| Literature DB >> 29907552 |
Gita Thanarajasingam1, Lori M Minasian2, Frederic Baron3, Franco Cavalli4, R Angelo De Claro5, Amylou C Dueck6, Tarec C El-Galaly7, Neil Everest8, Jan Geissler9, Christian Gisselbrecht10, John Gribben11, Mary Horowitz12, S Percy Ivy2, Caron A Jacobson13, Armand Keating14, Paul G Kluetz5, Aviva Krauss5, Yok Lam Kwong15, Richard F Little2, Francois-Xavier Mahon16, Matthew J Matasar17, María-Victoria Mateos18, Kristen McCullough19, Robert S Miller20, Mohamad Mohty21, Philippe Moreau22, Lindsay M Morton2, Sumimasa Nagai23, Simon Rule24, Jeff Sloan25, Pieter Sonneveld26, Carrie A Thompson19, Kyriaki Tzogani27, Flora E van Leeuwen28, Galina Velikova29, Diego Villa30, John R Wingard31, Sophie Wintrich32, John F Seymour33, Thomas M Habermann19.
Abstract
Tremendous progress in treatment and outcomes has been achieved across the whole range of haematological malignancies in the past two decades. Although cure rates for aggressive malignancies have increased, nowhere has progress been more impactful than in the management of typically incurable forms of haematological cancer. Population-based data have shown that 5-year survival for patients with chronic myelogenous and chronic lymphocytic leukaemia, indolent B-cell lymphomas, and multiple myeloma has improved markedly. This improvement is a result of substantial changes in disease management strategies in these malignancies. Several haematological malignancies are now chronic diseases that are treated with continuously administered therapies that have unique side-effects over time. In this Commission, an international panel of clinicians, clinical investigators, methodologists, regulators, and patient advocates representing a broad range of academic and clinical cancer expertise examine adverse events in haematological malignancies. The issues pertaining to assessment of adverse events examined here are relevant to a range of malignancies and have been, to date, underexplored in the context of haematology. The aim of this Commission is to improve toxicity assessment in clinical trials in haematological malignancies by critically examining the current process of adverse event assessment, highlighting the need to incorporate patient-reported outcomes, addressing issues unique to stem-cell transplantation and survivorship, appraising challenges in regulatory approval, and evaluating toxicity in real-world patients. We have identified a range of priority issues in these areas and defined potential solutions to challenges associated with adverse event assessment in the current treatment landscape of haematological malignancies.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29907552 PMCID: PMC6261436 DOI: 10.1016/S2352-3026(18)30051-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lancet Haematol ISSN: 2352-3026 Impact factor: 18.959