| Literature DB >> 31955338 |
J D Guo1, P Hlavacek2, T Poretta3, G Wygant3, D Lane3, M Gorritz4, X Wang4, C C Chen4, R L Wade4, X Pan3, J Rajpura3, B Stwalley3, L Rosenblatt3.
Abstract
Low molecular weight heparins (LMWHs) and direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) are among the recommended treatment options for cancer-associated thrombosis (CAT) in the 2019 National Comprehensive Care Network guidelines. Little is known about the current utilization of DOACs in CAT patients, particularly on the inpatient to outpatient therapy transition. This study assessed real-world treatment patterns of CAT in hospital/ED in adult cancer patients (≥ 18 years) diagnosed with CAT during a hospital visit in IQVIA's Hospital Charge Data Master database between July 1, 2015 and April 30, 2018, and followed their outpatient medical and pharmacy claims to evaluate the initial inpatient/ED and outpatient anticoagulants received within 3 months post-discharge. Results showed that LMWH and unfractionated heparin (UFH) were the most common initial inpatient/ED CAT treatments (35.2% and 27.4%, respectively), followed by DOACs (9.6%); 20.8% of patients received no anticoagulants. Most DOAC patients remained on DOACs from inpatient/ED to outpatient settings (71.4%), while 24.1%, 43.5%, and 0.1% of patients treated with LMWH, warfarin, or UFH respectively, remained on the same therapy after discharge. In addition, DOACs were the most common initial post-discharge outpatient therapy. Outpatient treatment persistence and adherence appeared higher in patients using DOACs or warfarin versus LMWH or UFH. This study shows that DOACs are used as an inpatient/ED treatment option for CAT, and are associated with less post-discharge treatment switching and higher persistence and adherence. Further research generating real-world evidence on the role of DOACs to help inform the complex CAT clinical treatment decisions is warranted.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Cancer associated thrombosis; Direct oral anticoagulants; Low molecular weight heparin; Venous thromboembolism; Warfarin
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Year: 2020 PMID: 31955338 PMCID: PMC7366581 DOI: 10.1007/s11239-019-02032-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Thromb Thrombolysis ISSN: 0929-5305 Impact factor: 2.300
Fig. 1Patient selection flow chart
Baseline patient demographic and clinical characteristics stratified by index CAT treatment (n = 8125)
| Total | DOACs | LMWH | Warfarin | UFH | Thrombolytic agent | No anticoagulant treatment | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N = 8125 | N = 730 | N = 2932 | N = 428 | N = 2323 | N = 122 | N = 1590 | |
| Agea, mean ± SD | 65.6 ± 13.0 | 66.4 ± 12.9 | 65.2 ± 13.3 | 67.5 ± 12.6 | 66.1 ± 12.6 | 62.9 ± 13.5 | 65.2 ± 13.3 |
| Malea | 3793 (46.7%) | 363 (49.7%) | 1298 (44.3%) | 212 (49.5%) | 1123 (48.3%) | 61 (50.0%) | 736 (46.3%) |
| Geographic regiona, n (%) | |||||||
| Northeast | 302 (3.7%) | 17 (2.3%) | 109 (3.7%) | 19 (4.4%) | 102 (4.4%) | 1 (0.8%) | 54 (3.4%) |
| Midwest | 489 (6.0%) | 43 (5.9%) | 143 (4.9%) | 28 (6.5%) | 165 (7.1%) | 12 (9.8%) | 98 (6.2%) |
| South | 2454 (30.2%) | 221 (30.3%) | 957 (32.6%) | 110 (25.7%) | 659 (28.4%) | 43 (35.2%) | 464 (29.2%) |
| West | 496 (6.1%) | 43 (5.9%) | 159 (5.4%) | 47 (11.0%) | 114 (4.9%) | 6 (4.9%) | 127 (8.0%) |
| Unknown | 4384 (54.0%) | 406 (55.6%) | 1564 (53.3%) | 224 (52.3%) | 1283 (55.2%) | 60 (49.2%) | 847 (53.3%) |
| Insurance typea, n (%) | |||||||
| Cash | 6 (0.1%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 3 (0.1%) | 0 (0.0%) | 3 (0.2%) |
| Medicaid | 154 (1.9%) | 13 (1.8%) | 55 (1.9%) | 8 (1.9%) | 35 (1.5%) | 2 (1.6%) | 41 (2.6%) |
| Medicare | 2735 (33.7%) | 277 (37.9%) | 955 (32.6%) | 179 (41.8%) | 773 (33.3%) | 35 (28.7%) | 516 (32.5%) |
| Third Party | 2193 (27.0%) | 200 (27.4%) | 816 (27.8%) | 101 (23.6%) | 623 (26.8%) | 29 (23.8%) | 424 (26.7%) |
| Unknown | 3037 (37.4%) | 240 (32.9%) | 1106 (37.7%) | 140 (32.7%) | 889 (38.3%) | 56 (45.9%) | 606 (38.1%) |
| Type of index CATa, n (%) | |||||||
| DVT | 3743 (46.1%) | 427 (58.5%) | 1232 (42.0%) | 218 (50.9%) | 782 (33.7%) | 47 (38.5%) | 1037 (65.2%) |
| PE | 4382 (53.9%) | 303 (41.5%) | 1700 (58.0%) | 210 (49.1%) | 1541 (66.3%) | 75 (61.5%) | 553 (34.8%) |
| Setting of CAT diagnosisa, n (%) | |||||||
| Inpatient | 5728 (70.5%) | 325 (44.5%) | 2245 (76.6%) | 344 (80.4%) | 2171 (93.5%) | 117 (95.9%) | 526 (33.1%) |
| ED | 2397 (29.5%) | 405 (55.5%) | 687 (23.4%) | 84 (19.6%) | 152 (6.5%) | 5 (4.1%) | 1064 (66.9%) |
| Prior CAT diagnosisb, n (%) | 652 (8.0%) | 52 (7.1%) | 192 (6.5%) | 46 (10.7%) | 176 (7.6%) | 20 (16.4%) | 166 (10.4%) |
| Prior CAT treatmentb, n (%) | 4893 (60.2%) | 389 (53.3%) | 1823 (62.2%) | 251 (58.6%) | 1388 (59.8%) | 89 (73.%) | 953 (59.9%) |
| Top 5 comorbiditiesc, n (%) | |||||||
| Diabetes | 2023 (24.9%) | 155 (21.2%) | 710 (24.2%) | 123 (28.7%) | 641 (27.6%) | 35 (28.7%) | 359 (22.6%) |
| Dyslipidemia | 3226 (39.7%) | 270 (37.0%) | 1123 (38.3%) | 205 (47.9%) | 1025 (44.1%) | 46 (37.7%) | 557 (35.0%) |
| Hypertension | 4982 (61.3%) | 420 (57.5%) | 1769 (60.3%) | 297 (69.4%) | 1524 (65.6%) | 74 (60.7%) | 898 (56.5%) |
| Osteoarthritis | 2398 (29.5%) | 219 (30.0%) | 854 (29.1%) | 128 (29.9%) | 721 (31.0%) | 28 (23.0%) | 448 (28.2%) |
| Smoking or history of smoking | 2581 (31.8%) | 196 (26.8%) | 919 (31.3%) | 116 (27.1%) | 807 (34.7%) | 43 (35.2%) | 500 (31.4%) |
| CCIc, mean ± SD | 4.4 (2.9) | 3.9 (2.8) | 4.4 (2.8) | 4.0 (2.9) | 4.3 (3.0) | 4.8 (2.6) | 4.2 (2.9) |
| Top 5 cancer typesd(n, %) | |||||||
| Malignant neoplasm of bronchus and lung | 1500 (18.5%) | 102 (14.%) | 570 (19.4%) | 54 (12.6%) | 487 (21.%) | 16 (13.1%) | 271 (17.%) |
| Malignant neoplasm of breast | 1176 (14.5%) | 129 (17.7%) | 445 (15.2%) | 57 (13.3%) | 287 (12.4%) | 17 (13.9%) | 241 (15.2%) |
| Malignant neoplasm of testis | 724 (8.9%) | 98 (13.4%) | 216 (7.4%) | 50 (11.7%) | 186 (8.0%) | 16 (13.1%) | 158 (9.9%) |
| Malignant neoplasm of colon | 625 (7.7%) | 58 (7.9%) | 217 (7.4%) | 27 (6.3%) | 190 (8.2%) | 11 (9.0%) | 122 (7.7%) |
| Malignant neoplasm of pancreas | 470 (5.8%) | 31 (4.2%) | 191 (6.5%) | 14 (3.3%) | 141 (6.1%) | 9 (7.4%) | 84 (5.3%) |
| Metastatic statusd(n, %) | |||||||
| Metastatic | 150 (1.8%) | 9 (1.2%) | 66 (2.3%) | 15 (3.5%) | 43 (1.9%) | 1 (0.8%) | 16 (1.0%) |
| Non-metastatic | 7975 (98.2%) | 721 (98.8%) | 2866 (97.7%) | 413 (96.5%) | 2280 (98.1%) | 121 (99.2%) | 1574 (99.0%) |
| Oncology treatment historyd(n, %) | |||||||
| No pre-index oncology treatment | 3951 (48.6%) | 370 (50.7%) | 1340 (45.7%) | 240 (56.1%) | 1133 (48.8%) | 52 (42.6%) | 816 (51.3%) |
| I-O therapy (biologic therapy) | 163 (2.0%) | 13 (1.8%) | 56 (1.9%) | 6 (1.4%) | 54 (2.3%) | 1 (0.8%) | 33 (2.1%) |
| Chemotherapy | 3208 (39.5%) | 263 (36.%) | 1286 (43.9%) | 129 (30.1%) | 911 (39.2%) | 59 (48.4%) | 560 (35.2%) |
| Cancer-related hormone therapy | 709 (8.7%) | 75 (10.3%) | 242 (8.3%) | 43 (10.0%) | 189 (8.1%) | 11 (9.0%) | 149 (9.4%) |
| Radiation therapy | 652 (8.0%) | 39 (5.3%) | 246 (8.4%) | 27 (6.3%) | 207 (8.9%) | 14 (11.5%) | 119 (7.5%) |
| Surgery | 416 (5.1%) | 56 (7.7%) | 128 (4.4%) | 27 (6.3%) | 100 (4.3%) | 4 (3.3%) | 101 (6.4%) |
| Year of index date (n, %) | |||||||
| 2015 | 1296 (16.0%) | 87 (11.9%) | 519 (17.7%) | 134 (31.3%) | 323 (13.9%) | 15 (12.3%) | 218 (13.7%) |
| 2016 | 2847 (35.0%) | 257 (35.2%) | 1034 (35.3%) | 160 (37.4%) | 779 (33.5%) | 43 (35.2%) | 574 (36.1%) |
| 2017 | 3104 (38.2%) | 296 (40.5%) | 1078 (36.8%) | 110 (25.7%) | 935 (40.2%) | 49 (40.2%) | 636 (40.0%) |
| 2018 | 878 (10.8%) | 90 (12.3%) | 301 (10.3%) | 24 (5.6%) | 286 (12.3%) | 15 (12.3%) | 162 (10.2%) |
| Length of stay (LOS), mean ± SD | 4.0 (4.0) | 2.2 (2.4) | 4.2 (3.8) | 4.5 (3.9) | 5.5 (4.3) | 6.7 (7.2) | 2.1 (2.6) |
aMeasure assessed on the index date
bMeasure assessed during the 6-month pre-index period, not including the index date
cMeasure assessed during the 6-month pre-index period, including the index date
dMeasure assessed during the 6-month pre-index period through 30-days post-index
Fig. 2Sequence of the initial anticoagulant therapies received during the index hospital visit and within 3 months after discharge in patients with at least 3 months of follow-up (n = 5341). Values provided are the percentage of patients who were treated with the specified therapies during the index hospital visit (left-hand bar), and the initial treatment received in the outpatient setting within 3 months after discharge (right-hand bar). The shaded pathways represent the proportion of patients who flow from the specified hospital treatment to the specified outpatient treatments
Treatment patterns of the initial post-discharge anticoagulant treatment received within 3 months after discharge among CAT patients with ≥ 3 months of follow-up after discharge and ≥ 3 months of follow-up after initiation of the outpatient treatment (n = 2243)
| Total | DOACs N = 1300 | LMWH N = 526 | Warfarin N = 408 | UFH | Thrombolytic therapy | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patients with discontinuation within 3 months of treatment initiationa(n,%) | 523 (23.3%) | 159 (12.2%) | 247 (47.0%) | 70 (17.2%) | 3 (50.0%) | 3 (100.0%) |
| Persistence to therapyat 3 months after treatment initiationb(n,%) | 1720 (76.7%) | 1141 (87.8%) | 279 (53.0%) | 338 (82.8%) | 3 (50.0%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| MPRc, mean ± SD | 0.9 (0.1) | 0.9 (0.1) | 0.9 (0.2) | 0.9 (0.1) | 0.4 (0.3) | 1.0 (0.0) |
| Adherence (MPR ≥ 0.80; n, %) | 1923 (85.7%) | 1154 (88.8%) | 402 (76.4%) | 363 (89.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 3 (100.0%) |
1631 patients did not have evidence of anticoagulant treatment within 3 months after discharge; 1467 patients had outpatient anticoagulant therapy, but had less than 3 months of follow-up after outpatient treatment initiation.
aDiscontinuation is defined as a gap of > 60 days between end of days' supply for a prescription to the next dispensing date of a drug in the same treatment group, or as a switch to a new treatment group. Last date of days’ supply before this gap is the discontinuation date
bPersistence to therapy is defined as remaining on therapy with no gaps > 60 days between the end of days’ supply for a prescription to the next fill date of any drug in the same treatment group
cMPR is defined as the sum of days’ supply for all claims prior to the discontinuation date (i.e., while a patient is on therapy)