| Literature DB >> 34919568 |
Jeremiah Stout1,2, Cambray Smith3, Jan Buckner4, Alex A Adjei4, Mark Wentworth5, Jon C Tilburt2,6, Zubin Master2,7.
Abstract
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) allows patients with serious illnesses to access investigational drugs for "compassionate use" outside of clinical trials through expanded access (EA) Programs. The federal Right-to-Try Act created an additional pathway for non-trial access to experimental drugs without institutional review board or FDA approval. This removal of oversight amplifies the responsibility of physicians, but little is known about the role of practicing physicians in non-trial access to investigational drugs. We undertook semi-structured interviews to capture the experiences and opinions of 21 oncologists all with previous EA experience at a major cancer center. We found five main themes. Participants with greater EA experience reported less difficulty accessing drugs through the myriad of administrative processes and drug company reluctance to provide investigational products while newcomers reported administrative hurdles. Oncologists outlined several rationales patients offered when seeking investigational drugs, including those with stronger health literacy and a good scientific rationale versus others who remained skeptical of conventional medicine. Participants reported that most patients had realistic expectations while some had unrealistic optimism. Given the diverse reasons patients sought investigational drugs, four factors-scientific rationale, risk-benefit ratio, functional status of the patient, and patient motivation-influenced oncologists' decisions to request compassionate use drugs. Physicians struggled with a "right-to-try" framing of patient access to experimental drugs, noting instead their own responsibility to protect patients' best interest in the uncertain and risky process of off-protocol access. This study highlights the willingness of oncologists at a major cancer center to pursue non-trial access to experimental treatments for patients while also shedding light on the factors they use when considering such treatment. Our data reveal discrepancies between physicians' sense of patients' expectations and their own internal sense of professional obligation to shepherd a safe process for patients at a vulnerable point in their care.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34919568 PMCID: PMC8682887 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0261478
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Summary of themes.
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| Oncologists had mixed reviews on the ease of accessing experimental drugs through EA and that past experience was likely to have eased administrative burdens. |
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| Oncologists reported differing rationales of patients considering experimental interventions where most patients had a strong science and health understanding of the intervention while others were skeptical of conventional medicine and interested in pursuing natural or alternative options. |
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| Oncologists reported that the majority of patients had realistic expectations of experimental medicine i.e., improving quality of life, while some had unrealistic optimism expecting a miracle cure. |
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| Oncologists reported that terminally ill patients can ask for any experimental drug but should not have a right to try any drug they desire because some options are unreasonable and can cause harm. |
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| Oncologists reported that it is their professional obligation to seek experimental drugs through compassionate use for patients who can benefit from them. |
Oncologists’ reasons for considering non-trial preapproval access to investigational drugs.
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| I have another patient where she was on hospice. There was a drug and I was able to get the drug because it was for a certain targeted mutation. I knew it was a homerun drug. I gave it to the patient. Now we’re a year later and she got out of hospice. She’s alive, doing really well. (Participant 1) |
| Most of the time I’m not looking for something that’s like a nebulous phase-one trial. Usually I’m looking for things that are open in phase two elsewhere that we just don’t have available here, or things that maybe have looked really promising in a phase two or phase three trial but have not been FDA approved, so it’ll be hard for us to push that through insurance. (Participant 11) |
| I do research on [ |
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| I thought about it and I really thought about it. I did not think it was ethical. I thought that it was not—the safety wasn’t established. The patient’s clinical status was really poor. I would never have considered giving her therapy if we weren’t already going down this road. Ultimately, I decided to cancel the medication. (Participant 1) |
| I didn’t do it because that patient was advanced, a poor performance status, would not be able to tolerate, his lab studies were abnormal, and so that was never an option for that patient. (Participant 15) |
| The other patient, the drug is part of a class of drugs that’s been under investigation for a couple of years now and have shown a number of results already, and have class of effects that have been mirrored across different agents so that the clinical side effect profile is pretty well known, and it’s pretty well tolerated, so she wasn’t hesitant to go ahead with it. (Participant 8) |
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| I think in those situations I’ve told the patient I will reach out to the company and see if I can first and foremost always look for clinical trials first. Th[e] first priority is to gain access to these meds through clinical trials. In the most recent case the patient actually screen failed for a really stupid reason, and so that’s why I reached out to the company to say, “Can we treat her off study?” (Participant 10) |
| These patients that I referred to have extremely rare diseases and extremely poor survival, and the options that we have on the market, none of them work great for them. (Participant 16) |
| Both patients have [name of tumor type], which doesn’t really have a lot of other options from a treatment standpoint, so I think the less options you have from a cancer treatment perspective, the more willing you are to go out on a limb and try other stuff. (Participant 8) |
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| It’s not something I typically do unless I really think that there’s a strong reason to do it or a patient’s really pushing for it. (Participant 17) |
| Again, it also depends on what the patient’s experience has been with previous treatments. If they felt miserable and not having quality of life, then they may not wanna do anything more. If they felt good with whatever treatments they had, they wanna do more, so I think it just depends on the patient’s experience. (Participant 4) |
| Well, there’re several calculations that go into this. One is what’s the likely potential for benefit. The second one is what’s the experience with the drug and that is, is it reasonably tolerated. The third is what’s the availability to get the drug or a reasonable surrogate outside of this mechanism. Then what’s the patient think? There are some people that are in go mode and it’s like, ‘Yeah. Even though it’s not on the market yet, yeah, I really want it.’ All those things weigh into the calculation, I think. (Participant 21) |