| Literature DB >> 33245533 |
Hidehiro Kakizaki1, Kyu-Sung Lee2, Daisuke Katou3, Osamu Yamamoto4, Budiwan Sumarsono5, Satoshi Uno4, Osamu Yamaguchi6.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: MATCH was a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study enrolling Japanese and Korean men aged ≥ 40 years who still had overactive bladder (OAB) symptoms while receiving tamsulosin. After a 4-week single-blind screening period in which patients received placebo and tamsulosin, patients were randomized to mirabegron 50 mg + tamsulosin or placebo + tamsulosin for 12 weeks (n = 568). This post hoc analysis investigated the proportion of treatment responders for each treatment group and for subgroups stratified by age based on voiding diaries and patient-reported outcomes (PROs).Entities:
Keywords: Add-on; Mirabegron; Overactive bladder; Responder; Tamsulosin; Urology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33245533 PMCID: PMC7854388 DOI: 10.1007/s12325-020-01517-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Ther ISSN: 0741-238X Impact factor: 3.845
Patient demographics and baseline characteristics (FAS)
[Table adapted from Kakizaki H, Lee KS, Yamamoto O, et al. Mirabegron Add-on Therapy to Tamsulosin for the Treatment of Overactive Bladder in Men with Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms: A Randomized, Placebo-controlled Study (MATCH). Eur Urol Focus. 2019. doi:10.1016/j.euf.2019.10.019, with permission from Elsevier]
| Parameter | Tamsulosin + placebo, | Tamsulosin + mirabegron 50 mg, |
|---|---|---|
| Age in years, mean (SD) | 65.6 (9.0) | 65.3 (8.5) |
| Age group, | ||
| < 65 years | 127 (44.9) | 118 (41.8) |
| ≥ 65 years | 156 (55.1) | 164 (58.2) |
| Ethnicity, | ||
| Japanese | 268 (94.7) | 268 (95.0) |
| Korean | 15 (5.3) | 14 (5.0) |
| BMI, kg/m2, mean (SD) | 23.558 (2.996) | 23.912 (3.003) |
| Prostate volume, ml, mean (SD) | 31.14 (10.18) | 30.86 (12.55) |
| 14.25 (6.81) | 14.70 (7.53) | |
| Disease duration, months, mean (SD) | 52.9 (59.5)a | 44.6 (44.4)b |
| Micturitions/24 h, mean (SD) | 10.76 (2.36) | 10.40 (2.24) |
| Urgency episodes/24 h, mean (SD) | 4.18 (2.40) | 3.99 (2.32) |
| Urgency urinary incontinence episodes/24 h, mean (SD) | 1.46 (1.91)c | 1.03 (0.77)d |
| OABSS total score, mean (SD) | 7.9 (1.9) | 7.9 (2.0) |
| OAB-q symptom bother, mean (SD) | 37.43 (20.24) | 37.65 (20.22) |
| OAB-q HRQoL, mean (SD) | 76.60 (16.89) | 75.51 (16.43) |
BMI body mass index, FAS full analysis set, HRQoL health-related quality of life, OAB-q overactive bladder questionnaire, OABSS overactive bladder symptom score, SD standard deviation
an = 257
bn = 249
cn = 74
dn = 86
Fig. 1Proportion of patients achieving normalization at EoT. EoT end of treatment, OABSS overactive bladder symptom score
Fig. 2Proportion of patients achieving (i) ≥ 50% decrease in urgency or incontinence episodes, (ii) ≥ 10% decrease in micturitions, and (iii) < 2 urgency episodes at EoT. EoT end of treatment
Fig. 3Proportion of patients achieving (i) MID in OAB-q symptom bother score, (ii) MID in OAB-q HRQoL score, and (iii) MCIC in OABSS at EoT. EoT end of treatment, HRQoL health-related quality of life, MCIC minimally clinically important change, MID minimally important difference, OAB-q overactive bladder questionnaire, OABSS overactive bladder symptom score
Double- and triple-responder analyses for the placebo and mirabegron 50 mg groups (FAS)
| Tamsulosin + placebo | Tamsulosin + mirabegron 50 mg | |
|---|---|---|
| Double-responder criteria | ||
| Micturition (normalization) and OAB-q symptom bother score (MID) | 33/277 (11.9%) | 62/275 (22.5%) |
| Micturition (normalization) and OAB-q HRQoL score (MID) | 20/277 (7.2%) | 37/275 (13.5%) |
| Urgency (normalization) and OAB-q symptom bother score (MID) | 38/277 (13.7%) | 36/276 (13.0%) |
| Urgency (normalization) and OAB-q HRQoL score (MID) | 22/277 (7.9%) | 17/276 (6.2%) |
| Incontinence (normalization) and OAB-q symptom bother score (MID) | 34/80 (42.5%) | 42/88 (47.7%) |
| Incontinence (normalization) and OAB-q HRQoL score (MID) | 17/80 (21.3%) | 25/88 (28.4%) |
| Urgency urinary incontinence (normalization) and OAB-q symptom bother score (MID) | 30/74 (40.5%) | 42/85 (49.4%) |
| Urgency urinary incontinence (normalization) and OAB-q HRQoL score (MID) | 16/74 (21.6%) | 25/85 (29.4%) |
| Nocturia (normalization) and OAB-q symptom bother score (MID) | 16/252 (6.3%) | 20/243 (8.2%) |
| Nocturia (normalization) and OAB-q HRQoL score (MID) | 11/252 (4.4%) | 12/243 (4.9%) |
| OABSS (normalization) and OAB-q symptom bother score (MID) | 33/280 (11.8%) | 39/279 (14.0%) |
| OABSS (normalization) and OAB-q HRQoL score (MID) | 18/280 (6.4%) | 19/279 (6.8%) |
| Micturition (≥ 10% decrease) and OAB-q symptom bother score (MID) | 81/277 (29.2%) | 120/275 (43.6%) |
| Micturition (≥ 10% decrease) and OAB-q HRQoL score (MID) | 46/277 (16.6%) | 74/275 (26.9%) |
| Urgency (≥ 50% decrease) and OAB-q symptom bother score (MID) | 100/277 (36.1%) | 124/276 (44.9%) |
| Urgency (≥ 50% decrease) and OAB-q HRQoL score (MID) | 57/277 (20.6%) | 72/276 (26.1%) |
| OABSS (MCIC) and OAB-q symptom bother score (MID) | 87/280 (31.1%) | 107/279 (38.4%) |
| OABSS (MCIC) and OAB-q HRQoL score (MID) | 49/280 (17.5%) | 58/279 (20.8%) |
| Triple-responder criteria | ||
| Micturition (normalization) and OAB-q symptom bother score (MID) and OAB-q HRQoL score (MID) | 18/277 (6.5%) | 34/275 (12.4%) |
| Urgency (normalization) and OAB-q symptom bother score (MID) and OAB-q HRQoL score (MID) | 22/277 (7.9%) | 16/276 (5.8%) |
| Incontinence (normalization) and OAB-q symptom bother score and OAB-q HRQoL score | 16/80 (20.0%) | 24/88 (27.3%) |
| Urgency urinary incontinence (normalization) and OAB-q symptom bother score (MID) and OAB-q HRQoL score (MID) | 15/74 (20.3%) | 23/85 (27.1%) |
| Nocturia (normalization) and OAB-q symptom bother score (MID) and OAB-q HRQoL score (MID) | 10/252 (4.0%) | 12/243 (4.9%) |
| OABSS (MCIC) and OAB-q symptom bother score (MID) and OAB-q HRQoL score (MID) | 18/280 (6.4%) | 19/279 (6.8%) |
| Micturition (≥ 10% decrease) and OAB-q symptom bother score (MID) and OAB-q HRQoL score (MID) | 42/277 (15.2%) | 69/275 (25.1%) |
| Urgency (≥ 50% decrease) and OAB-q symptom bother score (MID) and OAB-q HRQoL score (MID) | 55/277 (19.9%) | 68/276 (24.6%) |
| OABSS (MCIC) and OAB-q symptom bother score and OAB-q HRQoL score | 47/280 (16.8%) | 55/279 (19.7%) |
FAS full analysis set, HRQoL health-related quality of life, MCIC minimally clinically important change, MID minimally important difference, OAB-q overactive bladder questionnaire, OABSS overactive bladder symptom score
Responder analyses (FAS) for the placebo and mirabegron 50 mg groups (by age group)
| Age group | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| < 65 years | ≥ 65 years | |||
| Tamsulosin + placebo | Tamsulosin + mirabegron | Tamsulosin + placebo | Tamsulosin + mirabegron | |
| Normalization of micturitions | 17/126 (13.5%) | 35/116 (30.2%) | 35/154 (22.7%) | 50/161 (31.1%) |
| Normalization of urgency episodes | 17/126 (13.5%) | 22/116 (19.0%) | 34/154 (22.1%) | 31/162 (19.1%) |
| Normalization of incontinence episodes | 20/33 (60.6%) | 17/28 (60.7%) | 28/47 (59.6%) | 37/61 (60.7%) |
| Normalization of urgency urinary incontinence episodes | 19/32 (59.4%) | 17/27 (63.0%) | 25/42 (59.5%) | 38/59 (64.4%) |
| Normalization of nocturia episodes | 18/111 (16.2%) | 16/97 (16.5%) | 7/144 (4.9%) | 10/148 (6.8%) |
| Normalization of OABSS score | 19/127 (15.0%) | 21/117 (17.9%) | 22/156 (14.1%) | 27/164 (16.5%) |
| ≥ 50% decrease in urgency episodes | 61/126 (48.4%) | 73/116 (62.9%) | 87/154 (56.5%) | 101/162 (62.3%) |
| ≥ 50% decrease in incontinence episodes | 22/33 (66.7%) | 20/28 (71.4%) | 38/47 (80.9%) | 48/61 (78.7%) |
| ≥ 10% decrease in micturitions | 51/126 (40.5%) | 73/116 (62.9%) | 80/154 (51.9%) | 90/161 (55.9%) |
| < 2 urgency episodes | 58/126 (46.0%) | 70/116 (60.3%) | 85/154 (55.2%) | 101/162 (62.3%) |
| ≥ 3-point decrease in OABSS score | 50/127 (39.4%) | 58/117 (49.6%) | 69/156 (44.2%) | 87/164 (53.0%) |
| OAB-q symptom bother score (MID) | 73/126 (57.9%) | 80/117 (68.4%) | 80/154 (51.9%) | 102/162 (63.0%) |
| OAB-q HRQoL score (MID) | 43/126 (34.1%) | 55/117 (47.0%) | 46/154 (29.9%) | 54/162 (33.3%) |
FAS full analysis set, MID minimally important difference, OAB-q overactive bladder questionnaire, OABSS overactive bladder symptom score
Double- and triple-respondera analyses (FAS) for the placebo and mirabegron 50 mg groups (by age group)
| Age group | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| < 65 years | ≥ 65 years | |||
| Tamsulosin + placebo | Tamsulosin + mirabegron | Tamsulosin + placebo | Tamsulosin + mirabegron | |
| Double-responder criteria | ||||
| Micturition normalization and ≥ 10-point improvement in OAB-q symptom bother score | 14/125 (11.2%) | 24/116 (20.7%) | 19/152 (12.5%) | 38/159 (23.9%) |
| Micturition normalization and ≥ 10-point improvement in OAB-q HRQoL score | 9/125 (7.2%) | 17/116 (14.7%) | 11/152 (7.2%) | 20/159 (12.6%) |
| Urgency (normalization) and OAB-q symptom bother score | 14/125 (11.2%) | 18/116 (15.5%) | 24/152 (15.8%) | 18/160 (11.3%) |
| Urgency (normalization) and OAB-q HRQoL score | 7/125 (5.6%) | 11/116 (9.5%) | 15/152 (9.9%) | 6/160 (3.8%) |
| Incontinence normalization and OAB-q symptom bother score | 15/33 (45.5%) | 14/28 (50.0%) | 19/47 (40.4%) | 28/60 (46.7%) |
| Incontinence normalization and OAB-q HRQoL score | 8/33 (24.2%) | 12/28 (42.9%) | 9/47 (19.1%) | 13/60 (21.7%) |
| Urgency urinary incontinence (normalization) and OAB-q symptom bother score | 14/32 (43.8%) | 14/27 (51.9%) | 16/42 (38.1%) | 28/58 (48.3%) |
| Urgency urinary incontinence (normalization) and OAB-q HRQoL score | 7/32 (21.9%) | 12/27 (44.4%) | 9/42 (21.4%) | 13/58 (22.4%) |
| Nocturia (normalization) and OAB-q symptom bother score | 14/110 (12.7%) | 12/97 (12.4%) | 2/142 (1.4%) | 8/146 (5.5%) |
| Nocturia (normalization) and OAB-q HRQoL score | 10/110 (9.1%) | 7/97 (7.2%) | 1/142 (0.7%) | 5/146 (3.4%) |
| OABSS normalization and OAB-q symptom bother score | 17/126 (13.5%) | 18/117 (15.4%) | 16/154 (10.4%) | 21/162 (13.0%) |
| OABSS normalization and OAB-q HRQoL score | 8/126 (6.3%) | 13/117 (11.1%) | 10/154 (6.5%) | 6/162 (3.7%) |
| Triple responder criteria | ||||
| Micturition normalization and OAB-q symptom bother score and OAB-q HRQoL score | 9/125 (7.2%) | 17/116 (14.7%) | 9/152 (5.9%) | 17/159 (10.7%) |
| Urgency normalization and OAB-q symptom bother score and OAB-q HRQoL score | 7/125 (5.6%) | 11/116 (9.5%) | 15/152 (9.9%) | 5/160 (3.1%) |
| Incontinence normalization and OAB-q symptom bother score and OAB-q HRQoL score | 8/33 (24.2%) | 11/28 (39.3%) | 8/47 (17.0%) | 13/60 (21.7%) |
| Urgency urinary incontinence normalization and OAB-q symptom bother score and OAB-q HRQoL score | 7/32 (21.9%) | 11/27 (40.7%) | 8/42 (19.0%) | 12/58 (20.7%) |
| Nocturia normalization and OAB-q symptom bother score and OAB-q HRQoL score | 9/110 (8.2%) | 7/97 (7.2%) | 1/142 (0.7%) | 5/146 (3.4%) |
| OABSS normalization and OAB-q symptom bother score and OAB-q HRQoL score | 8/126 (6.3%) | 13/117 (11.1%) | 10/154 (6.5%) | 6/162 (3.7%) |
| Micturition (≥ 10% decrease) and OAB-q symptom bother score and OAB-q HRQoL score | 20/125 (16.0%) | 40/116 (34.5%) | 22/152 (14.5%) | 29/159 (18.2%) |
| Urgency (≥ 50% decrease) and OAB-q symptom bother score and OAB-q HRQoL score | 26/125 (20.8%) | 39/116 (33.6%) | 29/152 (19.1%) | 29/160 (18.1%) |
| OABSS (MCIC) and OAB-q symptom bother score and OAB-q HRQoL score | 24/126 (19.0%) | 30/117 (25.6%) | 23/154 (14.9%) | 25/162 (15.4%) |
FAS full analysis set, HRQoL health-related quality of life, MCIC minimally clinically important change, OAB-q overactive bladder questionnaire, OABSS overactive bladder symptom score
| Previous results from the MATCH study showed that mirabegron therapy added on to tamsulosin was superior to placebo in improving objective endpoints, such as mean number of micturitions/24 h and mean volume voided/micturition, and also patient-reported outcomes (PROs), such as the overactive bladder symptom score (OABSS) and overactive bladder questionnaire (OAB-q) score. |
| For a symptom-defined condition such as OAB, it is important to show that treatment effects are clinically meaningful to patients. |
| Therefore, this analysis aimed to understand not only whether mirabegron treatment resulted in a change in OAB symptoms, but also whether this change was meaningful to patients for each symptom by investigating the proportion of treatment responders from the MATCH study and identifying responders by symptom resolution (normalization) or clinically important improvements. |
| Mirabegron therapy added on to tamsulosin in men improved OAB symptoms with the most improvements seen in micturitions; these changes were meaningful and worthwhile to patients. |
| Patients with OAB often have a constellation of symptoms, and the degree of distress due to individual symptoms varies. In addition, responsiveness can be different in individual patients. Considering that OAB patients have heterogeneous symptoms and concerns, it is important to understand treatment response in specific patient populations. |