| Literature DB >> 33771903 |
Jonathan R Strosberg1, Rajaventhan Srirajaskanthan2, Ghassan El-Haddad3, Edward M Wolin4, Beth R Chasen5, Matthew H Kulke6, David L Bushnell7, Martyn E Caplin8, Richard P Baum9, Andrew E Hendifar10, Kjell Öberg11, Philippe Ruszniewski12, Paola Santoro13, Per Broberg13, Oscar R Leeuwenkamp14, Eric P Krenning15.
Abstract
We report the impact of 177Lu DOTATATE treatment on abdominal pain, diarrhea, and flushing, symptoms that patients with advanced midgut neuroendocrine tumors (NETs) often find burdensome.Entities:
Keywords: NETTER-1; Neuroendocrine; Oncology: Endocrine; Radionuclide Therapy; lutetium-177; neuroendocrine; symptom diary
Year: 2021 PMID: 33771903 PMCID: PMC8612179 DOI: 10.2967/jnumed.120.258897
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nucl Med ISSN: 0161-5505 Impact factor: 11.082
FIGURE 1.NETTER-1 trial design.
FIGURE 2.Patient diary for cancer-related symptoms. Diary contains 2 pages for each period of 4 wk, except 3 pages for screening period of up to 6 wk. At each study day, patient was asked to mark tick boxes corresponding to symptoms presented during that day and return diary at next study visit.
FIGURE 3.Change in mean number of days with symptoms. Negative score signifies improvement. Shown are mean change from baseline in number of days with symptoms in 177Lu-DOTATATE and high-dose octreotide LAR arms, adjusted for baseline symptom status. Error bars show 95% CIs. n = 87 (177Lu-DOTATATE) and n = 84 (high-dose octreotide LAR) patients at baseline. Number of patients with diary data decreased throughout study. Analyses were performed on intent-to-treat population.
FIGURE 4.Change in mean number of days with symptoms during first 48 wk of randomized treatment phase. Negative score signifies improvement. Shown are estimated mean decline from baseline in number of days with symptoms at each time point. Estimates are least-squares (LS) means from mixed model for repeated measures. Error bars show 95% CIs. Analyses were performed on intent-to-treat population. There were 87 177Lu-DOTATATE patients and 84 high-dose octreotide LAR patients at baseline. Number of patients with diary data decreased throughout study.
Baseline Symptom Score (Safety Analysis Set)
| Baseline number of days with symptoms | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 177Lu-DOTATATE ( | High-dose octreotide LAR ( | |||||
| Symptom | <4 d | 4–10 d | >10 d | <4 d | 4–10 d | >10 d |
| Abdominal pain | 50 (44.6) | 12 (10.7) | 25 (22.3) | 45 (40.5) | 13 (11.7) | 26 (23.4) |
| Diarrhea | 31 (27.7) | 14 (12.5) | 42 (37.5) | 35 (31.5) | 21 (18.9) | 28 (25.2) |
| Flushing | 43 (38.4) | 17 (15.2) | 27 (24.1) | 45 (40.5) | 13 (11.7) | 26 (23.4) |
Data are number followed by percentage in parentheses.
FIGURE 5.Mean change from baseline in diary symptoms over 48 wk by duration of symptoms at baseline. Negative score signifies improvement. Shown are mean changes from baseline in symptom scores in 177Lu-DOTATATE and high-dose octreotide LAR arms. Error bars show SD. Number of patients with diary data decreased throughout study. Analyses were performed on safety analysis set.
FIGURE 6.Correlation between diary-recorded and EORTC QLQ-C30– or QLQ-GI.NET-21–reported evolution of symptoms. Correlation coefficients measuring degree of association between time course of symptom score (number of days with symptoms) and quality-of-life score (0–100 on EORTC QLQ-C30 or QLQ-GI.NET-21 scale) for individual patients. Positive value (>0 to 1) indicates positive correlation, and negative value (−1 to < 0) indicates negative correlation. aSummary of correlations across all patients, using Bland–Altman method ().