| Literature DB >> 33337513 |
Salvatore D'Agate1, Chandrashekhar Chavan2, Michael Manyak3, Juan Manuel Palacios-Moreno4, Matthias Oelke5, Martin C Michel6, Claus G Roehrborn7, Oscar Della Pasqua8,9.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To evaluate the effect of delayed start of combination therapy (CT) with dutasteride 0.5 mg and tamsulosin 0.4 mg on the risk of acute urinary retention or benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH)-related surgery (AUR/S) in patients with moderate-to-severe lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) at risk of disease progression.Entities:
Keywords: Acute urinary retention; BPH-related surgery; Benign prostatic hyperplasia; Clinical trial simulations; Dutasteride; Lower urinary tract symptoms; Relative risk; Tamsulosin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33337513 PMCID: PMC8332595 DOI: 10.1007/s00345-020-03517-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Urol ISSN: 0724-4983 Impact factor: 4.226
Fig. 1Overview of the steps for the implementation of the clinical trial simulation scenarios, covariate factors affecting baseline risk of AUR/S and main findings. a Schematic diagram of the clinical trial simulations based on a hazard model describing the time to first AUR/S. b Heat maps illustrating the contribution of baseline clinical characteristics to the baseline risk of AUR/S. * Whilst heat maps allow visualisation of the effect of the interaction between some baseline characteristics, an assessment of the baseline risk of AUR/S for individual patients, which takes into account all these factors concurrently (i.e. IPSS, PSA, PV and Qmax) requires the use of the TTE model (Table S4). Even though each panel shows scales that include mild IPSS symptoms scores and normal ranges for the other baseline characteristics, defining a patient at risk of disease progression implies not only the resulting contribution of all these covariates, but also other factors than the risk of AUR/S. c Kaplan–Meier plot describing the survival estimates over 48 months stratified by treatment arm. Survival (y-axis) indicates the proportion of patients who have not had an event; at time zero the survival is 100% (i.e. no patient has experienced an AUR/S). The solid lines describe the predicted median time to first AUR/S over the period of 48 months across the different treatment arms. Shaded areas show 95% confidence intervals. The number of patients in each cohort is summarised in Table S4. d Cumulative hazard plot describing the cumulative incidence of AUR/S over 48 months stratified by treatment arm. Cumulative incidence of AUR/S across different treatment arms. Lines represent the median cumulative incidence of AUR/S over time. Shaded areas show the 95% confidence intervals. The table below the panel shows the cumulative number of events over time. The number of patients in each cohort is summarised in Table S4. TAM-DUT CT: tamsulosin and dutasteride combination therapy
Proportion of patients who switch to combination therapy and summary of the results from 10 clinical trial replicates for the different treatment arms
| Treatment duration | Transition to CT |
|---|---|
| Start of treatment | 0 |
| 01 month | 1272 (1269, 1280) |
| 03 months | 1111 (1102, 1139) |
| 06 months | 716 (700, 753) |
| 12 months | 451 (424, 472) |
| 24 months | 416 (395, 439) |
| 36 months | 0 |
| 48 months | 0 |
Upper panel: Overview of the patient population that switches to combination therapy (CT) due to non-response to tamsulosin monotherapy, as defined by a change in IPSS < 25% relative to baseline. Lower panel: number of events, incidence, relative risk, attributable risk and time to comparable progression for 10 trial replicates. Results are shown as medians (90%-confidence intervals)
*p < 0.001 log-rank test on survival curve; Bonferroni-corrected α = 0.0083
aTime at which the incidence of AUR/S is comparable to that observed at 48 months after immediate start of treatment with tamsulosin and dutasteride CT