| Literature DB >> 34338965 |
Adam Brufsky1, Xianchen Liu2, Benjamin Li3, Lynn McRoy3, Rachel M Layman4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Limited information exists regarding tumor response to palbociclib plus an aromatase inhibitor (AI) versus AI alone in real-world practice.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34338965 PMCID: PMC8484164 DOI: 10.1007/s11523-021-00826-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Target Oncol ISSN: 1776-2596 Impact factor: 4.493
Patient characteristics
| Characteristic | Unadjusted cohort | Cohort after PSM | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Palbociclib + Letrozole ( | Letrozole ( | Standardized difference | Palbociclib + Letrozole ( | Letrozole ( | Standardized difference | |
| Age, y | ||||||
| Mean (SD) | 64.4 (11.2) | 70.6 (10.9) | 0.5645 | 68.3 (10.8) | 68.0 (10.8) | –0.0288 |
| Median (IQR) | 65.0 (57.0–73.0) | 72.0 (63.0–80.0) | 70.0 (62.0–76.0) | 68.0 (61.0–78.0) | ||
| Age group, | ||||||
| 18–64 | 318 (48.0) | 85 (27.8) | –0.4270 | 68 (31.6) | 77 (35.8) | 0.0886 |
| 65–74 | 220 (33.2) | 90 (29.4) | –0.0825 | 81 (37.7) | 76 (35.4) | –0.0483 |
| ≥ 75 | 124 (18.7) | 131 (42.8) | 0.5404 | 66 (30.7) | 62 (28.8) | –0.0407 |
| Race/ethnicity, | ||||||
| White | 462 (69.8) | 216 (70.6) | 0.0175 | 162 (75.4) | 147 (68.4) | –0.1556 |
| Black | 46 (7.0) | 22 (7.2) | 0.0094 | 10 (4.7) | 15 (7.0) | 0.0995 |
| Asian | 15 (2.3) | 6 (2.0) | –0.0212 | 3 (1.4) | 5 (2.3) | 0.0689 |
| Hispanic or Latino | 16 (2.4) | 6 (2.0) | –0.0312 | 4 (1.9) | 4 (1.9) | 0.0000 |
| Other/unknown | 123 (18.6) | 56 (18.3) | –0.0072 | 36 (16.7) | 44 (20.5) | 0.0957 |
| Practice type, | ||||||
| Academic | 36 (5.4) | 15 (4.9) | 0.0242 | 17 (7.9) | 12 (5.6) | 0.0928 |
| Community | 626 (94.6) | 291 (95.1) | 198 (92.1) | 203 (94.4) | ||
| Disease stage at initial diagnosis, | ||||||
| I or II | 239 (36.1) | 106 (34.6) | –0.0306 | 65 (30.2) | 72 (33.5) | 0.0699 |
| III | 92 (13.9) | 45 (14.7) | 0.0231 | 20 (9.3) | 32 (14.9) | 0.1718 |
| IV | 274 (41.4) | 118 (38.6) | –0.0577 | 107 (49.8) | 84 (39.1) | –0.2166 |
| Not documented | 57 (8.6) | 37 (12.1) | 0.1145 | 23 (10.7) | 27 (12.6) | 0.0581 |
| ECOG performance status, | ||||||
| 0 | 278 (42.0) | 72 (23.5) | –0.4013 | 62 (28.8) | 62 (28.8) | 0.0000 |
| 1 | 138 (20.9) | 60 (19.6) | –0.0308 | 43 (20.0) | 47 (21.9) | 0.0457 |
| 2 | 36 (5.4) | 22 (7.2) | 0.0721 | 17 (7.9) | 16 (7.4) | –0.0175 |
| 3 or 4 | 4 (0.6) | 11 (3.6) | 0.2097 | 3 (1.4) | 2 (0.9) | –0.0434 |
| Not documented | 206 (31.1) | 141 (46.1) | 0.3110 | 90 (41.9) | 88 (40.9) | –0.0189 |
| Visceral disease,a
| ||||||
| No | 378 (57.1) | 210 (68.6) | –0.2403 | 137 (63.7) | 138 (64.2) | –0.0097 |
| Yes | 284 (42.9) | 96 (31.4) | 78 (36.3) | 77 (35.8) | ||
| Bone-only disease,b
| 246 (37.2) | 121 (39.5) | 0.0490 | 96 (44.7) | 89 (41.4) | –0.0658 |
| Brain metastases, | 16 (2.4) | 14 (4.6) | 0.1177 | 4 (1.9) | 7 (3.3) | 0.0885 |
| Number of metastatic sites,c
| ||||||
| 1 | 326 (49.2) | 172 (56.2) | 0.1398 | 127 (59.1) | 123 (57.2) | –0.0377 |
| 2 | 193 (29.2) | 71 (23.2) | –0.1357 | 52 (24.2) | 50 (23.3) | –0.0219 |
| 3 | 88 (13.3) | 33 (10.8) | –0.0772 | 25 (11.6) | 27 (12.6) | 0.0285 |
| ≥ 4 | 45 (6.8) | 9 (2.9) | –0.1799 | 7 (3.3) | 8 (3.7) | 0.0254 |
| Not documented | 10 (1.5) | 21 (6.9) | 0.2696 | 4 (1.9) | 7 (3.3) | 0.0885 |
The balance in important prognostic baseline characteristics was assessed using a standardized difference approach, with a standardized difference of ≥ 0.10 considered indicative of practical significance [28]
ECOG Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group, IQR interquartile range, PSM propensity-score matching
aVisceral disease was defined as metastatic disease in the lung and/or liver; patients could have had other sites of metastases. No visceral disease was defined as no lung or liver metastases
bBone-only disease was defined as metastatic disease in the bone only
cMultiple metastases at the same site were counted as one site (e.g., if a patient had three bone metastases in the spine, it was considered only one site)
Fig. 1Real-world best tumor response. ECOG Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group, LET letrozole, OR odds ratio, PAL palbociclib, PSM propensity-score matching. Indeterminate response includes situations in which the clinician explicitly states that he/she is not able to make a determination of the assessment
Fig. 2Real-world best overall tumor response rates by subgroup. ECOG Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group, LET letrozole, PAL palbociclib, rwBTR real-world best tumor response aVisceral disease was defined as metastatic disease in the lung and/or liver; patients could have had other sites of metastases. No visceral disease was defined as no lung or liver metastases. bBone-only disease was defined as metastatic disease in only the bone. cMultiple metastases at the same site were counted as one site (e.g., if a patient had three bone metastases in the spine, it was considered only one site)
Fig. 3Real-world progression-free survival among patients with one or more tumor response assessments. LET letrozole, PAL palbociclib, PSM propensity-score matching, rwPFS real-world progression-free survival
Fig. 4Overall survival among patients with one or more tumor response assessments. LET letrozole, NE not estimable, NR not reached, OS overall survival, PAL palbociclib, PSM propensity-score matching
| This is the first comparative analysis of real-world tumor response in patients with hormone receptor-positive/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative metastatic breast cancer (HR+/HER2– MBC) treated with first-line palbociclib plus letrozole versus letrozole alone in the real-world clinical setting. |
| Patients with HR+/HER2‒ MBC were more likely to respond to palbociclib plus letrozole compared with letrozole alone. |
| These data complement the clinical benefit of palbociclib plus endocrine therapy observed in randomized clinical trials and support palbociclib plus letrozole as a standard of care for patients with HR+/HER2‒ MBC. |