The US National Cancer Institute plans to enroll about 1,000 patients beginning in July, experts said at the American Society of Clinical Oncology meeting in Chicago.
"This is the largest and most rigorous precision oncology trial in history," said James Doroshow, deputy director of the National Cancer Institute, during a press conference at ASCO.
Rather than treating cancer based on its location -- whether breast, colon, lung or otherwise -- the approach consists of identifying the molecular anomalies of different cancers in order to determine the best treatments for each individual.
The project was described in broad strokes by President Barack Obama in his State of the Union address in January.
Also Read
The promise of precision medicine is that it may someday lead to more effective treatments and shorter clinical trials for the some 200 different types of tumors known today.
The trial's name is NCI-MATCH: Molecular Analysis for Therapy Choice.
Researchers will refer to an arsenal of more than 20 different study drugs or drug combinations, "each targeting a specific gene mutation, in order to match each patient in the trial with a therapy that targets a molecular abnormality in their tumor," said a statement from the NCI.
Subjects could also include people with tumors who have no standard treatment.
At least a quarter of those enrolled must be people with rare forms of cancer.