AI Article Synopsis

  • The study emphasizes the importance of incorporating patient-reported outcomes (PROs) to evaluate symptomatic adverse events in cancer clinical trials, which is crucial for understanding treatment tolerability.
  • Researchers analyzed safety data from cancer drug approvals between 2015-2021, focusing on the most common symptomatic adverse reactions reported in clinical trials for lung, breast, and hematologic cancers.
  • Findings revealed that fatigue, diarrhea, and nausea were the most frequently reported adverse reactions, indicating these should be prioritized when developing PRO strategies for assessing treatment tolerability in future trials.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Incorporating patient-reported outcomes (PROs) to assess symptomatic adverse events (AEs) in cancer clinical trials (CTs) is important to characterize treatment tolerability. Cancer therapies approved over the past decade have expanded the types of expected toxicities. To inform future symptomatic AE PRO item selection, we identified the most common symptomatic adverse reactions from recently approved products.

Methods: We reviewed approvals from 2015 to 2021 for lung, breast, and hematologic cancer indications. Using United States Prescribing Information safety data, we recorded symptomatic adverse reactions reported in ≥20% of patients in the experimental arm of CTs supporting approvals. We calculated the proportion of arms reporting each symptomatic adverse reaction.

Results: In total, 130 experimental arms were included (lung = 30, breast = 10, hematologic = 90). For all cancer types, fatigue and diarrhea were reported in >50% of the arms. Nausea was reported in ≥50% of the arms for all except lung. Vomiting, decreased appetite, and alopecia, were reported in ≥50% of breast cancer arms. Rash, musculoskeletal pain, and cough were reported in >50% of leukemia/lymphoma arms. Cough was common (50%) in multiple myeloma arms.

Conclusions: Heterogeneity in symptomatic adverse reactions across CTs supports the use of item libraries when building a PRO strategy to assess tolerability. Fatigue, diarrhea, and nausea were the most frequent symptomatic adverse reactions reported in contemporary cancer CTs and could provide a starting point when selecting PRO symptomatic AE items. Additional symptomatic AE PRO items should be selected based on the mechanism of action, early clinical data, published literature, and patient and clinician input.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jval.2024.09.009DOI Listing

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