Literature DB >> 33729581

Cancer clinical trial vs real-world outcomes for standard of care first-line treatment in the advanced disease setting.

Louise Kostos1,2, Wei Hong3, Belinda Lee2,3,4, Ben Tran2,3, Sheau Wen Lok2,3, Angelyn Anton3,5,6, Grace Gard3, Yat Hang To3, Vanessa Wong3, Jeremy Shapiro7, Rachel Wong3,5,6, Shirley Wong1, Richard de Boer2, Peter Gibbs1,3.   

Abstract

Clinical trials have strict eligibility criteria, potentially limiting external validity. However, while often discussed this has seldom been explored, particularly across cancer types and at variable time frames posttrial completion. We examined comprehensive registry data (January 2014 to June 2019) for standard first-line treatments for metastatic colorectal cancer (CRC), advanced pancreatic cancer (PC), metastatic HER2-amplified breast cancer (BC) and castrate-resistant prostate cancer (CaP). Registry patient characteristics and outcomes were compared to the practice-changing trial. Registry patients were older than the matched trial cohort by a median of 2-6 years (all P = <.01) for the CRC, BC and PC cohorts. The proportion of Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status (PS) 0-1 patients was lower for CRC (94.1% vs 99.2%, P = .001) and BC (94.9% vs 99.3%, P = .001). Progression-free survival (PFS) for registry patients was similar to the trial patients or significantly longer (CaP, Hazard Ratio [HR] = 0.65, P = <.001). Overall survival (OS) was also similar or significantly longer (CaP, HR 0.49, P = <.001). In conclusion, despite real-world patients sometimes being older or having inferior PS to trial cohorts, the survival outcomes achieved were consistently equal or superior to those reported for the same treatment in the trial. We suggest that this is potentially due to optimised use of each treatment over time, improved multidisciplinary care and increased postprogression options. We can reassure clinicians and patients that outcomes matching or exceeding those reported in trials are possible. The potential for survival gains over time should routinely be factored into future trial statistical plans.
© 2021 Union for International Cancer Control.

Entities:  

Keywords:  efficacy-effectiveness gap; metastatic cancer; real-world outcomes

Year:  2021        PMID: 33729581     DOI: 10.1002/ijc.33568

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Cancer        ISSN: 0020-7136            Impact factor:   7.396


  2 in total

Review 1.  Leveraging Comprehensive Cancer Registry Data to Enable a Broad Range of Research, Audit and Patient Support Activities.

Authors:  Belinda Lee; Lucy Gately; Sheau Wen Lok; Ben Tran; Margaret Lee; Rachel Wong; Ben Markman; Kate Dunn; Vanessa Wong; Matthew Loft; Azim Jalili; Angelyn Anton; Richard To; Miles Andrews; Peter Gibbs
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2022-08-26       Impact factor: 6.575

2.  Rationale, Strengths, and Limitations of Real-World Evidence in Oncology: A Canadian Review and Perspective.

Authors:  Laurent Azoulay
Journal:  Oncologist       Date:  2022-09-02       Impact factor: 5.837

  2 in total

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