| Literature DB >> 30340549 |
Apostolia M Tsimberidou1, Laura A Levit2, Richard L Schilsky3, Steven D Averbuch4, Daniel Chen5, John M Kirkwood6, Lisa M McShane7, Elad Sharon7, Kathryn F Mileham8, Michael A Postow9.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To develop recommendations for clinical trial reporting that address the unique efficacy, toxicity, and combination and sequencing aspects of immuno-oncology (IO) treatments.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30340549 PMCID: PMC6195705 DOI: 10.1186/s40425-018-0426-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
Trial reporting in immuno-oncology (TRIO) standards
| Reporting Standards | |
|---|---|
| Efficacy reporting standards | |
| 1. Report the criteria used to evaluate response to therapy and the rationale for the chosen criteria. | |
| 2. Include spider plots or swimmer plots in efficacy descriptions to better report kinetics of response (Figs | |
| 3. Report how disease control rate is defined and how its components are assessed. | |
| 4. Report criteria that allow patients to continue treatment beyond disease progression. | |
| 5. Report the number (proportion) of patients who are treated beyond progression, treatment beyond progression duration, emergence of new toxicity, and efficacy after initial progression. | |
| 6. Report progression-free survival and overall survival using Kaplan-Meier analyses. | |
| Toxicity reporting standards | |
| 7. Differentiate between the clinical diagnoses of IO toxicity and the specific symptoms that led to the diagnoses. | |
| 8. If the prespecified clinical diagnoses used in data collection belong to categories such as “immune-related adverse events” or “adverse events of special interest,” report how these terms are defined and why these categories were selected for trial reporting | |
| 9. Report all toxicity by specific grade. | |
| 10. Report clinical interventions used to manage IO toxicity (Table | |
| 11. Report time of onset and duration of IO toxicity (Table | |
| Combination or sequencing of immunotherapies reporting standard | |
| 12. Report the scientific hypothesis for the combination or sequence on the basis of preclinical and/or clinical data as well as the rationale for the selection of the particular dose(s) and sequence of agents. |
Standards 1 to 5 and 7 to 11 are unique to immuno-oncology (IO) therapies
Fig. 1Hypothetical example of a spider plot showing tumor growth or shrinkage from baseline in a cohort of patients. Patients are often color coded to correspond to their best objective response. By displaying index lesion tumor burden over time, spider plots clearly illustrate tumor burden changes over time. They can demonstrate a favorable antitumor response in index lesions by showing their decrease, even in patients determined to have a best response of progressive disease as defined by the presence of a new lesion
Fig. 2Hypothetical example of a swimmer plot showing time of objective response in relationship to duration of treatment and time of treatment cessation. Symbols along each bar and at the end of each bar could be used to represent various relevant clinical events, such as disease progression or start of a new anticancer therapy. Swimmer plots provide useful information about responses, which may start after cessation of immunotherapy, and about the potential persistence of these responses even without ongoing treatment. Continuation of response despite immunotherapy discontinuation is an important efficacy metric
Reporting of clinical consequences of toxicity
| Patients Who Experience Toxicity | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adverse Event | Dose Delay (No. and Proportion of patients | Dose Discontinuationa No. and proportion patients) | Timing of Toxicity Onset (median and range)b | Use of High-Dosec Steroids (No. and proportion of patients | Duration of High-Dose Steroid Use (median and range | Duration of Dose Taperingd (median and range) | Additional Immune- Suppressing Agents (No. and proportion of patients who required escalation beyond steroids; specify drugs) | Time to Resolution of Toxicitye (median and range, percent of patients with unresolved toxicity) | Emergency Center Visit/ Hospitalization (No. and proportion of patients) |
| Adverse event 1 | |||||||||
| (e.g., colitis) | |||||||||
| Adverse event 2 | |||||||||
| Adverse event 3 | |||||||||
| Adverse event 4 | |||||||||
aDefined as the inability to continue on the protocol; may include irreversible toxicity and toxicity resulting in ineligibility for subsequent treatment
bDays from cycle 1, day 1 to time of onset (include cycle, day and period from initiation of treatment)
cDefined as at least 40 mg prednisone equivalents per day
dIf the protocol required collecting this information
eDefine specifically if “resolution” refers to return to grade 1 or 0 (indicate whether this includes patients who are on steroids to manage adverse events)