• Lutte contre les cancers

  • Analyses économiques et systèmes de soins

  • Poumon

Severe adverse events impact overall survival and costs in elderly patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer on second-line therapy

A partir des données des registres américains des cancers portant sur 3 967 patients âgés de plus de 65 ans et atteints d'un cancer du poumon non à petites cellules de stade avancé, cette étude analyse l'impact, sur la survie globale et sur les coûts de dépenses de santé, de la survenue d'événements indésirables sévères pendant un traitement de deuxième ligne

Objectives : Elderly patients with advanced non-small lung cancer (aNSCLC) represent a high-risk patient population due to disease burden, comorbidities, and performance status, particularly after progressing on first-line therapy. Among elderly patients who receive second-line therapy, treatment related toxicities can have substantial impact on both clinical and economic outcomes. This study assessed the impact of severe adverse events (AEs) during second-line therapy on overall survival (OS) and all-cause heathcare costs in elderly with aNSCLC. Materials and Methods : Patients with aNSCLC aged ≥65 years who initiated second-line chemotherapy/targeted therapy were identified in the SEER-Medicare database (2007-2011). Fifty-seven AEs were identified by literature review and consultation with two oncologists. Severe AEs were defined as AEs that required a hospitalization and were operationalized based on AE diagnosis(es) recorded during hospitalizations. OS post-second-line initiation and healthcare costs during second-line were compared between patients with and without severe AEs. Results : Among 3,967 patients initiating second-line therapy, 1,624 (41%) had ≥1 severe AE, where hypertension (26%), anemia (24%), and pneumonia (23%) were most commonly reported. Patients with and without severe AEs had similar demographic and cancer characteristics at diagnosis and similar second-line treatment regimens, but patients with severe AEs had more comorbidities at second-line initiation. Median OS was lower in patients with versus without severe AEs (6 vs. 11 months). After multivariate adjustment, hazard of death was more than twice higher in patients with versus without severe AEs (adjusted hazard ratio [HR] 2.31, 95% CI 2.16–2.47). Healthcare costs were more than twice higher in patients with versus without severe AEs ($16,135 vs. $7,559 per-patient-per-month). Conclusion : Severe AEs among elderly patients with aNSCLC treated with second-line chemotherapy/targeted therapy were found to be associated with decreased OS and increasedhealthcare costs. Results suggest a potential link between severe AEs in second-line treated aNSCLC elderly and patient survival and economic burden to the healthcare system.

Lung Cancer 2018

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