AI Article Synopsis

  • cBTK inhibitors are commonly used for treating relapsed/refractory mantle cell lymphoma (R/R MCL), but issues like short response durations and resistance are prevalent among some patients.
  • A study analyzed Medicare claims from 2010-2019, focusing on elderly patients (≥ 66 years) who received third-line treatment after using cBTK inhibitors, assessing outcomes like treatment patterns, healthcare resource use (HRU), costs, and survival rates.
  • Findings showed that among 230 patients, the median overall survival was only 9.4 months, with high hospitalization rates (73.6%) and significant treatment costs ($145,726) in the year following third-line treatment, signaling a critical need for new therapies

Article Abstract

Background: While covalent Bruton's tyrosine kinase inhibitors (cBTKis) have become a standard of care treatment for relapsed/refractory mantle cell lymphoma (R/R MCL), response duration is limited and resistance to BTKi and/or adverse events develop in a subset of patients. However, little real-world evidence on post-cBTKi clinical and economic outcomes exists for these patients.

Patients And Methods: This retrospective study used 2010 to 2019 U.S. Medicare claims, to identify elderly (≥ 66 years) patients with newly-diagnosed MCL who received third-line (3L) treatment and had evidence of cBTKi use in a prior line of therapy. Outcomes were assessed ≥ 12-months post 3L-treatment initiation and included treatment patterns, all-cause and MCL-related HRU and costs, and overall survival.

Results: The final sample contained 230 elderly patients with R/R MCL receiving 3L treatment who had cBTKi use in a prior line of therapy (mean age 75.0, 21.7% age > 80 years; 67.4% male; 93.9% White). Common 3L treatments included chemotherapy (26.1%), lenalidomide (18.7%), and bortezomib (18.3%); 1-quarter (25.7%) of patients received a cBTKi (17.8% ibrutinib; 7.8% acalabrutinib). Overall survival was poor from 3L treatment initiation (median OS = 9.4 months; 1-years survival rate = 43.7%). Patients exhibited high rates of HRU (73.6% experienced hospitalization) and substantial costs ($145,726) in the 12-months after 3L initiation.

Conclusion: A large unmet need exists in this patient subpopulation, highlighting the importance of ongoing development of novel therapeutics.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.clml.2024.05.023DOI Listing

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