| Literature DB >> 29909880 |
Paul G Kluetz1, Bindu Kanapuru2, Steven Lemery2, Laura Lee Johnson2, Mallorie H Fiero2, Karen Arscott3, Yolanda Barbachano4, Ethan Basch5, Michelle Campbell2, Joseph C Cappelleri6, David Cella7, Charles Cleeland8, Corneel Coens9, Selena Daniels2, Crystal S Denlinger10, Dianne L Fairclough11, James R Hillard12, Lori Minasian13, Sandra A Mitchell13, Daniel O'Connor4, Sheetal Patel14, Eric H Rubin15, Anna Ryden16, Katherine Soltys17, Rajeshwari Sridhara2, Gita Thanarajasingam18, Galina Velikova19, Stephen Joel Coons20.
Abstract
The US Food and Drug Administration and the Critical Path Institute's Patient-Reported Outcome (PRO) Consortium convened a cosponsored workshop on the use of PRO measures to inform the assessment of safety and tolerability in cancer clinical trials. A broad array of international stakeholders involved in oncology drug development and PRO measurement science provided perspectives on the role of PRO measures to provide complementary clinical data on the symptomatic side effects of anticancer agents. Speakers and panelists explored the utility of information derived from existing and emerging PRO measures, focusing on the PRO version of the National Cancer Institute's Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events. Panelists and speakers discussed potential ways to improve the collection, analysis, and presentation of PRO data describing symptomatic adverse events to support drug development and better inform regulatory and treatment decisions. Workshop participants concluded the day with a discussion of possible approaches to the patient-reported assessment of an investigational drug's overall side effect burden as a potential clinical trial end point. The Food and Drug Administration reiterated its commitment to collaborate with international drug development stakeholders to identify rigorous methods to incorporate the patient perspective into the development of cancer therapeutics.Entities:
Keywords: PRO-CTCAE; drug safety; oncology; patient-reported outcomes; tolerability
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29909880 DOI: 10.1016/j.jval.2017.09.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Value Health ISSN: 1098-3015 Impact factor: 5.725