summit in Porto to discuss priorities and specific action points required for the successful implementation of the European Cancer Mission and Europe's Beating Cancer Plan (EBCP). Speakers presented a unified view about the need to establish high-quality, networked infrastructures to decrease cancer incidence, increase the cure rate, improve patient's survival and quality of life, and deal with research and care inequalities across the European Union (EU). These infrastructures, featuring Comprehensive Cancer Centres (CCCs) as key components, will integrate care, prevention and research across the entire cancer continuum to support the development of personalized/precision cancer medicine in Europe. The three pillars of the recommended European infrastructures – namely translational research, clinical/prevention trials and outcomes research – were pondered at length. Speakers addressing the future needs of translational research focused on the prospects of multiomics assisted preclinical research, progress in Molecular and Digital Pathology, immunotherapy, liquid biopsy and science data. The clinical/prevention trial session presented the requirements for next-generation, multicentric trials entailing unified strategies for patient stratification, imaging, and biospecimen acquisition and storage. The third session highlighted the need for establishing outcomes research infrastructures to cover primary prevention, early detection, clinical effectiveness of innovations, health-related quality-of-life assessment, survivorship research and health economics. An important outcome of the Summit was the presentation of the Porto Declaration, which called for a collective and committed action throughout Europe to develop the cancer research infrastructures indispensable for fostering innovation and decreasing inequalities within and between member states. Moreover, the Summit guidelines will assist decision making in the context of a unique EU-wide cancer initiative that, if expertly implemented, will decrease the cancer death toll and improve the quality of life of those confronted with cancer, and this is carried out at an affordable cost.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)2507-2543
    Number of pages37
    JournalMolecular Oncology
    Volume15
    Issue number10
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Oct 2021

    Keywords

    • Cancer Mission
    • cancer research/care/prevention continuum
    • clinical/prevention trials
    • comprehensive cancer centres
    • infrastructures for translational cancer research
    • outcomes research
    • science policy

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