| Literature DB >> 31079189 |
Salvatore D'Agate1, Timothy Wilson2, Burkay Adalig3, Michael Manyak4, Juan Manuel Palacios-Moreno5, Chandrashekhar Chavan6, Matthias Oelke7, Claus Roehrborn8, Oscar Della Pasqua9,10.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Despite superiority of tamsulosin-dutasteride combination therapy versus monotherapy for lower urinary tract symptoms due to benign prostatic hyperplasia (LUTS/BPH), patients at risk of disease progression are often initiated on α-blockers. This study evaluated the impact of initiating tamsulosin monotherapy prior to switching to tamsulosin-dutasteride combination therapy versus immediate combination therapy using a longitudinal model describing International Prostate Symptom Score (IPSS) trajectories in moderate/severe LUTS/BPH patients at risk of disease progression.Entities:
Keywords: Benign prostatic hyperplasia; Clinical trial simulation; Drug–disease modelling; Dutasteride; Lower urinary tract symptoms; Tamsulosin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31079189 PMCID: PMC6994451 DOI: 10.1007/s00345-019-02783-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Urol ISSN: 0724-4983 Impact factor: 4.226
Fig. 1a Schematic diagram of CTS based on the longitudinal model describing individual IPSS trajectories [13]. b Mean IPSS changes from baseline (left panels) and predicted response rate (% responders) (right panels) stratified by treatment scenario according to a parallel-study design. From top to bottom, each panel depicts the predicted profiles for tamsulosin monotherapy (green dotted line), tamsulosin–dutasteride combination therapy (red solid line), and treatment arm switching to combination therapy (blue dashed line) at 1, 3, 6, 12 and 24 months. The lines depicting tamsulosin monotherapy and tamsulosin–dutasteride combination therapy are constant and represent these treatments being applied throughout 48 months. The dashed vertical lines indicate time of switch to combination therapy. Graphical summaries and statistical analysis refer to the results of a single replicate trial. In these simulations, the placebo effect was assumed to occur only immediately after enrolment into the study. Placebo effect is a key component of the initial response and can last longer than 6 months, as assessed by its half-life. No studies included a placebo treatment arm for > 2 years, so it was not possible to establish whether inter-individual differences might allow for a longer placebo effect
CTS results for each treatment arm based on a parallel-study design (ten trial replicates)
| (A) Treatment duration | Median number of patients transitioning to combination therapy (90% CI) |
|---|---|
| Start of treatment | 0 |
| 01 month | 489 (487, 493) |
| 03 months | 428 (413, 444) |
| 06 months | 284 (266, 306) |
| 12 months | 174 (163, 188) |
| 24 months | 157 (153, 173) |
| 36 months | 0 |
| 48 months | 0 |
Panel (A): overview of the patient population transitioning from tamsulosin to tamsulosin–dutasteride combination therapy due to non-response to tamsulosin. Panel (B): primary endpoint, i.e. proportion of responders (response rate) and IPSS values at 48 months in patients responding to treatment. The difference in the proportion of responders in each virtual treatment arm relative to the combination therapy arm [RespondersCT − Responders (%)] summarises the impact of immediate combination therapy. Panel (C): cumulative percentage of subjects switching from moderate or severe to mild symptom scores at each visit. Panel (D): Impact of immediate versus delayed start of tamsulosin–dutasteride combination therapy on the magnitude of response, as assessed by the proportion of patients showing changes in IPSS ≥ 35%, ≥ 50% and ≥ 75% relative to baseline at month 48. The statistical significance of the differences between treatment arms for each response threshold is shown for a single replicate trial in Table S5 (see Supplemental Materials)
The results presented above refer to a CTS scenario including placebo effect only after the initial treatment phase. Placebo effect is an important component of the initial response and can last more than 6 months, as assessed by its half-life. No studies included a placebo treatment arm for > 2 years, so it was not possible to establish whether inter-individual differences might allow for a longer placebo effect. Unless indicated otherwise, values represent median (90% CIs) from ten trial replicates. Symptom severity: mild = IPSS 1–7, moderate = IPSS 8–19, and severe = IPSS ≥ 20
CI confidence interval, CTS clinical trial simulation, IPSS International Prostate Symptom Score
*Log rank test: p < 0.01
aBaseline IPSS [range] in each treatment arm
bpercentage of responders (IPSS drop ≥ 25% relative to baseline) at 48 months