Researchers from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute report that websites that market personalized cancer care services often overemphasize their stated benefits and downplay their limitations. Many sites also offer genetic tests whose value for guiding cancer treatment has not been shown to be clinically useful, according to the team’s study (“Marketing of Personalized Cancer Care on the Web: an Analysis of Internet Websites”) in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

“Internet marketing may be detrimental if it endorses products of unproven benefit,” write the investigators.

Internet marketing of cancer-related gene tests is unregulated so there is wide variation in how these services are presented, posing a challenge for consumers and their physicians, notes Stacy Gray, M.D., a medical oncologist and investigator at the Dana-Farber Center for Outcome and Policy Research and first author of the paper that analyzes 55 websites marketing the services.

“We wanted to see if consumers are getting a balanced picture of benefits and limitations of these services,” says Dr. Gray. “We found a lot of variation. Some of the information is good, but all of it needs to be looked at critically by consumers and health care providers.”

The study found that “in general, the benefits of these personalized cancer products are reported much more frequently than are the limitations,” continued Dr. Gray. In addition, 88% of the websites offered one or more “nonstandard” tests that lacked evidence of clear clinical utility in routine oncology practice.

The scientists analyzed personalized or precision cancer medicine (PCM) products and services marketed by private companies, academic medical centers, physicians, research institutes, and other organizations. PCM was defined by the authors as “…products or services that could be used to tailor, personalize, or individualize care based on genomic or tumor-derived data.” PCM often refers to testing DNA from samples of a patient's tumor to detect mutations or other genetic abnormalities. The results may help physicians predict how the disease will behave and select a drug or drugs targeted to the particular mutations found in the cancer. Such targeted agents may be more effective and cause fewer adverse side effects than standard chemotherapy.

These somatic tests look at the genetic characteristic of the tumor itself. Germline testing analyzes the patient's personal genome  and may turn up altered genes in a healthy person that raise his or her risk of developing cancer.

A majority of the Internet sites (58%) offered somatic testing, and 20% marketed germline testing, the study found. In addition, 44% of sites offered some form of personalized cancer care.
The report cited examples of marketing claims such as:

  • “Reduce trial and error at the prescription pad. Genetic testing is a tool for better patient care, greater accuracy, lower costs, enhanced care-that is our promise.”
  • Using the marketer's “enhanced treatment options, our patients experienced a greater life expectancy, often with less side effects than standard treatment.” A late-stage pancreatic cancer patient's life “was extended five years by (our product)-guided treatment.”
  • “Our laboratory analyzes your tumor's response to 8-16 drugs and combinations to identify which treatments will work best to kill your cancer.”

Claims and other information posted on Internet sites are not subject to regulation by agencies such as the FDA or the Federal Trade Commission. More recently, the FDA has said it intends to begin regulating genomic testing more broadly.

Even if regulation of the websites becomes a reality, the researchers said, “Oncology providers will need to guide patients as they navigate decisions about personalized cancer medicine.”

Previous articlePhthalates Disrupt Pregnancy Hormone, Hamper Fetal Masculinization
Next articleGenetic “Dimmer” Switches that Shaped Human Brain Evolution Mapped