| Literature DB >> 36066628 |
Ingo J Diel1, Richard Greil2,3, Jan Janssen4, Christian W Kluike5, Bagmeet Behera6, Ali Abbasi7, Anouchka Seesaghur7, Michael Kellner8, Christine Jaeger9, Katja Bjorklof10, Antoaneta Tomova11, Ferdinand Haslbauer12.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To describe (non)adherence with denosumab among patients with solid tumors and bone metastases.Entities:
Keywords: Denosumab; Implementation; Initiation; Medication adherence; Persistence; Real-world study
Year: 2022 PMID: 36066628 PMCID: PMC9446633 DOI: 10.1007/s00520-022-07333-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Support Care Cancer ISSN: 0941-4355 Impact factor: 3.359
Fig. 1Forms of adherence and nonadherence with denosumab. Percentages within colored circles denote the proportion of patients by cancer type. Please refer to Table 2 and Supplementary Fig. 2 for additional data and full adherence definitions. aTime to initiation was defined as the time from diagnosis of bone metastasis to first-ever denosumab administration. bEach denosumab administration for patients with ≥ 3 doses of denosumab. Patients classified as optimal or suboptimal according to the extent to which gaps between administrations correspond to the recommended administration gap of 28 days, in terms of both regularity and consistency. cNo gap of > 60 days between consecutive denosumab administrations from initiation. BC breast cancer, KC kidney cancer, LC lung cancer, OC other types of cancer, PC prostate cancer
Adherence with denosumab by type of cancer
| Phase of medication adherence/nonadherence | Breast cancer | Prostate cancer | Lung cancer | Kidney cancer | Other types of cancer |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Initiation | |||||
| Patients, | 842 | 441 | 222 | 59 | 177 |
| Time from bone metastasis diagnosis to denosumab initiation, median (Q1–Q3) days | 32 (15–70) | 43 (16–146) | 32 (15–79) | 51 (20–124) | 30 (14–87) |
| Adherence: timely initiation | 684 (81.2) | 309 (70.1) | 173 (77.9) | 38 (64.4) | 135 (76.3) |
| Nonadherence: late initiation | 158 (18.8) | 132 (29.9) | 49 (22.1) | 21 (35.6) | 42 (23.7) |
| Implementation | |||||
| Patients, | 797 | 423 | 178 | 55 | 147 |
| Adherence: optimal implementation | 578 (72.5) | 293 (69.3) | 111 (62.4) | 37 (67.3) | 94 (64.0) |
| Nonadherence: suboptimal implementation | 219 (27.5) | 130 (30.7) | 67 (37.6) | 18 (32.7) | 53 (36.1) |
| Persistence | |||||
| Patients, | 843 | 446 | 222 | 59 | 178 |
| Adherence: persistent | |||||
| 3 months | 732 (86.8) | 386 (86.6) | 156 (70.3) | 50 (84.8) | 128 (71.9) |
| 6 months | 644 (76.4) | 347 (77.8) | 92 (41.4) | 40 (67.8) | 90 (50.6) |
| 9 months | 558 (66.2) | 309 (69.3) | 71 (32.0) | 30 (50.9) | 62 (34.8) |
| 12 months | 283 (33.6) | 163 (36.6) | 30 (13.5) | 18 (30.5) | 26 (14.6) |
| Nonadherence: non-persistent | |||||
| 3 months | 111 (13.2) | 60 (13.5) | 66 (29.7) | 9 (15.3) | 50 (28.1) |
| 6 months | 199 (23.6) | 99 (22.2) | 130 (58.6) | 19 (32.2) | 88 (49.4) |
| 9 months | 285 (33.8) | 137 (30.7) | 151 (68.0) | 29 (49.2) | 116 (65.2) |
| 12 months | 560 (66.4) | 283 (63.5) | 192 (86.5) | 41 (69.5) | 152 (85.4) |
Data shown as n (%) unless indicated otherwise
Baseline demographics and clinical characteristics of patients by type of cancer
| Characteristic | Breast cancer | Prostate cancer | Lung cancer | Kidney cancer | Other types of cancer |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | |||||
| Patients, | 843 | 446 | 222 | 59 | 178 |
| Mean (SD) | 62.5 (11.8) | 72.7 (8.1) | 64.4 (9.5) | 66.9 (9.5) | 65.4 (10.4) |
| Sex | |||||
| Patients, | 843 | 446 | 222 | 59 | 178 |
| Female | 843 (100.0) | 0 (0) | 79 (35.6) | 22 (37.3) | 78 (43.8) |
| Country | |||||
| Patients, | 843 | 446 | 222 | 59 | 178 |
| Germany | 506 (60.0) | 296 (66.4) | 159 (71.6) | 50 (84.7) | 116 (65.2) |
| Austria | 197 (23.4) | 28 (6.3) | 36 (16.2) | 2 (3.4) | 45 (25.3) |
| Eastern Europea | 140 (16.6) | 122 (27.4) | 27 (12.2) | 7 (11.9) | 17 (9.6) |
| Prior medications | |||||
| Patients, | 842 | 441 | 222 | 59 | 177 |
| Anticancer therapy | 597 (70.9) | 320 (72.6)b | 172 (77.5)c | 47 (79.7) | 128 (72.3)c |
| Chemotherapy | 312 (37.1)d | 78 (17.7)e | 148 (66.7)f | 37 (62.7)g | 104 (58.8)h |
| Antiresorptive therapyi | 63 (7.5) | 38 (8.6)b | 9 (4.1)c | 6 (10.2) | 10 (5.6)c |
| Renal impairment at enrollment | |||||
| Patients, | 842 | 441 | 222 | 59 | 177 |
| Yes | 12 (1.4) | 22 (5.0) | 5 (2.3) | 3 (5.1) | 3 (1.7) |
| No | 322 (38.2) | 122 (27.7) | 57 (25.7) | 6 (10.2) | 57 (32.2) |
| Not available | 508 (60.3) | 297 (67.3) | 160 (72.1) | 50 (84.7) | 117 (66.1) |
| Hypocalcemia/hypercalcemia at enrollment | |||||
| Patients, | 842 | 441 | 222 | 59 | 177 |
| Yes | 18 (2.1) | 6 (1.4) | 4 (1.8) | 2 (3.4) | 6 (3.4) |
| No | 316 (37.5) | 137 (31.1) | 58 (26.1) | 7 (11.9) | 54 (30.5) |
| Not available | 508 (60.3) | 298 (67.6) | 160 (72.1) | 50 (84.7) | 117 (66.1) |
| Prior hypercalcemia | |||||
| Patients, | 842 | 441 | 222 | 59 | 177 |
| Yes | 22 (2.6) | 9 (2.0) | 5 (2.3) | 4 (6.8) | 7 (4.0) |
| No | 373 (44.3) | 151 (34.2) | 77 (34.7) | 19 (32.2) | 63 (35.6) |
| Not available | 447 (53.1) | 281 (63.7) | 140 (63.1) | 36 (61.0) | 107 (60.5) |
| Number of bone metastases | |||||
| Patients, | 842 | 441 | 222 | 59 | 177 |
| 1 | 188 (22.3) | 77 (17.5) | 78 (35.1) | 25 (42.4) | 67 (37.9) |
| 2–4 | 313 (37.2) | 157 (35.6) | 83 (37.4) | 20 (33.9) | 62 (35.0) |
| > 4 | 283 (33.6) | 189 (42.9) | 50 (22.5) | 11 (18.6) | 36 (20.3) |
| Not availablej | 58 (6.9) | 18 (4.1) | 11 (5.0) | 3 (5.1) | 12 (6.8) |
| Bone pain | |||||
| Patients, | 842 | 441 | 222 | 59 | 177 |
| Yes | 40 (4.8) | 13 (2.9) | 14 (6.3) | 11 (18.6) | 8 (4.5) |
| No | 63 (7.5) | 10 (2.3) | 13 (5.9) | 5 (8.5) | 12 (6.8) |
| Not available | 739 (87.8) | 418 (94.8) | 195 (87.8) | 43 (72.9) | 157 (88.7) |
| History of SRE prior to enrollment | |||||
| Patients, | 842 | 441 | 222 | 59 | 177 |
| ≥ 1 record of specific SRE | 91 (10.8) | 20 (4.5) | 25 (11.3) | 13 (22.0) | 18 (10.2) |
| No SRE recorded | 299 (35.5) | 141 (32.0) | 57 (25.7) | 9 (15.3) | 52 (29.4) |
| SRE not available | 452 (53.7) | 280 (63.5) | 140 (63.1) | 37 (62.7) | 107 (60.5) |
SRE skeletal-related event. Data shown as n (%) unless indicated otherwise. aData for Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Hungary, and Slovakia were pooled because statistics for some tumor types were too low to be presented for the individual countries; data not available for b2 patients, c1 patient, d134 patients, e45 patients, f23 patients, g5 patients, and h22 patients; iin Study 240, prior antiresorptive therapy consisted of bisphosphonates, including zoledronic acid, ibandronate, pamidronate, and unspecified others [4]; in X-TREME, prior antiresorptive therapy included bisphosphonates; junknown or missing
Fig. 2Quality of life assessed at month 3 of denosumab initiation via the EQ-5D-5L questionnaire domains in patients with a breast, b prostate, c lung, d kidney, and e other cancer types. Patients may have received radiotherapy for palliative pain. a Twenty-two point seven percent and 30.3% of patients had a history of pain medication (analgesics) prior to enrollment and at 3 months after the first dose of denosumab, respectively; 81.2% initiated denosumab within 90 days of bone metastasis (BM) diagnosis, and 86.8% were persistent at 3 months. b Fifteen point nine percent and 27.4% of patients had a history of pain medication (analgesics) prior to enrollment and at 3 months after the first dose of denosumab, respectively; 70.1% initiated denosumab within 90 days of BM diagnosis, and 86.6% were persistent at 3 months. c Thirty-eight point three percent and 36.0% of patients had a history of pain medication (analgesics) prior to enrollment and at 3 months after the first dose of denosumab, respectively; 77.9% initiated denosumab within 90 days of BM diagnosis, and 70.3% were persistent at 3 months. d Thirty-three point nine percent and 40.7% of patients had a history of pain medication (analgesics) prior to enrollment and at 3 months after the first dose of denosumab, respectively; 64.4% initiated denosumab within 90 days of BM diagnosis, and 84.8% were persistent at 3 months. e Forty-three point five percent and 49.7% of patients had a history of pain medication (analgesics) prior to enrollment and at 3 months after the first dose of denosumab, respectively; 76.3% initiated denosumab within 90 days of BM diagnosis, and 71.9% were persistent at 3 months. EQ-5D-5L EuroQoL 5-Dimension 5-Level
Clinical recommendations for improving medication adherence with denosumab based on the Action, Actor, Context, Target, Time (AACTT) framework [35]
| Strategy for improving medication adherence | Target (patient/physician) | Individual or group actioning the strategy | Timing of strategy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Initiation of denosumab immediately after BM diagnosis | Patient | Physician | Immediately after BM diagnosis |
| Supplementation with calcium and vitamin D to reduce the risk of hypocalcemia | Patient | Physician/nurse | During denosumab treatment |
| Reminders for appointments (e.g., diaries or text messages) | Patient | Clinic support staff | During denosumab treatment |
| Education on ESMO guidelines, tailored to the specialty of the physician and depending on experience | Physician | Physician/nurse | Ongoing |
| Education on SREs to address gaps in bone health education [ | Patient | Physician/nurse | Prior to denosumab initiation/during denosumab treatment |
| Information to address gaps (e.g., in the form of documents, videos, or websites) [ | Patient | Physician/nurse | Prior to denosumab initiation |
| Facilitation of communication between patients and their physician [ | Patient/physician | Patient/physician/nurse | Ongoing |
| Consider off-site, drive-through, or home administration of denosumab, where feasible, if adherence is disrupted (e.g., due to the COVID-19 pandemic) in patients receiving denosumab [ | Patient | Physician | During denosumab treatment |
BM bone metastasis, BTA bone-targeting agent, COVID-19 coronavirus disease 2019, ESMO European Society for Medical Oncology, SRE skeletal-related event