Reported by Michael Miller
January 22, 2002
You are the 12th National Cancer Institute (NCI) Director
in its 64 year history. Is there anything you'd like to say by way
of an introductory statement:
Dr. von Eschenbach: I am extremely honored and excited to accept this important
role. My approach and attitude coming to this position is not that
of 'I have an agenda and I've decided what all the answers are going
to be.' Just the opposite is true. I'm coming to this role to promote
the "we" in the NCI. I intend to access all the expertise from this
great institute of knowledge and experience and from experts throughout
the community in order for us to work collaboratively and collectively
towards a comprehensive solution to the problem of cancer. I intend
to listen and learn so that from this process "we" will define an
ongoing successful agenda. I value the full dimension of research
along with the translation of research discovery into effective
interventions. It's a process that's already underway at the NCI
and a process I will accentuate and accelerate.
Are there any major, overall goals you'd like to achieve
during your tenure at NCI?
Dr. von Eschenbach: I have told former NCI Director Richard Klausner that I am coming
to the NCI to complement the previous Directors, and I mean that
as both complement and compliment. I compliment them for the tremendous
accomplishments and progress the NCI has achieved under their leadership.
Since the passage of the National Cancer Act 30 years ago, we have
made great progress in our scientific understanding of the biology
of cancer. We have much more to learn about this complex disease,
but the National Cancer Institute has been responsible for many
of these accomplishments. At the same time, I see a responsibility
to complement what's gone before by building on that foundation.
Our emerging understanding of cancer at the genetic, molecular,
and cellular levels opens up enormous opportunity to alter disease
processes at each level. The paradigm that I grew up with as an
oncologist was to 'find cancer and kill it'. Now we can look forward
to not only eradicating cancer, but to 'target and control it' by
modulating and altering the behavior of cancer. Our goal should
be to accelerate the evolution of this exciting new paradigm, leading
to biology-based interventions to detect, treat, and prevent cancers.
The decoding of the human genome and the burgeoning field
of proteomics hold the promise of treating cancer differently from
one patient to the next. How do you see cancer research evolving
to meet patient needs in the 21st Century?
Dr. von Eschenbach: Initially we approached cancer as a single disease. Then it
became apparent that cancers behave quite differently depending
on organ site. When I began my career in oncology in the seventies,
the NCI was at the forefront of promoting organ site programs. Due
to progress since then, we are beginning to understand cancer at
a more fundamental level -- at a genetic and molecular level. So
we will be able to further define a tumor that arises in the breast
or in the prostate by its genetic and molecular fingerprint. Beyond
just the site of the origin of the tumor, these genetic and molecular
profiles will determine our interventions. We will be applying and
combining agents for detection, treatment, or prevention that are
directed to unique targets in the malignant process. From a pharmaceutical
or biotechnology perspective, the development of a drug will be
based on a target and that target may be present on a subset of
tumors from a variety of organ sites.
For example, STI-571 was developed against a molecular target present
in some leukemias, but clinical trials are now underway in other
diverse tumors in which this drug can be effective, such as stromal
tumors of the stomach and prostate cancer. The recognition that
tumors which are diverse with regard to their site of origin can
share common molecular pathways will cause us to realign our approach
to drug development and clinical delivery.
You've been through treatment for cancer yourself twice.
Do you feel this experience has influenced you in your roles as
cancer researcher and administrator?
Dr. von Eschenbach: Clearly having cancer has affected me, however I don't think
you have to be a cancer patient to be a compassionate oncologist
or a researcher passionate about a cure. Developing cancer did not
make me more compassionate or more passionate, but rather gave me
more of a sense of urgency. I initially made the decision to be
an oncologist because, intellectually, the mysteries of cancer fascinated
me the most. But then during my urology residency, my dad was diagnosed
with prostate cancer and later, as I was practicing oncology full-time
in the clinic, I witnessed first-hand cancer's tremendous everyday
toll in human suffering. Being a cancer physician requires caring
and dedication. Being a cancer patient brings with it a deep sense
of urgency about eradicating this disease. It is important to not
just solve the problem, but to solve it as quickly as possible,
because every day that we don't is another day that people suffer
and die. So I appreciate the balance between being careful, meticulous,
and precise in our research, but at the same time I will drive this
process with a sense of urgency. I will always maintain that the
cancer patient is at the center of what we're doing. Ultimately,
what we accomplish will be measured in terms of people living or
dying or suffering or not.
One of your areas of clinical experience has been in urologic
oncology. What lessons do you expect to take from this field that
may be helpful in the evolution of various programs at the National
Cancer Institute?
Dr. von Eschenbach: The field of urologic oncology has been interesting as a model
system for many of the fundamental problems of cancer. The origin
of cancer is genetic but the behavior of a cancer cell is influenced
by its environment. This dynamic is responsible for the tremendous
variability we encounter among patients with even the same type
of tumor. The tumor that I have specialized in, prostate cancer,
is one of the most interesting models of diverse behavior. Prostate
cancer is the most prevalent malignant transformation that occurs
in men, and for most it remains a relatively innocuous disease throughout
life, but for a subset of men it's a vicious disease and the second
leading cause of male cancer death. One of our major research challenges
is to not only understand the origin of cancer, but the basis of
its virulence. As a fourth year medical student I knew prostate
cancer cells could cause bone cells to produce blastic lesions.
Research is now revealing that organ site-specific cell-to-cell
interaction, such as between prostate cancer cells and bone cells,
is critical to the metastatic cascade. Thus, prostate cancer is
an important model for metastasis. Research that helps us understand
this critical interplay between tumor and environment can lead us
to innovative ways of controlling the metastases responsible for
the lethal phenotype of cancer.
As a clinical oncologist, I am convinced that successful management
of these complex tumors must involve interdisciplinary collaborative
care, and that we cannot solve this complex problem without research.
I learned these lessons early and they have been my mantra. We study
tumors in the laboratory, but a cancer evolves in a patient, and
that patient can alter the outcome of that cancer.
So, while endeavoring to prolong the lives of cancer patients,
we cannot overlook the importance of assuring their quality of life.
Among others, nutrition, pain control, fatigue management, and emotional
support are essential to the patient's reaction to cancer and much
study is needed to understand these elements.
So you're talking about a real bench to bedside approach?
Dr. von Eschenbach: Exactly. Discovery and delivery. But we must come to think of
discovery and delivery as a continuous rather than a linear process.
It is critical that we apply discoveries in the laboratory to the
clinic, but I believe it is equally important to bring observations
from the clinic and bedside to the laboratory for elucidation. This
will be even more important as we move further into a new era of
biologic interventions. Monitoring and measuring the expression
of biologic interventions in the patient in real time will add a
great deal more information to help guide therapy than relying just
on measurement of tumor shrinkage and patient survival. Monitoring
of the molecular pathways that regulate the tumor's growth and behavior
allows the basic researcher and the clinical researcher to work
much more closely together to refine and improve cancer therapy.
You've served in important leadership capacities for both
the American Cancer Society and the National Dialogue on Cancer.
How do you see these and other such organizations interacting with
the NCI, and what can NCI do to foster good relations with these
and other cancer support organizations?
Dr. von Eschenbach: The role that the NCI has played in what we may call the National
Cancer Agenda has been crucial and can even be thought of as the
keystone. The NCI plays a critically important part in fostering
research and promoting the delivery of state-of-the-art care. Increasingly,
many other organizations and agencies are playing essential roles,
especially in delivery of care. The Food and Drug Administration,
CDC, CMS (formerly HCFA), state agencies, and health care delivery
systems and providers, are essential to insure an ultimate solution
to the problem of cancer. The NCI can't provide for everything that
is required for a successful National Cancer Agenda, but it must
play a key leadership role in making sure the agenda is fulfilled.
Cooperation, collaboration, and integration are very important and
the NCI will continue to forge creative partnerships with many other
organizations at the federal, state, and local levels as well as
pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies, cancer survivor groups,
and non-governmental groups like the American Cancer Society, the
American Association for Cancer Research, the American Society of
Clinical Oncology, and others.
Unlike a number of former NCI Directors, you've had no formal
Federal government employment. How do you think your experience
as a government official will differ from your experience in the
academic sector?
Dr. von Eschenbach: Although I've not been at NCI, I've spent many years at M.D.
Anderson Cancer Center, a state institution, which is a part of
the University of Texas. I do have an understanding of a governmental
system and its rules, regulations, and processes. I am blessed by
the fact that I'm surrounded by people at the NCI who understand
the system exceedingly well. Deputy Director Alan Rabson, M.D.,
has been at NCI for 46 years and is invaluable to have at my side.
I also have an Executive Committee made up of individuals with great
experience and I'm looking forward to working and interacting with
them.
One of the most important tasks of the NCI Director is creating
a balanced research portfolio. What are your thoughts on the best
ways to achieve balance?
Dr. von Eschenbach: A balanced portfolio must be developed with careful deliberation
and consultation. If you think of successful portfolio management
from a financial perspective, you set goals and targets and then
partner with the best financial advisors you can find to successfully
manage each aspect of the portfolio. In addition to its own talented
staff, the NCI is fortunate to have key advisors that can oversee
the portfolio, such as the National Cancer Advisory Board, the Board
of Scientific Advisors, and the Board of Scientific Counselors.
In addition, an array of experts in the community are devoted to
seeing the NCI succeed in its mission. The portfolio is in good
hands and as director I will continue to partner with talent and
great minds in cancer to formulate and manage our investments in
research.
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