‘When you build it with them, they will come’
Reaching out via Twitter (@corrie_painter), Painter enlisted MBC patients and activists for help in developing the project protocol — kind of a recipe for a research study. After more than a year of planning, the project had an easy-to-use, online consent form in which MBC patients could agree to share medical records, treatment history and tumor tissue and donate saliva samples (allowing researchers to analyze both their cancerous tumors and noncancerous cells). Every word and photo on the website was jointly agreed on by patients and researchers.
The site launched on Oct. 13, 2015 — MBC Awareness day. Again, Painter and Wagle turned to the MBC community to help get the word out. Painter showed the Fred Hutch audience charts of rising Twitter and Facebook traffic. In one 8-hour period, an initial Facebook post was shared 244 times. “I thought we’d been hit by a virus,” Painter said.
Beth Caldwell, an MBC patient diagnosed in 2014 and a blogger from Seattle, was an early blip on the chart of Twitter traffic. She was also one of the site’s first partners and beta testers.
“I found it really empowering that the point of the project was to help us,” she told the Fred Hutch audience Monday. “Not to engage in the politics of Cancerland, which are many and awful sometimes. Not to advance their careers. They cared about us as people and about saving our lives. For them to work with us and hear our needs from the very start was very powerful.”
To date — seven months into the project — more than 1,900 women and men with MBC from all 50 states have joined.
“When you build it with them,” Painter said, “they will come.”
Preliminary findings
Once the database is built out, the goal is to have it be user-friendly for patients as well as researchers. When the investigators figure something out, patients will be the first to know. The project provides regular updates through the website, email, Twitter and Facebook. Plans call for patient-friendly educational information and videos to explain research approaches and discoveries.
MBC Project investigators have already announced a few preliminary findings from patient-reported data. About 100 patients, for instance, have reported an “extraordinary response” to Xeloda, an MBC oral chemo drug. For years, researchers have come across so-called exceptional responders — people who defied all expectations by responding dramatically to a drug or treatment when others failed to do so. Now the advent of rapid and inexpensive gene sequencing makes it possible for researchers to figure out what genetic changes allowed them to respond — and know who else might respond as well.
But searching for these extraordinary responders was like looking for the proverbial needle in a haystack — until the MBC Project.
“It took us 28 days to find 100 extraordinary responders to different therapies,” Painter said. “You’re never going to find more than 100 extraordinary responders to Xeloda in one institution. But just since October, we’ve found these, consented them and are ready to do genomics.”
The MBC Project has also quickly identified more than 700 patients who have been on the same therapy for over two years; studying them could provide insights into who develops resistance to a certain drug and who doesn’t, and why. It found 100 people who report living with MBC for more than 10 years — well beyond the expected two to three years.
“Beyond the science, the patient in me jumps for joy,” said Painter, pointing to a chart that showing the long-term survivor bar soaring above the rest. “We all want to be in that bar.”
More than numbers
As valuable as this data is, the patient-partners provide researchers with far more than numbers. When the MBC Project mailed out saliva kits to participants, for example, MBC patients returned them with notes and photos tucked inside. Scientists — many of whom are not physicians and seldom interact with patients — keep these taped above their lab benches, glancing up from their pipetting to see real people with real families living real lives.
Project researchers also try to meet up with MBC patients face-to-face. When scientists attended a recent breast cancer symposium in San Antonio, they put out a tweet — naturally — and met up with a dozen patients.
“We were literally all sitting at the same table: researchers, patients,” Painter said. “It was not just a metaphor.”
The MBC Project plans to expand its inquiries beyond extraordinary responders to look at patients who have advanced disease at diagnosis, young people with mets and MBC in understudied populations. The Broad Institute also is exploring expanding into other understudied cancers with strong online communities.
Just as a test, Painter sent out a recent tweet asking if anyone with angiosarcoma would be willing to participate. She got 92 responses — including one from a patient who has been living with the disease for 32 years.
The patient in her jumped for joy.
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