TY - CHAP M1 - Book, Section TI - Clinical Trials in Older Patients with Cancer A1 - Khan, Khurum A1 - Seymour, Matthew A1 - Ring, Alistair A1 - Johnson, Peter A2 - Ring, Alistair A2 - Harari, Danielle A2 - Kalsi, Tania A2 - Mansi, Janine A2 - Selby, Peter PY - 2018 T2 - Problem Solving in Older Cancer Patients AB - Clinical trials are conducted in patients with cancer in order to determine the optimal treatment for a patient population. This might include evaluation of a new therapeutic agent, best use of an existing drug or intervention, assessment of safety, or identification of which patients are most likely to benefit from treatment.1 The information gained from such studies may be submitted to regulatory authorities and inform best practice guidelines, and will often be required to make decisions on whether an intervention may be funded by those commissioning healthcare. However, a unifying feature of these applications of clinical trial results is that the evidence base is established in a population that is representative of the population we are planning to treat. Unfortunately, this is not necessarily the case when considering the care of older patients with cancer.2 SN - PB - Clinical Publishing CY - New York, NY Y2 - 2021/02/25 UR - hemonc.mhmedical.com/content.aspx?aid=1152357696 ER -