| Literature DB >> 33850304 |
Kamal S Saini1,2, Chris Twelves3.
Abstract
The complexity of neoplasia and its treatment are a challenge to the formulation of general criteria that are applicable across solid cancers. Determining the number of prior lines of therapy (LoT) is critically important for optimising future treatment, conducting medication audits, and assessing eligibility for clinical trial enrolment. Currently, however, no accepted set of criteria or definitions exists to enumerate LoT. In this article, we seek to open a dialogue to address this challenge by proposing a systematic and comprehensive framework to determine LoT uniformly across solid malignancies. First, key terms, including LoT and 'clinical progression of disease' are defined. Next, we clarify which therapies should be assigned a LoT, and why. Finally, we propose reporting LoT in a novel and standardised format as LoT N (CLoT + PLoT), where CLoT is the number of systemic anti-cancer therapies (SACT) administered with curative intent and/or in the early setting, PLoT is the number of SACT given with palliative intent and/or in the advanced setting, and N is the sum of CLoT and PLoT. As a next step, the cancer research community should develop and adopt standardised guidelines for enumerating LoT in a uniform manner.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33850304 PMCID: PMC8292475 DOI: 10.1038/s41416-021-01319-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Definitions of key terms.
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Anti-cancer agent | A (bio)pharmaceutical product used for the treatment of malignant disease, including—but not limited to—cytotoxic, endocrine, targeted, immunotherapy (including vaccine and cell and gene therapy) and radiopharmaceuticals (e.g. radioisotopes, radio-labelled monoclonal antibodies, radioactive microspheres) that has been approved by the FDA and/or the EMA for treatment of any cancer. Note: (1) An anti-cancer agent in clinical development not yet approved by the FDA and/or EMA for treatment of any cancer (as on date of starting such therapy) should be termed an ‘experimental anti-cancer agent’; (2) Supportive therapy (e.g. haematopoietics, drugs for preventing skeletal related events, etc) should not be considered as an anti-cancer agent. |
| Anti-cancer modality | The type of therapy used to remove, kill or suppress cancer cells, including: • Surgery (therapeutic and including, but not limited to, open surgery, laparoscopic surgery, video-assisted thoracic surgery, robot-assisted surgery, etc.), but excluding diagnostic biopsy; • Radiotherapy (including, but not limited to, external beam radiation, brachytherapy, proton beam, stereotactic radiosurgery) but excluding radiopharmaceuticals (e.g. radioisotopes, radio-labelled monoclonal antibodies, radioactive microspheres); • Systemic anti-cancer therapy (SACT; see definition below); • Other (including, but not limited to, high-intensity focused ultrasound, cryotherapy, thermal ablation, photodynamic therapy, hyperthermia, vascular embolisation and anti-cancer agents not meeting the definition of SACT). |
| Clinical progression of disease (cPD) | The clear worsening of the patient’s clinical status or prognosis in the opinion of the treating clinician, taking into consideration clinical findings, imaging (including, but not limited to, objective imaging response criteria) and laboratory test results. |
| Clinical setting | The maximum extent of cancer spread experienced by the patient to date, denoted as A: Early setting (operable, without known distant metastasis); B: Locally advanced setting (inoperable, without known distant metastasis); C. Metastatic setting (operable/inoperable, with known distant metastases) Note: Operable implies that in the opinion of the clinician all known cancer can be completely removed surgically; Inoperable implies that in the opinion of the clinician all known cancer cannot be completely removed surgically. |
| Line of therapy (LoT) | A serial chronological number assigned to each systemic anti-cancer therapy (SACT) and experimental SACT administered to a patient and denotes a discrete attempt to treat the cancer. Note: LoT is reported in the format LoT N (CLoT + PLoT); CLoT is the number of SACT administered with curative intent and/or in the early setting (i.e. operable, without known distant metastasis); PLoT is the number of SACT given with palliative (i.e. non-curative/life-extending) intent and/or in the advanced setting (i.e. inoperable and/or with known distant metastases); N is the sum of CLoT and PLoT. |
| Systemic anti-cancer therapy (SACT) | SACT has the following features: • It consists of one or more anti-cancer agents or experimental anti-cancer agents, which can be administered alone or in combination or sequence (which might include alternating, hybrid, continuation maintenance therapy and/or switch-maintenance therapy); • It is prospectively planned; • It is usually (but not necessarily) administered in repeating cycles; • It is administered systemically, or via local/regional routes but with the intention of systemic effect or significant reduction of overall tumour burden in the opinion of the clinician; • It is given at a clinically relevant dose for a duration that is expected to exert systemic anti-cancer effect. Note: (1) If the SACT is composed exclusively of experimental anti-cancer agent(s), the prefix ‘Experimental’ should be added to such SACT; (2) A patient participating in a study where the control arm consists only of a placebo should not be considered to have received a SACT in that trial unless unblinded information is available; (3) If an FDA/EMA-approved anti-cancer agent is used with the intention of providing supportive/symptomatic care (e.g. dexamethasone is approved for multiple myeloma, but might also be used to treat nausea and vomiting in patients with other cancers), it should not be considered as an SACT. |
| Treatment intent | Treatment intent, in the opinion of the treating clinician, can be curative or palliative (i.e. non-curative/life-extending) (A) Curative therapy aims at complete elimination of cancer and preventing its recurrence; (B) Palliative therapy aims at improving the quality and/or quantity of life but without the expectation of cure. |
The proposed standard dataset (top row) comprises the minimum data to be collected regarding the current disease status (columns 1–4) and anti-cancer therapy (columns 5–9) that would help determine the line of therapy (LoT, column 10).
| (1) | (2) | (3) | (4) | (5) | (6) | (7) | (8) | (9) | (10) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Serial No. | Clinical setting | Treatment intent | Date of most recent clinical progression of disease (cPD) | Anti-cancer modality | Start date | Stop date | Reason for stopping | Comments | Line of therapy N (CLoT + PLoT) |
| 1 | 2A Early | 3A Curative | NA (Date of diagnosis: 1999 Dec 20) | 5A: i, ii SACT: Cytotoxic, Endocrine 5C | 2000 Jan 01 | 2005 Aug 14 | 8B Completed | 5FU + epirubicin 75 + cyclophosphamide x6 → breast conserving surgery → EBRT → tamoxifen x 2 yrs → letrozole x 3 yrs | 1 (1 + 0) |
| 2 | 2A Early | 3A Curative | 2010 Dec 22 | 5A: ii SACT: Endocrine 5C | 2011 Jan 01 | 2013 Jan 01 | 8B Completed | Isolated local recurrence, mastectomy, letrozole x 2 yrs | 2 (2 + 0) |
| 3 | 2B Locally advanced | 3B Palliative | 2015 Feb 01 | 5A: ii SACT: Endocrine | 2015 Feb 07 | 2016 Sep 19 | 8A cPD | Anastrazole | 3 (2 + 1) |
| 4 | 2C Metastatic | 3B Palliative | 2016 Sep 15 | 5A: ii, iii SACT: Endocrine, Targeted | 2016 Oct 02 | 2017 Jan 07 | 8A cPD | Everolimus + Exemestane | 4 (2 + 2) |
| 5 | 2C Metastatic | 3B Palliative | 2017 Jan 07 | 5A: i SACT: Cytotoxic | 2017 Feb 01 | 2017 Jul 17 | 8C Toxicity | Paclitaxel (stopped due to neuropathy) | 5 (2 + 3) |
| 6 | 2C Metastatic | 3B Palliative | 2017 Jan 07 | 5A: i SACT: Cytotoxic | 2017 Aug 09 | 2017 Dec 23 | 8A cPD | Docetaxel | 5 (2 + 3) |
| 7 | 2C Metastatic | 3B Palliative | 2017 Dec 17 | 5A: i SACT: Cytotoxic | 2018 Jan 08 | 2018 Aug 15 | 8A cPD | Capecitabine | 6 (2 + 4) |
| 8 | 2C Metastatic | 3B Palliative | 2018 Aug 15 | 5A: i SACT: Cytotoxic | 2018 Sep 01 | 2018 Dec 30 | 8A cPD | Eribulin | 7 (2 + 5) |
| 9 | 2C Metastatic | 3B Palliative | 2019 Jan 03 | 5A: ii SACT: Endocrine | 2019 Jan 27 | 2019 Jun 15 | 8A cPD | Fulvestrant | 8 (2 + 6) |
| 10 | 2C Metastatic | 3B Palliative | 2019 Jun 04 | 5B: iii Experimental SACT: Targeted | 2019 Jun 22 | 2020 Apr 30 | 8A cPD | Experimental agent (small molecule) | 9 (2 + 7) |
The table has been populated with an illustrative example of enumeration of the LoTs for a hypothetical patient with breast cancer who received multiple LoTs.
Dates should be reported in the format YYYY MMM DD, e.g. 2021 Jan 01.
LoT is recorded in the format LoT N (CLoT + PLoT); CLoT is the number of SACT administered with curative intent and/or in the early setting (i.e. operable, without known distant metastasis); PLoT is the number of systemic anti-cancer therapy (SACT) with palliative intent (i.e. non-curative/life-extending) and/or in the advanced setting (i.e. inoperable and/or with known distant metastases); N is the sum of CLoT and PLoT.
2A: Early setting (operable, without known distant metastasis); 2B: locally advanced setting (inoperable, without known distant metastasis); 2C: metastatic setting (operable/inoperable, with known distant metastases); 3A: curative; 3B: palliative; 5A: systemic anti-cancer therapy (SACT); 5B: experimental SACT (i.e. SACT without any FDA/EMA-approved anti-cancer agent); [5A and 5B are further categorised as: (i) cytotoxic; (ii) endocrine therapy; (iii) targeted; (iv) immunotherapy (including vaccine and cell and gene therapy); (v) other]; 5C: surgery; 5D: radiotherapy; 5E: other.; 8A: clinical progression of disease (cPD); 8B: completed planned anti-cancer therapy; 8C: toxicity; 8D: patient/clinician choice; 8E: death; 8F: other (e.g. financial or any other reason).
Fig. 1Over time, as a patient’s cancer burden increases, the corresponding goals evolve, and anti-cancer treatment is accordingly customised to provide goal-concordant care.
Line of therapy (LoT) should be reported in a standard format as LoT N (CLoT + PLoT). The distinction between CLoT (curative intent and/or early setting) and PLoT (palliative intent and/or advanced setting) could be unclear in some scenarios, and the clinician should make a considered decision keeping in mind the type of cancer as well as individual patient characteristics.
Draft guidelines for determining lines of therapy in patients with solid cancers.
| (1) Once clinical progression of disease (cPD) is documented, assign a new line of therapy (LoT) to the next systemic anti-cancer therapy (SACT). |
| (2) In the absence of cPD, if an anti-cancer agent that is part of a SACT is discontinued due to toxicity and substituted by another anti-cancer agent of the same class, retain the same LoT. |
| (3) In the absence of cPD, if one or more new anti-cancer agent is added to an ongoing SACTa consider this a new SACT, and assign it a new LoT |
| (4) Irrespective of cPD, if one or more anti-cancer agent is discontinued from an ongoing SACT for any reason, retain the same LoT for the remaining anti-cancer agents. |
| (5) Irrespective of cPD, if the dose or schedule or route of administration of one or more anti-cancer agent of an ongoing SACT is modified for any reason, retain the same LoT. |
aExcept if prospectively planned per definition of SACT in Table 1, and except in scenario covered above in Guideline No. 2.