[Impact of a coordinated regional organization to secure the management of patients on oral anticancer drugs: CHIMORAL, a comparative trial].

Bull Cancer

AP-HP, hôpitaux universitaires de l'Est parisien, hôpital Tenon, service d'oncologie médicale et de thérapie cellulaire, pôle onco-hématologie, 4, rue de la Chine, 75970 Paris cedex 20, France.

Published: September 2019

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Article Abstract

Introduction: Oral anticancer drugs have disrupted hospital and community practices. A better coordination and patient support for medication and adverse events management by primary care providers (general practitioner, community pharmacist and liberal nurse) could improve the situation. The CHIMORAL study evaluated a model of coordination by territorial health networks.

Methods: A here and elsewhere, prospective and multicentric study, comparing coordinated care with standard care. Primary outcome was the use of the hospital structure for adverse events within 6 months of initiating treatment.

Results: In all, 283 patients were included. 92% had at least one adverse event, with a higher median number in the coordinated group (12.5 vs. 9.0, P=0.02). No difference in hospital use by arm (P=0.502). Increase in the use of community care for adverse events in the coordinated group (27% vs. 16%, P=0.009). No observed impact on progression rates, quality of life and treatment adherence. The overall survival rate at 6 months is numerically higher in the coordinated group (87% vs. 76%, P=0.064).

Discussion: This model does not show any difference on the primary endpoint. The lack of randomization, patient selection, power loss, and local initiatives to monitor these patients may have biased the analysis. A large number of uses of the healthcare system were observed. These results confirm the need for a dedicated care pathway for the patient with oral anticancer drugs.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bulcan.2019.03.019DOI Listing

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