| Literature DB >> 31814788 |
Shashank Cingam1, Lainey Flatow-Trujillo2, Leslie A Andritsos1, Cecilia Arana Yi1.
Abstract
Polycythemia vera (PV) is a rare myeloproliferative neoplasm (MPN) associated with significant impairment in quality of life (QoL) due to disease-related symptoms and complications. Assessment of disease burden constitutes standard monitoring of symptoms and response. Conventional treatments for MPN, such as hydroxyurea, phlebotomy, or interferon, have not shown a significant impact in QoL or patient-reported outcomes (PRO). Ruxolitinib (RUX) is a JAK2 inhibitor approved for patients intolerant or resistant to hydroxyurea (HA). We conducted a systematic review of clinical trials of RUX in patients with PV that incorporated PRO measures to evaluate the effects on PRO and QoL. Three randomized Phase 3 studies reported in four publications were relevant for analysis. Although the small number of trials and potential for treatment bias in the review, treatment with RUX was associated with improved QoL and PRO in PV patients intolerant or resistant to hydroxyurea.Entities:
Keywords: patient-reported outcomes; polycythemia vera; quality of life; ruxolitinib
Year: 2019 PMID: 31814788 PMCID: PMC6861552 DOI: 10.2147/JBM.S177692
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Blood Med ISSN: 1179-2736
Figure 1PRISMA diagram of clinical trials of ruxolitinib in polycythemia vera.
Common Instruments Used In Myeloproliferative Neoplasms For Quantitatively Measuring Symptoms And Quality Of Life
| Abbreviated QoL Instrument | Full title | Scoring | Description | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MPN-SAF | Myeloproliferative Neoplasm Symptoms Assessment Form | 14 individual symptoms scores, multiplied by 10 to achieve 0–100 scale. | 3 symptom clusters: Mechanisms related to cytokines (TSS-C); Hyperviscosity (TSS-H), and splenomegaly (TSS-S); MPN SAF is validated in PV. | Emanuel et al |
| Johansson et al | ||||
| Scherber et al | ||||
| PSIS | Pruritus Symptom Impact Scale | Five point questionnaire.10 point scale; zero equals “no itching/not bothered at all” and 10 equals “bothered as bad as you can imagine/interfered as bad as you can.” | Evaluates severity, interruption of daily life and improvement or worsening of their itching/pruritus since the start of treatment. | Vannucchi et al |
| EORTC-QLQ-C30 | European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Core Questionnaire-for all cancer patients. | Multi-item scales and single-item measures. | High score represents a high/healthy status/QoL. High score for a symptom represents a high level of symptomatology. | Aaronson et al |
| EQ-5D-5L | EuroQOL Group non-disease specific QoL instrument | Measures health outcomes for a wide range of health conditions and treatments. | Endpoints are labeled “best imaginable health state” and “worst imaginable health state.” | Herdman et al |
| WPAI | Work Productivity and Activity Impariment Questionnaire | Six-item questionnaire that measures self-reported productivity loss during the past seven days | Questions about absence from work, hours spent at work, reduction in productivity at work, and reduction in productivity while performing regular activities. | Relly et al |
| PGIC | Patient Global Impression of Change | Scale from 1 to 7 from “very much improved” to “very much worse” | Evaluates all aspects of patients’ health and assesses in there has been an improvement or decline in clinical status | Dorwkin et al |
Published Studies Of Ruxolitinib In PV And Quality Of Life And PRO
| Topic | Authors | Year | Patient Group | QoL Instruments | No Of Patients | Outcome | Main Symptom Topics | Limitations | Quality Assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| QoL PRO | Vannucchi et al | 2015 | PV, intolerant/resistant to HA on RUX | MPN-SAF | 222 | At week 32, 36/74 had 50% reduction of MPN SAF symptom score. Reduction in score by PSIS. EORTC QLQ-C30 scores were higher compared to standard. PGIC comparable to SOC. | Pruritus Tiredness, Night sweats Headaches DizzinessVision problems Muscle aches Abdominal discomfort Early satiety | Open-label, potential treatment bias | **** >20% missing PRO data |
| QoL PRO | Mesa et al | 2016 | PV, intolerant/resistant to HA on RUX | EORTC-QLQ-C30MPN-SAFPSISPGIC | 222 | At week 32, 44% on RUX achieved MID (minimally important difference) in GHS/QoL compared to 9% MPN SAF 49% achieved better total symptom score compared to 5% PSIS Improvement in the 5 components of PSIS as early as week 4 PGIC 46% condition improved at week 4 versus 11% | Fatigue Insomnia Pain Dyspnea Appetite loss Diarrhea, Nausea and vomiting Pruritus Role functioning Cognitive functioning Social functioning Physical functioning | Open label | **** |
| QoL PRO | Passamonti et al | 2017 | PV without splenomegaly, intolerant/resistant to HA | MPN-SAF | 173 | Median percentage change from baseline (−45.3%) in RUX vs BAT. At week 28, 29/64 had 50% or greater reduction in MPN-SAF score. EQ-5D-5L no problems in 5 dimensions and improvement in work productivity. Reduction in score by PSIS. Improvements in scores from PGIC and WPAI. | Pruritus Overall QoL, Fatigue Activity impairment | Open-label | ***** |
| QoL | Mesa et al | 2016 | PV on HA ≥ 4 weeks with cytokine symptom cluster (TSS-C) | MPN-SAF | 110 | At week 16, ≥50% improvement from baseline TSS-C in 43.4% of RUX no statistically significant | Tiredness Muscle aches, Night sweats Itching | Did not anticipate high proportion of patients achieving endpoint on HA arm | *** |
Notes: ****Represents a quality assessment of 80%, and *****Represents a quality assessment of 100%.
Figure 2Histograms comparing ruxolitinib with standard therapy or hydroxyurea alone in RESPONSE at 32 weeks, RESPONSE at 28 weeks and RELIEF at 16 weeks. Graph 1 depicts proportion of patients who achieved a ≥50% reduction in the MPN-SAF TSS. The RELIEF study only reported the TSS- C (Cytokine symptoms). Graph 2 depicts the proportion of patients who reported “very much” or “much improved” on the PGIC scale.
Abbreviations: TSS, Total Symptom Score; PGIC, Patient Global Impression of Change.
Ongoing Clinical Trials In Polycythemia Vera Incorporating PRO In Efficacy Assessment
| Title | Clinical Trial Identifier | PRO Instruments | Phase | Recruitment Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TGR-1202 + Ruxolitinib in Subjects With Myelofibrosis, MDS/MPN, or Polycythemia Vera Resistant to Hydroxyurea | NCT02493530 | MPN-SAF TSS | Phase I | Recruiting |
| Expanded Treatment Protocol (ETP) of Ruxolitinib in Patients With Polycythemia Vera Who Are Hydroxyurea Resistant or Intolerant and for Whom no Treatment Alternatives Are Available. | NCT02292446 | MPN-SAF | Phase III | Completed |
| SAR302503 in Patients With Polycythemia Vera or Essential Thrombocythemia | NCT01420783 | MPN-SAF | Phase II | Completed |
| Low Dose Interferon Alpha Versus Hydroxyurea in Treatment of Chronic Myeloid Neoplasms (DALIAH) | NCT01387763 | EORTC QLQ C-30 and MPN-SAF | Phase III | Active, not recruiting |
| The Benefit/Risk Profile of AOP2014 in Low-risk Patients With PV (Low-PV) | NCT03003325 | Functional Assessment of cancer Therapy-Anaemia (FACT-An) and MPN-SAF TSS | Phase II | Recruiting |
| Idasanutlin Monotherapy in Patients With Hydroxyurea-Resistant/Intolerant Polycythemia Vera | NCT03287245 | MPN-SAF TSS | Phase II | Recruiting |
| KRT-232 Compared to Ruxolitinib in Patients With Phlebotomy-Dependent Polycythemia Vera | NCT03669965 | MPN-SAF TSS | Phase II | Recruiting |