| Literature DB >> 31679112 |
Wolfgang Wick1, Andriy Krendyukov2, Klaus Junge3, Thomas Höger4, Harald Fricke4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Glioblastoma is an aggressive malignant cancer of the central nervous system, with disease progression associated with deterioration of neurocognitive function and quality of life (QoL). As such, maintenance of QoL is an important treatment goal. This analysis presents time to deterioration (TtD) of QoL in patients with recurrent glioblastoma receiving Asunercept plus reirradiation (rRT) or rRT alone.Entities:
Keywords: Asunercept; Quality of life; Recurrent glioblastoma; Time to deterioration
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31679112 PMCID: PMC6881251 DOI: 10.1007/s11060-019-03320-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurooncol ISSN: 0167-594X Impact factor: 4.130
QoL deterioration and median TtD following treatment with either rRT + Asunercept or rRT alone
| Asunercept + rRT | rRT | p value | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N | Median TtD, days | N | Median TtD, days | ||
| Overall QoL | 49 | 166 | 21 | 107 | 0.0099 |
| Physical functioning | 53 | 183 | 22 | 89 | 0.0069 |
| Emotional functioning | 50 | NR | 21 | 117 | 0.3002 |
| Fatigue | 50 | 98 | 21 | 88 | 0.5956 |
| 52 | NR | 22 | 139 | 0.5419 | |
| 57 | 166 | 25 | 103 | 0.0319 | |
NR not reached
Fig. 1Kaplan–Meier curves showing TtPoD and TtD of overall QLQ-CL15 PAL in patients treated with Asunercept + rRT (a) or rRT alone (b)
Fig. 2Kaplan–Meier curves showing effect of Asunercept + rRT and rRT alone on TtPoD and TtD in physical functioning (a, e) neurological status (b, f), fatigue (c, g) and total sum of all scores (d, h)
Summary of quality of life results in Phase II/III studies in patients with recurrent GB receiving systemic treatments
| Study | Study design | Treatments | QoL questionnaire reported | QoL results | Relationship between progression of disease and QoL deterioration |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brandes et al. [ | Phase II randomised study | Patients randomised to lomustine plus bevacizumab (n = 61), or lomustine plus placebo (n = 62) until further disease progression, then patients continued bevacizumab or placebo with chemotherapy (investigator’s choice) | EORTC Quality of Life questionnaire (QLQ-C30) BN20 | No differences between treatment groups in time to health-related QoL deterioration | Not reported in publication |
| Badruddoja et al. [ | Phase II single-arm study | Patients received bevacizumab and temozolomide (n = 30) | Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Brain (FACT-BR) Patient and/or family member completed FACT-BR at every clinic visit during the duration of the study | No significant differences in mean FACT-BR scores between cycles | FACT-BR scores were unchanged until just prior to tumour progression Once the patient had progressive disease, FACT-BR data were no longer collected |
| Field et al. [ | Phase II randomised study | Patients randomised to bevacizumab plus carboplatin (N = 60), or bevacizumab alone (n = 62) | EORTC Quality of Life questionnaire (QLQ-C30) BN20 validated measurement tools EQ-5D health outcome measure | No differences between treatment groups | Decreases in health-related QoL generally occurred before disease progression Nonetheless, QoL domains considered relevant to symptoms of rGB improved in half of patients who had symptoms at baseline |
| Wick et al. [ | Phase III randomised study | Patients randomised to lomustine plus bevacizumab (N = 288), or lomustine alone (N = 149) | EORTC Quality of Life Questionnaire-Core 30 (QLQ-C30) EORTC brain-cancer module (BN20) Evaluated at baseline and every 12 weeks | No significant differences between treatment groups, apart from a lower score for social functioning in the lomustine + bevacizumab group versus the lomustine group (P = 0.001) | No significant difference in TtD in QoL between groups when progression was not included as an event Deterioration-free survival was longer in the lomustine + bevacizumab group versus the lomustine group (12.4 weeks vs. 6.7 weeks; pp < 0.001) |
| Dirven et al. [ | Phase II randomised study | Patients randomised to lomustine (n = 45), bevacizumab (n = 46), or lomustine plus bevacizumab (n = 47) | EORTC Quality of Life questionnaire (QLQ-C30) Brain module (QLQ-BN20) Measured at randomisation and every 6 weeks until disease progression | Health-related QoL remained stable in all treatment groups during the first three treatment cycles > 50% of patients showed stable or improved health-related QoL during their progression-free time, except for social functioning, irrespective of treatment group | Reduced health-related QoL was most pronounced at disease progression for all scales, other than social functioning, which deteriorated earlier in disease course |
| Kong et al. [ | Phase II study of two patient cohorts | First cohort of patients received temozolomide 40 mg/m2 (n = 10). Second cohort of patients received temozolomide 50 mg/m2 (n = 28) | Physical and mental component scores from the short form-36 (SF-36) Measured at baseline, 3 months, and 6 months from the beginning of treatment | Follow-up SF-36 at 3 months showed a significant decrease in QoL score in physical health status in all patients No significant difference in mental health status | For patients responding to treatment, SF-36 at 3 months demonstrated no significant difference in physical and mental health status when compared with baseline |
| Wick et al. [ | Phase III randomised study | Patients randomised to enzastaurin (n = 174), or lomustine (n = 92) | Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Brain (FACT-BR) Completed before randomisation, every 3 weeks, and after discontinuation | No difference between treatment groups in time to deterioration of physical and functional well-being and symptoms | Deterioration in patient-reported outcomes was consistent with PFS |
| Khan et al. [ | Phase II single-arm study | Patients received temozolomide (n = 35) | Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy–Brain (FACT-BR) Completed at study entry and at the end of each cycle | Most patients maintained FACT-BR scores during both stable and progressive disease No significant post-progression deterioration in the FACT-BR scores | |
| Brada et al. [ | Phase II single-arm study | Patients received temozolomide (n = 138) | EORTC QLQ-C30 (+3) Brain Cancer Module 20 (BCM-20) | Health-related QoL responses were more common among the patients who responded to treatment than among those with progressive disease Most improvement was recorded in global health-related QoL and motor dysfunction scores | |
| Yung et al. [ | Phase II randomised study | Patients randomised to temozolomide (n = 112), or procarbazine (N = 113) | EORTC QLQ-C30 (+3) Brain Cancer Module 20 (BCM20) Questionnaires were completed on day 1 of cycle 1 and at every visit throughout the study | Across all domains, the proportions of patients achieving a health-related QoL response were consistently higher for temozolomide than for procarbazine | Regardless of treatment, QoL was maintained at baseline levels prior to progression of disease, but then decreased substantially at the time of disease progression |
| Meta-analysis to investigate the added prognostic value of HRQoL for OS and PFS in a large heterogeneous sample of glioma patients | |||||
| Coomans et al. 2019 [ | Meta-analysis including data from previously published RCTs in glioma patients in which HRQoL was assessed | 5217 patients with glioma | QLQ-C30 and QLQ-BN20 questionnaires | Better cognitive and role functioning and less motor dysfunction were associated with longer OS Better role and cognitive functioning, and less nausea and vomiting were associated with longer PFS | |
Summary of the most-frequently administered QoL questionnaires in recurrent GB
| Scale | EORTC QLQ-C30 [ | Brain cancer module 20 (BCM20/BCN20) [ | Functional assessment of Cancer Therapy–Brain (FACT-BR) [ |
|---|---|---|---|
| To assess the QoL of patients with cancer | To be used in conjunction with the EORTC QLQ-C30 for measuring the health-related QoL in patients with brain cancer | To measure general QoL that reflects symptoms or problems associated with brain malignancies | |
Not at all: 1 A Little: 2 Quite a Bit: 3 Very Much: 4 Two global health status/QoL items are measured on a 7-point Likert scale (“very poor” to “excellent”) | Not at all: 1 A Little: 2 Quite a Bit: 3 Very Much: 4 | Five-point Likert scale ranging from 0 "not at all" to 4 "very much" | |
Patient responses are scored on health-related QoL measurement scales according to standard algorithms All scales have a 0–100 range. Improvement in function is represented by an increase in score, whereas improvement in symptoms is represented by a decrease in score | Patient responses are scored on health-related QoL measurement scales according to standard algorithms All scales have a 0–100 range. Improvement in function is represented by an increase in score, whereas improvement in symptoms is represented by a decrease in score | Higher ratings suggest higher QoL. Items are totalled to produce a score for each subscore (physical well-being; social/family; emotional well-being; functional well-being; and concerns relevant to patients with brain tumours), plus an overall QoL score | |
| Includes 30 questions that cover five aspects of functioning (physical, role, emotional, cognitive, social), eight symptoms (fatigue, pain, nausea/vomiting, dyspnoea, insomnia, appetite loss, constipation, diarrhoea), financial impact, and global health status/QoL | Includes 20 questions that cover future uncertainty, visual disorder, motor dysfunction, communication deficit, headache, seizures, drowsiness, hair loss, itching, difficulty with bladder control, and weakness of both legs | Includes 23 questions on aspects of physical well-being, social/family well-being, emotional well-being, functional well-being, and disease-specific concerns |