| Literature DB >> 30617763 |
Hayley M de Freitas1, Tetsuro Ito2, Monica Hadi1, Gemma Al-Jassar1, Mickaël Henry-Szatkowski3, Beenish Nafees4, Andrew J Lloyd5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Various treatment options are available for metastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer. This study aimed to quantify how men with prostate cancer in the United Kingdom (UK), Germany, and Spain perceive the risks and benefits of hypothetical abiraterone acetate plus prednisone treatment and docetaxel-based chemotherapy treatment options.Entities:
Keywords: Abiraterone acetate; Discrete choice experiment; Preference; Prostate cancer
Year: 2019 PMID: 30617763 PMCID: PMC6824341 DOI: 10.1007/s12325-018-0861-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Ther ISSN: 0741-238X Impact factor: 3.845
Fig. 1Example of a choice set presented in the DCE survey
Final DCE survey attributes and level descriptions
| Attributes | Levels |
|---|---|
| Mode of administration | Oral once a day Intravenous every 3 weeks |
| Tiredness and fatigue | 1% risk of fatigue (1 in 100 people) 5% risk of fatigue (1 in 20 people) 10% risk of fatigue (1 in 10 people) 15% risk of fatigue (about 1 in 7 people) |
| Treatment benefit or effectiveness | Effective for 8 months before your PSA rises and you need to see your physician Effective for 16 months before your PSA rises and you need to see your physician Effective for 24 months before your PSA rises and you need to see your physician Effective for 32 months before your PSA rises and you need to see your physician |
| Bone pain | Fully controlled with over-the-counter painkillers Fully controlled with prescription painkillers Controlled with prescription painkillers, most of the time Not well controlled, even with prescription pain killers |
| Nausea/vomiting or diarrhoea | 5% risk of nausea/vomiting or diarrhoea (1 in 20 people) 10% risk of nausea/vomiting or diarrhoea (1 in 10 people) 20% risk of nausea/vomiting or diarrhoea (1 in 5 people) 30% risk of nausea/vomiting or diarrhoea (3 in 10 people) |
| Risk of infection caused by treatment affecting your immune system | 1% risk of infection (1 in 100 people) 5% risk of infection (1 in 20 people) 10% risk of infection (1 in 10 people) 15% risk of infection (about 1 in 7 people) |
Participant demographics
| Variable | Patient subgroups | Total ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Biochemical recurrence ( | Locally advanced ( | Metastatic ( | ||
| Country | ||||
| UK | 40 (65.6%) | 15 (32.6%) | 5 (11.1%) | 60 (39.5%) |
| Germany | 8 (13.1%) | 8 (17.4%) | 38 (84.4%) | 54 (35.5%) |
| Spain | 13 (21.3%) | 23 (50.0%) | 2 (4.4%) | 38 (25.0%) |
| Age, years | ||||
| Mean (SD) | 69.1 (7.7) | 65.8 (8.1) | 71.9 (6.4) | 68.9 (7.8) |
| Min–max | 54.0–87.0 | 45.0–79.0 | 49.0–84.0 | 45.0–87.0 |
| Level of education | ||||
| Left high school with no qualifications | 6 (9.8%) | 8 (17.4%) | 4 (8.9%) | 18 (11.8%) |
| Completed secondary school | 27 (44.3%) | 24 (52.2%) | 30 (66.7%) | 81 (53.3%) |
| Completed some university | 14 (23.0%) | 8 (17.4%) | 9 (20.0%) | 31 (20.4%) |
| Degree/postgraduate level | 14 (23.0%) | 6 (13.0%) | 2 (4.4%) | 22 (14.5%) |
| Main activity | ||||
| Employed full time | 15 (24.6%) | 11 (23.9%) | 4 (8.9%) | 30 (19.7%) |
| Employed part time | 7 (11.5%) | 2 (4.3%) | 1 (2.2%) | 10 (6.6%) |
| Seeking work | 0 (0.0%) | 1 (2.2%) | 0 (0.0%) | 1 (0.7%) |
| Retired | 34 (55.7%) | 29 (63.0%) | 40 (88.9%) | 103 (67.8%) |
| Other | 5 (8.2%) | 3 (6.5%) | 0 (0.0%) | 8 (5.3%) |
| Time since diagnosis (year) | ||||
| Mean (SD) | 3.7 (4.4) | 2.4 (3.1) | 4.0 (3.4) | 3.39 (3.79) |
| Min–max | 0.00–19.00 | 0.00–16.00 | 0.00–14.00 | 0.00–19.00 |
| Present level of fatiguea | ||||
| 0 (no fatigue) | 26 (42.6%) | 11 (23.9%) | 0 (0.0%) | 37 (24.3%) |
| 1–5 | 30 (49.2) | 27 (58.7%) | 36 (80.0%) | 93 (61.2%) |
| > 5 | 5 (8.2) | 8 (17.4%) | 9 (20.0%) | 22 (14.5%) |
| Worst level of bone pain over the past 24 ha | ||||
| 0 (no pain) | 35 (57.4%) | 20 (43.5%) | 5 (11.1%) | 60 (39.5%) |
| 1–5 | 23 (37.7%) | 23 (50.0%) | 35 (77.8%) | 81 (53.3%) |
| > 5 | 3 (4.9%) | 3 (6.5%) | 5 (11.1%) | 11 (7.2%) |
aAs reported on a visual analogue scale ranging from 0 (no fatigue/no pain) to 10 (as bad as you can imagine)
Fig. 2Preference estimates (dummy coding) for the full population. Error bars represent 95% confidence intervals. A positive coefficient indicates that the attribute level was more preferred than the mean preference for that attribute. A negative coefficient indicates that the attribute level was less preferred than the mean preference for that attribute
Dummy coding preference estimates overall and by subgroups according to disease stage
| Attribute (reference) | Attribute type | Total ( | Biochemical recurrence ( | Locally advanced ( | Metastatic ( | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Estimate | Estimate | Estimate | Estimate | ||||||
| Mode of administration (orally once a day) | Intravenous every 3 weeks | − 0.416 | < 0.001 | − 0.476 | < 0.001 | − 0.491 | < 0.001 | − 0.301 | 0.002 |
| Tiredness and fatigue (1% risk of experiencing fatigue) | 5% risk | − 0.146 | 0.086 | 0.002 | 0.986 | − 0.269 | 0.073 | − 0.114 | 0.480 |
| 10% risk | − 0.442 | < 0.001 | − 0.458 | 0.008 | − 0.360 | 0.037 | − 0.507 | 0.008 | |
| 15% risk | − 0.446 | < 0.001 | − 0.494 | 0.002 | − 0.470 | 0.004 | − 0.369 | 0.044 | |
| Treatment benefit or effectiveness (effective for 32 months before your PSA rises) | Effective for 8 months | − 1.443 | < 0.001 | − 1.337 | < 0.001 | − 1.334 | < 0.001 | − 1.807 | < 0.001 |
| Effective for 16 months | − 0.854 | < 0.001 | − 0.763 | < 0.001 | − 0.826 | < 0.001 | − 1.024 | < 0.001 | |
| Effective for 24 months | − 0.393 | < 0.001 | − 0.426 | 0.005 | − 0.197 | 0.181 | − 0.610 | < 0.001 | |
| Bone pain (fully controlled with over-the-counter painkillers) | Fully controlled with prescription painkillers | 0.088 | 0.317 | 0.115 | 0.418 | 0.114 | 0.474 | 0.094 | 0.576 |
| Controlled with prescription painkillers, most of the time | 0.226 | 0.020 | 0.435 | 0.009 | − 0.027 | 0.876 | 0.320 | 0.094 | |
| Not well controlled, even with prescription painkillers | − 1.157 | < 0.001 | − 1.554 | < 0.001 | − 0.800 | < 0.001 | − 1.172 | < 0.001 | |
| Nausea/vomiting or diarrhoea (5% risk of nausea/vomiting or diarrhea) | 10% risk | − 0.138 | 0.128 | − 0.225 | 0.174 | − 0.012 | 0.939 | − 0.249 | 0.144 |
| 20% risk | − 0.446 | < 0.001 | − 0.594 | < 0.001 | − 0.440 | 0.015 | − 0.380 | 0.055 | |
| 30% risk | − 0.820 | < 0.001 | − 0.799 | < 0.001 | − 0.784 | < 0.001 | − 1.078 | < 0.001 | |
| Risk of infection affecting your immune system (1% risk of infection) | 5% risk of infection | − 0.313 | 0.001 | − 0.403 | 0.015 | − 0.364 | 0.025 | − 0.223 | 0.224 |
| 10% risk of infection | − 0.631 | < 0.001 | − 0.939 | < 0.001 | − 0.696 | < 0.001 | − 0.203 | 0.303 | |
| 15% risk of infection | − 0.595 | < 0.001 | − 0.888 | < 0.001 | − 0.536 | < 0.001 | − 0.387 | 0.013 | |
A positive coefficient indicates that the attribute level was more preferred than the reference level. A negative coefficient indicates that the attribute level was less preferred than the reference level
Relative attribute importance
| Attribute | Total | Biochemical recurrence ( | Locally advanced ( | Metastatic ( | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RAIa | Rank | RAIa | Rank | RAIa | Rank | RAIa | Rank | |
| Mode of administration | 2.09 | 6 | 2.39 | 6 | 2.47 | 5 | 1.51 | 6 |
| Fatigue | 2.24 | 5 | 2.49 | 5 | 2.36 | 6 | 2.55 | 4 |
| Effectiveness | 7.25 | 1 | 6.72 | 2 | 6.71 | 1 | 9.08 | 1 |
| Pain control | 6.26 | 2 | 10.00 | 1 | 4.60 | 2 | 6.37 | 2 |
| Nausea/vomiting | 4.12 | 3 | 4.02 | 4 | 3.94 | 3 | 5.42 | 3 |
| Infection | 3.17 | 4 | 4.31 | 3 | 5.59 | 4 | 3.11 | 5 |
aA standardised RAI for each attribute was calculated across the subgroups to allow for across-subgroup comparisons. First, an RAI was calculated for each attribute by taking the difference between the most and least preferred level. Then, the RAI was standardised across subgroups by dividing it by the RAI of the most important attribute across the subgroups (pain among participants with a biochemical recurrence) and multiplying by 10. The resulting number indicates the relative importance of each attribute across the subgroups (where a higher number indicates a relatively more important attribute)