Literature DB >> 26567010

Health-related quality of life in patients with locally advanced or metastatic breast cancer treated with eribulin mesylate or capecitabine in an open-label randomized phase 3 trial.

Javier Cortes1,2, Stacie Hudgens3, Chris Twelves4, Edith A Perez5, Ahmad Awada6, Louise Yelle7, Susan McCutcheon8, Peter A Kaufman9, Anna Forsythe10, Galina Velikova11.   

Abstract

The clinical benefit of eribulin versus capecitabine was evaluated using health-related quality of life (HRQoL) data from a phase 3 randomized trial in patients with pretreated advanced/metastatic breast cancer (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00337103). The study population has been described previously (Kaufman et al. in J Clin Oncol 33:594-601, 2015). Eligible patients received eribulin (1.4 mg/m(2) intravenously on days 1 and 8) or capecitabine (1.25 g/m(2) orally twice daily on days 1-14) per 21-day cycles. HRQoL was assessed using the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) Quality-of-life Questionnaire-Core 30 questions (QLQ-C30) and breast module-23 questions (QLQ-BR23), administered at baseline through 24 months, until disease progression or other antitumor treatment initiation. Minimally important difference (MID) and time to symptom worsening (TSW) were investigated. 1062 (96.4 %) Patients completed the EORTC questionnaire at baseline; overall, compliance was ≥80 %. Patients receiving capecitabine versus eribulin had significantly worse symptoms (higher scores) for nausea/vomiting (MID 8; P < 0.05) and diarrhea (MID 7; P < 0.05). Treatment with eribulin versus capecitabine, led to worse systemic therapy side-effects (dry mouth, different tastes, irritated eyes, feeling ill, hot flushes, headaches, and hair loss; MID 10; P < 0.01). Clinically meaningful worsening was observed for future perspective (MID 10; P < 0.05) with capecitabine and for systemic therapy side-effects scale (MID 10; P < 0.01) with eribulin. Patients receiving capecitabine experienced more-rapid deterioration in body image (by 2.9 months) and future perspective (by 1.4 months; P < 0.05) compared with those on eribulin; the opposite was observed for systemic side-effects where patients receiving eribulin experienced more-rapid deterioration than those receiving capecitabine (by 2 months; P < 0.05). Eribulin and capecitabine were found to have similar impact on patient functioning with no overall difference in HRQoL. Patients receiving eribulin reported worse systemic side-effects of chemotherapy but reduced gastrointestinal toxicity compared with capecitabine.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Breast cancer; Eribulin; Minimally important difference; Quality of life; Side effects

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26567010      PMCID: PMC4661183          DOI: 10.1007/s10549-015-3633-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Breast Cancer Res Treat        ISSN: 0167-6806            Impact factor:   4.872


Introduction

Despite recent advances in cancer therapies and increased availability of treatment options, metastatic breast cancer (MBC) remains incurable. The main treatment goals are to achieve disease control, preferably through prolonging overall survival (OS), and to delay or prevent debilitating disease symptoms [1, 2]. With each additional line of therapy, the response to chemotherapy decreases further and the response rate may be as low as 15 % in patients who have received up to two prior therapies, and is associated with significant toxicity and relatively low OS [3, 4]. In this situation, the measurement of patient-reported symptom experience and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) can provide additional information to evaluate and compare the efficacy and toxicity profiles of the treatments. Further, incorporation of patient-reported outcomes into toxicity reporting in clinical trials has been recommended to overcome the potential underreporting of severity of subjective adverse events by physicians in clinical trials [5-7]. Treatment side-effects (even those of lower grade) may adversely impact patient well-being [8, 9]. For example, chemotherapy-induced gastrointestinal symptoms (nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea) are not life-threatening, but are associated with worse HRQoL [10]. In contrast, uncomplicated neutropenia is often not associated with significant symptoms. Eribulin mesylate (eribulin), a novel microtubule dynamics inhibitor, was the first single agent shown to improve survival in patients with heavily pretreated MBC in the phase 3, randomized study 305/EMBRACE trial, where patients receiving eribulin experienced 2.7 months longer median OS than those receiving treatment of physician’s choice (hazard ratio (HR) 0.81; 95 % confidence interval (CI) 0.67–0.96; P = 0.014) [11]. HRQoL was not assessed in the trial due to the variety of treatments and schedules in the control arm (treatment of physician’s choice). HRQoL was, however, a prespecified secondary endpoint in a second phase 3, open-label, randomized trial (study 301) that evaluated eribulin versus capecitabine as first- to third-line treatment in pretreated patients with MBC [12]. The differences observed in OS between the eribulin arm compared with capecitabine (15.9 vs. 14.5 months, respectively) were not statistically significant (HR 0.88; 95 % CI 0.77–1.00; P = 0.056). Overall, the safety and tolerability profiles of the treatments were comparable: nausea was common with both treatments, in addition, eribulin treatment more commonly led to neutropenia, alopecia, leukopenia, and global peripheral neuropathy; whereas capecitabine was more often associated with hand-foot syndrome, and diarrhea. Similar improvements in patients’ HRQoL over time (a prespecified secondary endpoint), measured by the global health status (GHS)/quality of life (QoL) subscale of the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality-of-life Questionnaire-Core 30 questions (EORTC QLQ-C30), were observed in both treatment arms [12]. These two trials led to the approval of eribulin as a monotherapy for patients with MBC who have previously received at least one (European Union) or two (United States) chemotherapeutic regimens for advanced/metastatic disease, where prior therapy included an anthracycline and a taxane in the adjuvant or metastatic setting [13, 14]. Here we compare and further evaluate the clinical impact of eribulin and capecitabine on patients’ symptoms/side-effects, functioning, and HRQoL in study 301 [12] to better understand the quality of survival in patients with MBC. The analysis and interpretation of the results are based on a model that posits biological factors associated with a disease or its treatment lead to symptoms that influence functional status, which then impacts on overall HRQoL [15]. The specific objectives of the current post hoc analyses were to: Compare physical symptoms, functional scores, and GHS/QoL in patients treated with eribulin versus capecitabine over time; Estimate the proportion of patients experiencing clinically meaningful changes in HRQoL scales; and Compare the time to meaningful deterioration of HRQoL in both treatment arms. Subgroup analyses in patients with human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-negative and triple-negative disease status were also performed.

Methods

Patients

The population enrolled (E7389-G000-301; ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00337103) has been previously described [12]. In brief, women (aged ≥18 years) with histologically or cytologically confirmed breast cancer, who had received ≤3 prior chemotherapy regimens (≤2 for advanced and/or metastatic disease) including prior therapy with an anthracycline and a taxane, were eligible for study inclusion.

Study design

The study was an open-label, 2-arm, parallel, multicenter, phase 3 trial in which patients were stratified at randomization by geographic region (North America, Western Europe, Eastern Europe, Latin America, South Africa, and Asia) and HER2 status (positive, negative, or unknown). Patients were randomized (1:1) to receive 21-day cycles comprising eribulin mesylate 1.4 mg/m2 (equivalent to 1.23 mg/m2 of eribulin expressed as free base) intravenously over 2–5 min on days 1 and 8, or capecitabine 1.25 g/m2 orally twice daily on days 1–14. Patients received study treatment until disease progression, unacceptable toxicity, or patient/investigator request to discontinue. Grade 3 and 4 toxicities, including certain grade 2 toxicities with capecitabine, were managed by dose modification including dose reduction, treatment interruption, and/or symptomatic treatment [12].

HRQoL assessment

HRQoL was a secondary endpoint in this study; the principal prespecified HRQoL outcome was overall GHS/QoL at week 6, and has been reported previously in brief [12]. The results reported here are based on additional post hoc analyses of the study data. HRQoL was assessed using EORTC QLQ-C30 (version 3.0) [16, 17] and the breast module-23 questions (QLQ-BR23; version 1.0) [18]. The QLQ-C30 consists of 30 questions addressing five functional scales (cognitive, emotional, physical, social, and role), nine symptom scales (appetite loss, constipation, diarrhea, dyspnea, fatigue, financial difficulties, insomnia, nausea and vomiting, and pain), and one GHS/QoL scale. The EORTC QLQ-BR23 focuses on breast-cancer-specific issues and includes 23 questions addressing four functional (body image, future perspective, sexual enjoyment, and sexual functioning) and symptom scales (arm symptoms, breast symptoms, systemic therapy side-effects, and upset by hair loss) [19]. All scores for the EORTC QLQ-C30 and EORTC QLQ-BR23 were transformed to a scale from 0 to 100 [19]. Higher scores in the functional scales and GHS/QoL represent a superior level of functioning and better HRQoL, whereas higher scores in the symptom scales or items represent worse symptoms. The questionnaires were administered at baseline, week 6, and months 3, 6, 12, 18, and 24, or until disease progression or initiation of other antitumor treatment (including those initiated after study termination). The baseline EORTC questionnaires were completed in clinic before randomization. Subsequent questionnaires were completed in the clinic before any study-related procedures for that visit and before tumor assessment results were communicated to the patient. Patients were asked to complete questionnaires at each clinic visit, even if they had declined previously. Compliance was assessed by counting completed questionnaires.

Statistical analyses

The HRQoL population was defined as patients with QoL assessments at each time point within the intent-to-treat (ITT) population. Data were also analyzed separately for patients with HER2-negative or triple-negative disease. Analysis of patients with HER2-positive disease were not planned due to the anticipated fewer number of patients in this subgroup. Compliance for completing the EORTC questionnaires was evaluated descriptively for each treatment group. Pattern-mixture models were used to account for data missing-not-at-random [20]. No imputation for missing data was conducted. Mixed models on a set of covariates based on expert opinion (baseline patient demographics such as age, HER2 status, hormone receptor status, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group status, number of prior chemotherapy regimens for advanced disease, number of organs involved, visceral involvement, and disease-free interval >1 year prior to study) were performed to estimate the effect difference on repeated responses over a selected period of time and between treatment arms. Longitudinal analysis outcomes were expressed as least squares mean and standard error. To test the difference in least squares mean change from baseline between treatment arms, a 2-sided test with P ≤ 0.05 (unadjusted for multiplicity) was considered to be nominally statistically significant. The minimally important difference (MID) was defined as the smallest difference in scores between groups in the scales of interest, which patients perceived as beneficial. Literature-based threshold values for MID were used for scales in the EORTC QLQ-C30 [21]. Because there are not any published MIDs on the QLQ-BR23, a 10-point change was considered consistent with previous estimates [22]. For functional scales, an increase in change score from baseline of ≥1 MID was defined as “improved,” a decrease of ≥1 MID was defined as “worsened,” and a change in either direction of <1 MID was defined as “stable.” For symptom scales, the same criteria were applied with reverse direction. Proportions of patients classified as “improved,” “stable,” or “worsened” were calculated for each scale and cycle. Tests of proportions were done using Chi squared or Fisher’s exact tests, as appropriate. Cox analysis was used to compare the MID changes for eribulin versus capecitabine (using a reference HR of 1). Adjusted values are stated for the HR. Time to symptom worsening (TSW) was defined as the time until clinically meaningful deterioration by a specified threshold for each patient-reported endpoint (such as, the MID values) was observed. TSW was calculated for each HRQoL scale using Kaplan–Meier curves. A proportional hazards model (censoring on death, study drop-out, or study discontinuation) was used to estimate adjusted HR values of TSW plus each respective 95 % CI. For patients with >1 TSW event or who deteriorated without improvement, a generalized estimating equation was used to estimate the relative probabilities of observing TSW between treatment arms.

Results

HRQoL population

Of 1102 ITT patients randomized in study 301, 1062 (96.4 %) completed the EORTC questionnaire at baseline and thus formed the HRQoL population. The populations were broadly comparable between the treatment arms (Table 1a). The baseline scores for both questionnaires were similar (Table 1b). Across the symptom scales of the QLQ-C30, patients in both treatment arms had worse scores on fatigue, pain, insomnia, and financial difficulties (means >30). The scores on QLQ-C30 functional scales were generally good (mean values around and above 70) with the exception of GHS/QoL scale where mean scores around 50 suggest significant impact of disease [23]. However, the breast-cancer-specific functional scales of the QLQ-BR23 showed impact on all domains (mean scores 32–65), in particular, on sexual functioning (mean score 14.0; Table 1b).
Table 1

Baseline (a) patient characteristics and demographics, (b) health-related quality-of-life scores

(a)
ParameterEribulin (n = 472)Capecitabine (n = 444)Total (n = 916)
Age, median, years (SD; range)54.5 (10.3; 24.0–80.0)53.0 (10.3; 26.0–80.0)54.0 (10.3; 24.0–80.0)
Race, n (%)
  White424 (89.8)402 (90.5)826 (90.2)
  Other48 (10.2)42 (9.5)90 (9.8)
Body mass index, median (kg/m2) (SD; range)26.7 (5.5; 12.7–62.1)28.2 (5.8; 16.2–52.8)27.8 (5.6; 12.7–62.1)
ECOG PS, n (%)
  0228 (48.3)195 (43.9)423 (46.2)
  1236 (50.0)241 (54.3)477 (52.1)
  28 (1.7)8 (1.8)16 (1.7)
HER2 status, n (%)
  Positive80 (16.9)73 (16.4)153 (16.7)
  Negative309 (65.5)301 (67.8)610 (66.6)
  Unknown83 (17.6)70 (15.8)153 (16.7)
Triple-negative disease, n (%)
  No349 (73.9)343 (77.3)692 (75.5)
  Yes123 (26.1)101 (22.7)224 (24.5)
Number of prior chemotherapy regimens for metastatic disease, n (%)
  1130 (27.5)122 (27.5)252 (27.5)
  2271 (57.4)255 (57.4)526 (57.4)
  ≥371 (15.0)67 (15.1)138 (15.1)

Data shown are mean (SD). The italicized values represent symptom scales

BR23 breast cancer module (23 questions), ECOG PS Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status, EORTC European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer, GHS global health status, HER2 human endocrine receptor 2, QLQ-C30 quality-of-life questionnaire-Core 30 questions, QoL quality of life, SD standard deviation

a n = 554 (QLQ-C30) or 536 (BR23)

b n = 548 (QLQ-C30) or 526 (BR23)

Baseline (a) patient characteristics and demographics, (b) health-related quality-of-life scores Data shown are mean (SD). The italicized values represent symptom scales BR23 breast cancer module (23 questions), ECOG PS Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status, EORTC European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer, GHS global health status, HER2 human endocrine receptor 2, QLQ-C30 quality-of-life questionnaire-Core 30 questions, QoL quality of life, SD standard deviation a n = 554 (QLQ-C30) or 536 (BR23) b n = 548 (QLQ-C30) or 526 (BR23) Compliance for completing the EORTC questionnaires during the study was ≥85 % until 12 months, but was lower at 18 and 24 months (73–83 %), and sample sizes decreased due to study attrition (Table 2). Due to smaller sample sizes, analyses after 6 months should be interpreted with caution.
Table 2

Proportion of patients completing questionnaires at scheduled visits

VisitEribulin (%)(n = 554)Capecitabine (%)(n = 548)
Baseline96.8 (536/554)96.0 (526/548)
6 weeks91.1 (450/494)86.6 (419/484)
3 months89.2 (329/369)87.7 (299/341)
6 months87.4 (167/191)87.6 (170/194)
12 months86.2 (56/65)87.5 (63/72)
18 months73.3 (22/30)82.8 (24/29)
24 months76.5 (13/17)75.0 (15/20)

Data show patients who completed at least 1 question in the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer questionnaire among those who completed a baseline questionnaire. %, percent of all patients who were scheduled to complete a questionnaire at visit time (that is, patients who had not progressed or been censored)

Proportion of patients completing questionnaires at scheduled visits Data show patients who completed at least 1 question in the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer questionnaire among those who completed a baseline questionnaire. %, percent of all patients who were scheduled to complete a questionnaire at visit time (that is, patients who had not progressed or been censored)

Treatment effects on symptoms

Exposure to both treatments during the study was comparable between the two arms. Patients in the eribulin arm received a median of six treatment cycles, whereas patients in the capecitabine arm received a median of five treatment cycles. Overall, 177 patients (eribulin: 32.5 %, capecitabine: 32.4 %) in either arm underwent dose reduction. The most common reasons for dose reduction were neutropenia in the eribulin arm (22.6 %), and palmar-plantar erythrodysesthesia syndrome (4.9 %) in the capecitabine arm. During the course of the study, patients receiving capecitabine had comparatively more-severe symptoms (that is, higher symptom scores) for nausea and vomiting (P < 0.001; Fig. 1a and online resource Fig. S1; online resource Table S1) and diarrhea (P < 0.001) compared with those treated with eribulin (Fig. 1a). The differences were clinically significant, as a higher proportion of patients who received capecitabine versus eribulin experienced clinically meaningful worsening of nausea and vomiting (MID 8; HR 1.177 [95 % CI 1.013, 1.367]; P < 0.05) and diarrhea (MID 7; HR 1.189 [95 % CI 1.020, 1.385]; P < 0.05; Fig. 1b). Typically, the differences appeared to be greatest at 6 weeks, and declined thereafter.
Fig. 1

Effects of eribulin and capecitabine on physical symptom scales of the EORTC QLQ-C30 and QLQ-BR23 a differences in mean scores; b proportion of patients with worsened symptoms; c differences in median time to symptom worsening

Effects of eribulin and capecitabine on physical symptom scales of the EORTC QLQ-C30 and QLQ-BR23 a differences in mean scores; b proportion of patients with worsened symptoms; c differences in median time to symptom worsening In comparison, patients receiving eribulin had worse mean scores for the systemic therapy side-effects symptom scale (which included dry mouth, different tastes, irritated eyes, feeling ill, hot flushes, headaches, and hair loss; P < 0.001), and upset by hair loss (P < 0.05; Fig. 1a). A higher proportion of patients treated with eribulin experienced clinically meaningful worsening of systemic therapy side-effects than those treated with capecitabine (MID 10; HR 0.821 [95 % CI 0.707, 0.953]; P < 0.01; Fig. 1b). The analysis of TSW supported the interpretation of the MID thresholds. Patients receiving capecitabine had significantly shorter TSW for nausea and vomiting (MID 8; 7.6 vs. 10.2 months; P < 0.05), and diarrhea (MID 7; 8.4 vs. 11.5 months; P < 0.05) than those treated with eribulin. Similarly, patients treated with eribulin had significantly shorter TSW for systemic therapy side-effects (MID 10; 7.6 vs. 9.7 months; P < 0.05; Fig. 1c) compared with those treated with capecitabine.

Treatment effects on patient functioning

In the longitudinal analyses, baseline HRQoL scores were significantly associated with the change in HRQoL across all EORTC scales (P < 0.001); that is, worse baseline scores were predictive of worse scores while on treatment. There were no differences between the two treatment arms in terms of impact on patients’ functioning over time, as measured by changes in EORTC QLQ-C30 scores for functional scales (Fig. 2a). However, patients receiving eribulin had comparatively worse scores on the body image (P < 0.001) and sexual functioning scales (P < 0.05), measured by QLQ-BR23, than those receiving capecitabine (Fig. 2a).
Fig. 2

Effects of eribulin and capecitabine on function scales of the EORTC QLQ-C30 and QLQ-BR23. a differences in mean scores; b proportion of patients with worsened symptoms; c differences in median time to symptom worsening

Effects of eribulin and capecitabine on function scales of the EORTC QLQ-C30 and QLQ-BR23. a differences in mean scores; b proportion of patients with worsened symptoms; c differences in median time to symptom worsening As indicated by the MID analysis, 10–35 % of patients in both treatment arms experienced a clinically significant worsening of their functioning, suggesting that the majority of patients experienced stable or improved functioning. No statistically significant differences over the course of the study were observed between the treatment groups, except that a higher proportion of patients receiving capecitabine reported a meaningful worsening on the future perspective scale than those receiving eribulin (MID 10; HR 1.173 [95 % CI 1.015, 1.356]; P < 0.05; Fig. 2b). In the ITT population, median TSW was similar for the majority of the EORTC functional scales and the GHS/QoL scale, with only 1–2 months’ difference between the treatment arms. Patients receiving eribulin had significantly longer TSW for body image (MID 10; 8.9 vs. 6.0 months; P < 0.05) and future perspective (MID 10; 6.1 vs. 4.7 months; P < 0.05; Fig. 2c) than those treated with capecitabine.

Treatment effects in patient subgroups by receptor status

Overall, the results in the HER2-negative and triple-negative subgroups were similar to those in the overall population in all analyses (data not shown). However, in patients with triple-negative disease, significant differences were observed in the TSW analyses. Importantly, TSW in overall GHS/QoL was significantly longer in patients treated with eribulin than those treated with capecitabine (median time 6.2 vs. 6.0 months; P < 0.01; Fig. 3). This difference in median TSW may not appear clinically meaningful, however, a separation of the Kaplan–Meier survival curves is observed beyond 6 months, which is likely to explain the statistically significant difference between the two treatments. The median TSWs were also longer in the eribulin arm compared with capecitabine arm for fatigue (8.9 vs. 6.1 months; P < 0.01), nausea and vomiting (9.9 vs. 6.5 months; P < 0.05), pain (8.1 vs. 5.4 months; P < 0.05), and diarrhea (11.6 vs. 6.6 months; P < 0.01); as well as for the functional scales of body image (6.7 vs. 6.0 months; P < 0.05) and future perspective (6.0 vs. 4.8 months; P = 0.01). The TSW for systemic therapy side-effects appeared shorter for patients treated with eribulin than those receiving capecitabine, but this difference was not statistically significant (4.9 vs. 7.2 months; P > 0.05).
Fig. 3

Effects of eribulin and capecitabine, in terms of time to symptom worsening, on overall global health status/quality-of-life scale of the EORTC QLQ-C30 in patients with triple-negative disease

Effects of eribulin and capecitabine, in terms of time to symptom worsening, on overall global health status/quality-of-life scale of the EORTC QLQ-C30 in patients with triple-negative disease

Discussion

In this phase 3 trial comparing eribulin with capecitabine in patients with locally advanced or MBC previously treated with an anthracycline and a taxane, significant differences in physical symptoms/side-effects were observed, reflecting the different toxicity profiles of the drugs. Patients treated with capecitabine had worse scores, and more rapid TSW for gastrointestinal symptoms (nausea and vomiting, diarrhea), whereas patients treated with eribulin had worse scores for systemic therapy side-effects (dry mouth, food and drink taste, eyes painful, hair loss, feeling ill/unwell, hot flushes, headaches). These results were not only statistically significant in the longitudinal models but were also clinically meaningful, as measured by the MID analyses and TSW. Typically, the differences appeared to be greatest at 6 weeks, and declined thereafter. This is in alignment with the literature which suggests that during the course of their disease, over 50 % of patients will experience nausea and vomiting, with a large proportion experiencing these within the first week of treatment [10, 24]. Despite the above side-effects, the majority of patients (65–90 %) in both treatment groups maintained or improved their functioning relative to baseline. Based on the group-level data over time using the pattern-mixture model, patients treated with eribulin had worse body image scores than those receiving capecitabine. While this finding may seem contradictory to the TSW results, which show that patients treated with eribulin compared with capecitabine have longer TSW for body image, this can be explained by the nature of the two different approaches. TSW is an analytic approach that censors data on the time to meaningful decline by a predefined threshold, whereas, the longitudinal evaluation of the raw score change is not censored. Therefore, while patients may have worse scores for these domains in the eribulin arm, we observe that there scores do not decline more rapidly compared to capecitabine treatment to a point of meaningful worsening. Notably, in patients with triple-negative disease, eribulin also demonstrated a significant delay in time to symptom worsening of overall GHS/QoL, as well as fatigue, nausea and vomiting, diarrhea, and pain when compared with capecitabine. Although the 0.2-month improvement in median TSW of overall GHS/QoL with eribulin compared with capecitabine may not translate to an early clinical benefit, a larger separation of the curves is observed beyond 6 months, potentially due to a subset of patients responding well to treatment. Capecitabine is widely considered to be a chemotherapy drug with manageable toxicity and a favorable risk:benefit profile in patients with MBC [25, 26]. It is often used as a first-line treatment in older and frail patients to achieve disease control without significant side-effects [25, 27]. The capecitabine dose used in this study (1.25 g/m2 orally twice-daily on days 1–14 per 21-day cycle) is approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration, and has been used in other clinical trials in patients with MBC [28-30]. A lower dose of capecitabine, typically 1000 mg/m2 twice-daily for 14 days per 21-day cycle, has also been investigated with similar efficacy but reportedly better tolerability [28]. In our study, treatment exposure to capecitabine was comparable to eribulin, with similar proportions of patients in both arms experiencing dose reduction. The observation that the impact of eribulin on patient functioning and HRQoL, despite worse systemic side-effect scores, is similar to that of capecitabine, is therefore noteworthy, especially from a clinical perspective. HRQoL is increasingly being recognized as a valuable endpoint of cancer care by payers, regulators, prescribers, and patients. Patient-reported symptom endpoints have prognostic value in clinical trials and support the importance of assessing the patient’s views in the development of new therapies [31]. Therefore, while the development of new cancer therapies should clearly focus on improving efficacy, ideally in terms of OS, maximizing HRQoL is also an important goal, particularly in the setting of advanced disease. Where treatments have comparable tumor-related outcomes, but competing toxicity profiles or differing logistics of administration, HRQoL measurement may help patients and clinicians to guide treatment decisions [32]. The MID assessment described here was defined as the smallest difference in scores between groups in the scales of interest, which patients perceived as beneficial. Therefore, by definition, MID-based improvements are indicative of treatment benefit, and could guide physicians in making treatment decisions. The measurement of HRQoL and interpretation of HRQoL outcomes are, however, challenging. A review of clinical trials in patients with MBC that included measurement of HRQoL concluded that this assessment does not always provide additional information that is not already clear from other clinical outcomes, such as toxicity [32]. Indeed, in the current study, HRQoL changes in individual symptom scales of the EORTC QLQ-C30 and QLQ-BR23 instruments detected differences on patient reporting corresponding to the known adverse event profile for each agent. Nevertheless, no differences between the two treatments were observed for functional and overall HRQoL outcomes. HRQoL instruments may, however, lack sufficient precision to detect differences between treatments among a relatively homogeneous clinical trial population [33]. Patients may also find it easier to rate individual symptom scales accurately than a global HRQoL scale [33]. Chemotherapy-induced gastrointestinal symptoms (nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea) are common side-effects that can be debilitating for patients [10, 11]. Importantly, diarrhea can interfere with cancer treatment by forcing dose delays or reductions [34]. Diarrhea is one of the principal dose-limiting toxicities of capecitabine and this is reflected in the study findings, with eribulin being associated with comparatively lower symptom scores for diarrhea as well as a lower proportion of patients reporting worsening diarrhea, and a longer TSW for this symptom. Patients on capecitabine reported worse nausea/vomiting than those on eribulin, whereas the scale scores for other systemic therapy side-effects were significantly worse with eribulin. Together, this information will contribute to discussions with patients during the treatment decision-making process. Review of the observed toxicity experience of patients in this study (any grade adverse event) were consistent with the patient-reported symptom experience reported in this study: patients on capecitabine experienced more adverse events of diarrhea (29 vs. 14 % for eribulin), vomiting (17 vs. 12 % for eribulin), anorexia (15 vs. 13 % for eribulin) and nausea (24 vs. 22 % for eribulin) whereas patients on eribulin experienced more adverse events of alopecia (35 vs. 18 % for capecitabine) and fatigue (17 vs. 15 % for capecitabine) [35]. This HRQoL analysis has several strengths. It is based on data from a large-scale, randomized, clinical trial, using 2 well-validated instruments for data collection—the EORTC QLQ-C30 instrument and its breast-cancer-specific supplementary module, QLQ-BR23. Compliance was good throughout most of the study (≥80 % to the 12-month time point). Content validity for the symptom scales used has been validated in patients with advanced breast cancer or MBC in a phase 2 study of eribulin (E7389-G000-211; ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00246090) [36]. However, the analyses may be limited by the sample size for QoL analysis that decreased sharply from the 12-month time point due to death or discontinuation from the parent study, which is frequently observed in the metastatic setting due to the natural history of the disease. It should also be noted that the assessment instruments used for the study do not specifically capture the symptoms particularly related to capecitabine (namely, “hand-foot syndrome”) and eribulin (e.g., peripheral neuropathy). In conclusion, the majority of patients with pretreated locally advanced or MBC who were treated with either eribulin or capecitabine did not experience an overall deterioration in functioning or GHS/QoL. Eribulin and capecitabine had similar effects on patients’ HRQoL scores reflecting the known side-effect profiles of these two agents. Along with the efficacy and toxicity findings of study 301 [12] and study 305/EMBRACE [11], the HRQoL results from this study 301 analyses may help patients with MBC and their oncologists to make more informed treatment decisions. Supplementary material 1 (PDF 137 kb)
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1.  Randomized phase II non-inferiority study (NO16853) of two different doses of capecitabine in combination with docetaxel for locally advanced/metastatic breast cancer.

Authors:  A U Buzdar; B Xu; R Digumarti; L Goedhals; X Hu; V Semiglazov; S Cheporov; E Gotovkin; S Hoersch; K Rittweger; D W Miles; J O'Shaughnessy; S Tjulandin
Journal:  Ann Oncol       Date:  2011-06-01       Impact factor: 32.976

2.  Randomized phase III trial of ixabepilone plus capecitabine versus capecitabine in patients with metastatic breast cancer previously treated with an anthracycline and a taxane.

Authors:  Joseph A Sparano; Eduard Vrdoljak; Oliver Rixe; Binghe Xu; Alexey Manikhas; Carlos Medina; Susanne Crocamo Ventilari Da Costa; Jungsil Ro; Gonzalo Rubio; Monica Rondinon; Gumersindo Perez Manga; Ronald Peck; Valerie Poulart; Pierfranco Conte
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2010-06-07       Impact factor: 44.544

3.  Development of the National Cancer Institute's patient-reported outcomes version of the common terminology criteria for adverse events (PRO-CTCAE).

Authors:  Ethan Basch; Bryce B Reeve; Sandra A Mitchell; Steven B Clauser; Lori M Minasian; Amylou C Dueck; Tito R Mendoza; Jennifer Hay; Thomas M Atkinson; Amy P Abernethy; Deborah W Bruner; Charles S Cleeland; Jeff A Sloan; Ram Chilukuri; Paul Baumgartner; Andrea Denicoff; Diane St Germain; Ann M O'Mara; Alice Chen; Joseph Kelaghan; Antonia V Bennett; Laura Sit; Lauren Rogak; Allison Barz; Diane B Paul; Deborah Schrag
Journal:  J Natl Cancer Inst       Date:  2014-09-29       Impact factor: 13.506

4.  The European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer breast cancer-specific quality-of-life questionnaire module: first results from a three-country field study.

Authors:  M A Sprangers; M Groenvold; J I Arraras; J Franklin; A te Velde; M Muller; L Franzini; A Williams; H C de Haes; P Hopwood; A Cull; N K Aaronson
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  1996-10       Impact factor: 44.544

5.  Eribulin monotherapy versus treatment of physician's choice in patients with metastatic breast cancer (EMBRACE): a phase 3 open-label randomised study.

Authors:  Javier Cortes; Joyce O'Shaughnessy; David Loesch; Joanne L Blum; Linda T Vahdat; Katarina Petrakova; Philippe Chollet; Alexey Manikas; Veronique Diéras; Thierry Delozier; Vladimir Vladimirov; Fatima Cardoso; Han Koh; Philippe Bougnoux; Corina E Dutcus; Seth Seegobin; Denis Mir; Nicole Meneses; Jantien Wanders; Chris Twelves
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2011-03-02       Impact factor: 79.321

6.  Effects of second and subsequent lines of chemotherapy for metastatic breast cancer.

Authors:  In Hae Park; Keun Seok Lee; Jungsil Ro
Journal:  Clin Breast Cancer       Date:  2014-10-16       Impact factor: 3.225

7.  Quality of life under capecitabine (Xeloda®) in patients with metastatic breast cancer: data from a german non-interventional surveillance study.

Authors:  Volkmar Müller; Stefan Fuxius; Claus-Christoph Steffens; Christian Lerchenmüller; Birgit Luhn; Ursula Vehling-Kaiser; Ursula Hurst; Lars-Jörgen Hahn; Ulrike Soeling; Tim Wohlfarth; Matthias Zaiss
Journal:  Oncol Res Treat       Date:  2014-11-21       Impact factor: 2.825

8.  Chemotherapy-induced diarrhea: pathophysiology, frequency and guideline-based management.

Authors:  Alexander Stein; Wieland Voigt; Karin Jordan
Journal:  Ther Adv Med Oncol       Date:  2010-01       Impact factor: 8.168

Review 9.  Capecitabine monotherapy: safe and effective treatment for metastatic breast cancer.

Authors:  William B Ershler
Journal:  Oncologist       Date:  2006-04

10.  The European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer QLQ-C30: a quality-of-life instrument for use in international clinical trials in oncology.

Authors:  N K Aaronson; S Ahmedzai; B Bergman; M Bullinger; A Cull; N J Duez; A Filiberti; H Flechtner; S B Fleishman; J C de Haes
Journal:  J Natl Cancer Inst       Date:  1993-03-03       Impact factor: 13.506

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1.  Effect of renal function on neutrophil decreases following eribulin administration.

Authors:  Norifumi Suzuki; Hiroyuki Tanaka; Hirotoshi Murakami; Nobumoto Tomioka; Kenichi Watanabe; Masayuki Endo; Masato Takahashi
Journal:  Cancer Rep (Hoboken)       Date:  2020-06-17

2.  Eribulin Mesylate as Third or Subsequent Line Chemotherapy for Elderly Patients with Locally Recurrent or Metastatic Breast Cancer: A Multicentric Observational Study of GIOGer (Italian Group of Geriatric Oncology)-ERIBE.

Authors:  Silvana Leo; Ermenegildo Arnoldi; Lazzaro Repetto; Zaira Coccorullo; Saverio Cinieri; Palma Fedele; Marina Cazzaniga; Vito Lorusso; Agnese Latorre; Giovanna Campanella; Mariangela Ciccarese; Caterina Accettura; Salvatore Pisconti; Antonio Rinaldi; Cosimo Brunetti; Mimma Raffaele; Luigi Coltelli; Salvatore Spazzapan; Lucia Fratino; Luciana Petrucelli; Laura Biganzoli
Journal:  Oncologist       Date:  2018-11-09

3.  Time to deterioration in cancer randomized clinical trials for patient-reported outcomes data: a systematic review.

Authors:  E Charton; B Cuer; F Cottone; F Efficace; C Touraine; Z Hamidou; F Fiteni; F Bonnetain; M-C Woronoff-Lemsi; C Bascoul-Mollevi; A Anota
Journal:  Qual Life Res       Date:  2019-11-27       Impact factor: 4.147

4.  Value assessment in oncology drugs: funding of drugs for metastatic breast cancer in Canada.

Authors:  J Lemieux; S Audet
Journal:  Curr Oncol       Date:  2018-06-13       Impact factor: 3.677

5.  Effectiveness of eribulin as first-line or second-line chemotherapy for HER2-negative hormone-resistant advanced or metastatic breast cancer: findings from the multi-institutional, prospective, observational KBCRN A001: E-SPEC study.

Authors:  Yuichiro Kikawa; Takeshi Kotake; Shigeru Tsuyuki; Yookija Kang; Sachiko Takahara; Yuri Fujimoto; Hiroyasu Yamashiro; Hiroshi Yoshibayashi; Masahiro Takada; Rie Yasuoka; Katsuhiko Nakatsukasa; Kazuhiko Yamagami; Hirofumi Suwa; Toshitaka Okuno; Ichiro Nakayama; Tatsushi Kato; Nobuko Ogura; Yoshio Moriguchi; Hiroshi Ishiguro; Tatsuo Kagimura; Tetsuya Taguchi; Tomoharu Sugie; Masakazu Toi
Journal:  Breast Cancer       Date:  2022-04-23       Impact factor: 3.307

6.  Patient-Reported Outcomes in Patients With PIK3CA-Mutated Hormone Receptor-Positive, Human Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor 2-Negative Advanced Breast Cancer From SOLAR-1.

Authors:  Eva Maria Ciruelos; Hope S Rugo; Ingrid A Mayer; Christelle Levy; Frédéric Forget; Juan Ignacio Delgado Mingorance; Tamar Safra; Norikazu Masuda; Yeon Hee Park; Dejan Juric; Pierfranco Conte; Mario Campone; Sibylle Loibl; Hiroji Iwata; Xiaolei Zhou; Jinhee Park; Antonia Ridolfi; Ines Lorenzo; Fabrice André
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2021-03-29       Impact factor: 50.717

7.  Capecitabine for hormone receptor-positive versus hormone receptor-negative breast cancer.

Authors:  Siao-Nge Hoon; Peter Kh Lau; Alison M White; Max K Bulsara; Patricia D Banks; Andrew D Redfern
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2021-05-26

8.  Mindfulness-based stress reduction for women diagnosed with breast cancer.

Authors:  Lisa K Schell; Ina Monsef; Achim Wöckel; Nicole Skoetz
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2019-03-27

9.  Valproic acid potentiates the anticancer activity of capecitabine in vitro and in vivo in breast cancer models via induction of thymidine phosphorylase expression.

Authors:  Manuela Terranova-Barberio; Maria Serena Roca; Andrea Ilaria Zotti; Alessandra Leone; Francesca Bruzzese; Carlo Vitagliano; Giosuè Scogliamiglio; Domenico Russo; Giovanni D'Angelo; Renato Franco; Alfredo Budillon; Elena Di Gennaro
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2016-02-16

Review 10.  Eribulin in the management of inoperable soft-tissue sarcoma: patient selection and survival.

Authors:  Colin Thomas; Sujana Movva
Journal:  Onco Targets Ther       Date:  2016-09-09       Impact factor: 4.147

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