| Literature DB >> 26710718 |
Thomas W Flaig1, Ravi C Potluri2, Yvette Ng3, Mary B Todd3, Maneesha Mehra4.
Abstract
Despite increasing drug treatment options for metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) patients, real-world treatment data are lacking. We conducted retrospective analyses of commercial claims and electronic medical record (EMR) databases to understand how treatment patterns for mCRPC have changed in a US-based real-world population. Truven Health Analytics MarketScan(®) (2000-2013) and EMR (2004-2013) databases were used to identify patients with an index prostate cancer diagnosis (ICD-9 codes 185X or 233.4X) and prescription claims for an mCRPC drug (mitoxantrone, estramustine, docetaxel, sipuleucel-T, cabazitaxel, abiraterone acetate, enzalutamide, or radium-223). Regimen analyses for first line of therapy (LOT1), second line of therapy, and beyond were performed among cohorts based on year of first mCRPC drug usage. mCRPC drug usage and treatment duration were compared across cohorts and age groups within each cohort. The commercial claims cohort yielded 3437 evaluable patients. Most men (91%) commencing mCRPC treatment had docetaxel as LOT1 in 2010; this number had declined to 15% in 2013. In 2013, 67% and 9% of patients used abiraterone acetate and enzalutamide, respectively, as LOT1. Among both commercial claims and EMR cohorts, treatment pattern changes were most pronounced in men aged >80 years, and median treatment duration for some mCRPC drugs was shorter than expected based on available clinical trial information. These results demonstrate a shift in mCRPC treatments during the past 5 years, with greater use of newer noncytotoxic treatments than docetaxel. These real-world data aid in understanding the changing role of chemotherapy in the management of mCRPC.Entities:
Keywords: metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer; prostate cancer; real-world; treatment patterns
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26710718 PMCID: PMC4735776 DOI: 10.1002/cam4.576
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Med ISSN: 2045-7634 Impact factor: 4.452
Drugs approved for mCRPC by the US food and drug administration
| Drug | Approval Date | Therapy Line and Duration Guideline | MOA | Pivotal Trial | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre‐docetaxel | Post‐docetaxel | ||||
| Docetaxel | May 2004 | n/a | n/a | Taxane (chemotherapy by tubulin inhibition) | TAX327 |
| Sipuleucel‐T | April 2010 | Yes | Yes | Autologous cellular immunotherapy | IMPACT |
| Cabazitaxel | June 2010 | No | Yes | Next generation taxane | Tropic |
| Abiraterone acetate | April 2011 | Yes | Yes | Androgen synthesis inhibitor | COU‐AA‐301 |
| Enzalutamide | August 2012 | Yes | Yes | Androgen receptor antagonist | AFFIRM |
| Radium‐223 | May 2013 | CRPC unfit or declined for docetaxel | Yes | Bone‐directed alpha‐emitting radionuclide | ALSYMPCA |
CRPC, castration‐resistant prostate cancer; MOA, mechanism of action; mCRPC, metastatic CRPC; n/a, not applicable.
National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology: Prostate Cancer. Version 1.2016 30.
Asymptomatic.
Symptomatic.
Asymptomatic/minimally symptomatic, no visceral disease, good performance status.
Approved in 2011 for the treatment of mCRPC post‐docetaxel; approval expanded in 2012 to chemotherapy‐naïve mCRPC.
Approved in 2012 for the treatment of mCRPC post‐docetaxel; approval expanded in 2014 to chemotherapy‐naïve mCRPC.
CRPC patients with symptomatic metastatic bone disease and no known visceral metastases.
Distribution of mCRPC cohorts based on age at time of first mCRPC drug usage
| Commercial Claims Database | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total prostate cancer Population | Total evaluable mCRPC Patients | mCRPC Cohort | |||
| 2000–2003 | 2004–2008 | 2009–2013 | |||
|
| 326,907 | 3437 | 175 | 1124 | 2138 |
| Age, years | |||||
| Median (interquartile range) | 64.0 (59–74) | 70.0 (62–78) | 69.0 (61–77) | 71.0 (61–78) | 70.0 (62–78) |
| Age group, | |||||
| 44–64 years | 164,499 (50.3) | 1215 (35) | 65 (37) | 391 (35) | 759 (36) |
| 65–80 years | 123,658 (37.8) | 1604 (47) | 86 (49) | 547 (49) | 971 (45) |
| >80 years | 33,093 (10.1) | 604 (18) | 22 (13) | 180 (16) | 402 (19) |
mCRPC, metastatic castration‐resistant prostate cancer.
Age at time of first prostate cancer diagnosis.
Based on age at time of first mCRPC drug usage.
14 patients were not included in the age group splits due to inconsistency or missing values in their date‐of‐birth data.
Data for 5657 patients were not included due to inconsistency in date‐of‐birth data.
227 patients who had only 1 mCRPC injectable claim in the database were not deemed evaluable.
Distribution of 2009–2013 mCRPC commercial claims and EMR cohorts based on age at time of first mCRPC drug usage
| 2009–2013 mCRPC Cohort | ||
|---|---|---|
| Commercial claims | EMR | |
| Age, years | ||
| Median (interquartile range) | 70.0 (62–78) | 74.0 (67–80) |
| Age group, | ||
| 44–64 years | 759 (35.5) | 233 (17.4) |
| 65–80 years | 971 (45.4) | 776 (57.9) |
| >80 years | 402 (18.8) | 331 (24.7) |
EMR, electronic medical record; mCRPC, metastatic castration‐resistant prostate cancer.
14 patients were not included in the age group splits due to inconsistency or missing values in their date‐of‐birth data.
mCRPC drug usage by 4 index year–based cohort
| Commercial Claims Database | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of patients using an mCRPC drug regimen | Number of chemotherapy | |||||
| Cohort | LOT1 | LOT2+ | LOT1 chemotherapy | LOT1 Nonchemotherapy agent | LOT2+ chemotherapy | LOT2+ nonchemotherapy agent |
| 2000–2003 | 175 | 66 | 166 | 0 | 65 | 0 |
| 2004–2008 | 1124 | 362 | 1077 | 0 | 314 | 33 |
| 2009–2013 | 2138 | 789 | 1149 | 918 | 344 | 586 |
LOT1, first line of therapy; LOT2+, beyond second line of therapy; mCRPC, metastatic castration‐resistant prostate cancer.
Excludes patients who used carboplatin.
Cabazitaxel, docetaxel, estramustine, mitoxantrone.
Abiraterone acetate, enzalutamide, sipuleucel‐T.
Differences in utilization pattern of chemotherapy and nonchemotherapy mCRPC drug regimens were significant in LOT1 (P < 0.0001) and LOT2+ (P < 0.0001).
Figure 1Metastatic castration‐resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) drug usage proportion. (A) 2000–2003 and 2004–2008 commercial claims cohortsa; (B) 1‐year cohorts from 2010 to 2013 for LOT1; (C) 1‐year cohorts from 2010 to 2013 for LOT2+. LOT1, first line of treatment; LOT2, second line of treatment; LOT2+, beyond second line of treatment. n each of LOT1 and LOT2 settings, mCRPC drug usage proportion for each of these agents was significantly different (P < 0.0001) comparing the 2000–2003 and 2004–2008 commercial claims cohorts. o other claim of an mCRPC drug ±90 days from an mCRPC drug claim.
Figure 2Metastatic castration‐resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) usage proportion for LOT1 by age group. (A) individual year commercial claims cohorts from 2010 to 2013a; (B) 2013 commercial claims and EMR cohorts. EMR, electronic medical record; LOT1, first line of treatment. amCRPC drug usage proportion in each of the age groups (44–64, 65–80, >80 years) was significantly different (P < 0.0001) for each of these agents comparing years 2010–2013.
Figure 3Estimated median treatment duration of metastatic castration‐resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) drugsa in the 2000–2013 commercial claims cohort. (A) LOT1; (B) LOT2. LOT1, first line of treatment; LOT2, second line of treatment. Horizontal line = median; box = 25% and 75% quartiles, whisker = minimum and maximum values. aSipuleucel‐T was not included because of the fixed‐duration treatment course.
Figure 4Metastatic castration‐resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) drug usage proportion among docetaxel‐naïve and post‐docetaxel patients by age group in the 2010–2013 commercial claims cohort. In each of the age groups (44–64, 65–80, >80 years), the drug usage proportion of abiraterone acetate (P < 0.0001) and enzalutamide (P = 0.0003) was significantly different between the docetaxel‐naïve and post‐docetaxel settings, whereas the drug usage proportion of sipuleucel‐T (P = 0.40) and cabazitaxel (P = 0.42) was not significantly different between the docetaxel‐naïve and post‐docetaxel settings.