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Sunday, May 5, 2019

AUA 2019: Survival, Economics: Prostate Cancer with Abiraterone v. Enzalutamide

Prostate cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death among US males and accounts for a great proportion of health expenditures – this expenditure, just for prostate cancer alone, is estimated to be $15-16 billion by 2020. Indeed, many of these costs are directly attributed to systemic therapy used in the advanced prostate cancer disease state. During the advanced prostate cancer podium session at AUA 2019, Dr. Daniel George and colleagues presented real world results of the economics associated with patients receiving enzalutamide or abiraterone for metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC). Few real-world studies have evaluated the comparative effectiveness of abiraterone and enzalutamide on overall survival (OS) and none have described the economic burden associated with US military veterans receiving either treatment. As such, the objective of their study was to evaluate OS and economic outcomes among chemotherapy-naive mCRPC patients treated with either of these medications.
This study was a retrospective analysis of 3,174 male patients among those in the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) database. The study selection flow chart is as follows:
AUA2019_UroToday_Survival Rates and Economic Outcomes in Chemotherapy-Naïve mCRPC_1a.png
Between April 1, 2013 and March 31, 2018, mCRPC patients with evidence of surgical or medical castration, a pharmacy claim for abiraterone acetate or enzalutamide (1st claim date = index date) following surgical or medical castration, and with no chemotherapy treatment during the 12 months pre-index date were identified. Patients had to have continuous VHA enrollment for more 12 months pre- and post-index date and were followed until death or disenrollment from the VA system. The authors used Kaplan-Meier analysis to estimate OS and Cox proportional hazards regression models were used to examine the impact of treatment on survival. Subsequently, patients initiating abiraterone acetate were 1:1 propensity score matched with those starting enzalutamide. All-cause and prostate cancer-related resource use and costs per-patient-per-month (PPPM) were compared between the matched cohorts during the 12 months post-index date.
There were 1,945 abiraterone acetate and 1,229 enzalutamide mCRPC patients with mean ages of 73 and 74 years of age, respectively. Patients initiating enzalutamide had a significantly longer OS compared to those starting abiraterone acetate (29.3 months vs 26.0 months; HR 0.87, 95%CI 0.78-0.96):
AUA2019_UroToday_Survival Rates and Economic Outcomes in Chemotherapy-Naïve mCRPC_2 a.png
After propensity score matching, there were 1,160 patients in each cohort. Compared to abiraterone acetate patients, enzalutamide patients had fewer mean all-cause outpatient visits PPPM (2.51 vs 2.86; p < 0.0001) and fewer mean prostate cancer-related outpatient visits PPPM (0.86 vs 1.03; p < 0.0001). Enzalutamide patients also had lower:
  • Mean all-cause outpatient costs PPPM ($2,588 vs $3,115; p < 0.0001)
  • Mean total costs PPPM ($8,085 vs $9,092; p = 0.0002)
  • Prostate cancer-related outpatient costs PPPM ($1,356 vs $1,775; p < 0.0001)
  • Mean total costs PPPM ($6,321 vs $7,280; p < 0.0001)
Dr. George concluded his presentation with several summary points:
  • In this real-world analysis, patients prescribed enzalutamide compared to abiraterone acetate had great median overall survival, reduced risk of death, fewer prostate cancer outpatient visits and shorter inpatient length of stay, as well as lower all-cause and prostate cancer-related health care costs
  • As a limitation, Dr. George notes that this study was restricted by the factors available in the claims data and that other factors not included in the analysis may affect survival
Presented by: Daniel George, MD, Professor of Medicine and Surgery, Divisions of Medical Oncology and Urology in the Duke University School of Medicine and leads the Duke Prostate and Urologic Cancer Center, Durham, North Carolina
Co-Authors: Krishnan Ramaswamy, New York, NY, Stanislav Lechpammer, San Francisco, CA, Jack Mardekian, New York, NY, Neil M. Schultz, Northbrook, IL, Ahong Huang, Li Wang, Plano, TX, Onur Baser, Ann Arbor, MI

Urologic Disease Significantly Impacted By Dietary, Social Habits

Dietary and social habits can have significant impacts on urinary health, as evidenced by new studies being presented at the 2019 AUA Annual Meeting in Chicago. Four studies highlight the positive effects of heart-healthy diets on erectile function, the impact of marijuana smoking on urinary health and the impact of restrictive diets on testosterone production. These studies will be presented during a special session for media on May 4, 2019 at 9:00 a.m. Mayo Clinic urologist Dr. Tobias Kohler, chair of the AUA Public Media Committee, will moderate this session.
Abstracts presented include:
Publication # MP46-03
The Association Between Popular Diets and Serum Testosterone Among Men in the United States
Low-fat diets have been shown to have a number of health benefits, but may have a negative impact on serum testosterone levels in men. This study, using data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), examined the relationship between diets and serum testosterone levels. Among the 7,316 men identified for the study, 15.9 percent (1,160) were on a low-fat diet, 26.3 percent (1,924) were on a Mediterranean diet and 67.2 percent (4,920) were on a non-restrictive diet.
Key findings include:
  • Compared to men with non-restrictive diets, average testosterone was lower among men with low-fat and Mediterranean diets.
  • Men adhering to a low-fat diet were more likely to have a testosterone level under 300 ng/dl compared to those on non-restrictive diets.
Publication # MP75-09
Marijuana Consumption Has A Direct Deleterious Effect On Spermatozoa By Increasing Intracellular Reactive Oxygen Species Levels 20 Times More Than Tobacco Smoking: Reasons For Concern On Widespread Use
Marijuana and tobacco smoke have been shown to increase oxidative stress in cells, including reactive oxygen species (ROS), unstable molecules that build up at the cellular level. A build-up of ROS within cells can lead to DNA or RNA damage, or even cellular death. In this study of 622 men, researchers explored the potential association between marijuana and tobacco use in testicular and sperm function, as well as male infertility and hypogonadism. Subjects were divided into four groups: marijuana users (74), tobacco users (144), infertile (125) and fertile (279).
Key findings include:
  • Seminal ROS levels were higher in the marijuana group compared to tobacco and fertile groups.
  • Marijuana users had worse overall semen parameters (including sperm concentration, sperm count, motility and morphology) than tobacco users.
Publication # PD19-08
Marijuana, Alcohol, ED and Depression: Epidemiologic Correlations with BPH/LUTS
Prostatic enlargement (benign prostatic hyperplasia, or BPH) may cause men to experience bothersome lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS), such as nocturia, weak urine streams and urgency. In this review of 20,548 patients on medical treatment for BPH/LUTS, researchers identified several risk factors for LUTS: depression, hypertension, metabolic syndrome, erectile dysfunction, and also marijuana use. This is the first time marijuana use has been implicated as a risk factor for urination problems.
Key findings include:
  • Marijuana use and erectile dysfunction were associated with an increased risk of being on a LUTS medication.
  • On multivariate analysis, marijuana remained associated with this increased risk.
  • Alcohol use was not associated with an increased risk of BPH/LUTS.
Publication # PD28-07
Heart Healthy Diet and Erectile Dysfunction in the Health Professionals Follow-Up Study
Heart-healthy lifestyle changes – such as smoking cessation and weight loss – are attractive, non-pharmacologic options in the treatment of erectile dysfunction (ED), but is unknown whether heart-healthy diets have an association with ED. Researchers conducted a prospective analysis of 26,246 men ages 40 to 75 in the Health Professionals Follow-Up Study, which included assessments on erectile function and dietary questionnaires (used to calculate Mediterranean Diet and Alternative Health Eating Index scores) to review whether dietary choices were related to risk of incident ED.Key findings include:
Mediteranean Diet and Alternative Health Eating Index (AHEI) scores were associated with decreased risk of incident ED.
  • The inverse association between Mediterranean Diet and AHEI scores was strongest in men under age 60.
  • Higher intakes of legumes, fruit, vegetables, fish and long-chain fats were associated with a decreased risk of ED, and red and processed meats and trans fats were positively association with ED risk.
“This is the first time we’ve seen a definitive connection between marijuana use and certain urologic conditions such as infertility and BPH/LUTS, and in the context of legalization of cannabis, more research is warranted,” Dr. Kohler said. “Most importantly, these studies further underscore the need for healthy lifestyles and an understanding of how what we put in our bodies affects how they function.”

AUA 2019: What Contributes Most to High Prostate Cancer Health Care Costs?

It is known that a small percentage of patients utilize a very large percentage of healthcare expenditures for multiple disease states. At the 2019 American Urologic Association’s (AUA) annual meeting, Maxine Sun from Boston MA presented her group’s data regarding health care spending patterns in men with prostate cancer using the SEER Medicare administrative database.
They studied men aged >66 years with a diagnosis of prostate cancer in 2009. They next stratified men by the amount of healthcare expenditures, specifically looking at the top 5% in order to determine health care pending trends and to determine what contributes to the high costs of care for the top 5% of patients.
They identified 12,875 men with a primary diagnosis of prostate cancer in 2009. The total cost of care for these patients to the healthcare system was $241,800,495 (mean $18781 per patient). The top 5% of men required healthcare expenditures of $62,474,504, while the bottom 95% spent $179,325,991. They found that the factors that were correlated with being a top 5% expenditure patient were older age, more medical conditions at diagnosis, African-American race, and non-married. The top 5% of patients also had higher rates of metastatic disease at diagnosis as compared to the bottom 95% of patients (14% vs. 3%). On multivariate analysis, more advanced disease, unmarried men, higher Charlson comorbidity index, and those living in a higher Medicare spending health service area also were risk factors for being a top 5% expenditure patient.
They concluded that the top 5% of healthcare expenditure patients with prostate cancer in 2009 accounted for 25% of the total cost of treating this very common malignancy. Acknowledgement of the factors contributing to increased healthcare expenditures is very important in order to begin help decreasing the cost of care for prostate cancer, which is the most common soft tissue malignancy in American men.
Presented by: Maxine Sun, Boston MA

Saturday, May 4, 2019

Aging baby boomers push sky high incidence of shingles of the eye

More Americans are being diagnosed with eye complications of shingles, but older adults can call the shots on whether they are protected from the painful rash that can cost them their eyesight.
Among a group of 21 million adults, occurrences of herpes zoster ophthalmicus (HZO), when shingles gets in the eyes, tripled during a 12-year-period, according to Kellogg Eye Center research presented at the 2019 Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology annual meeting in Vancouver.
Study author Nakul Shekhawat, M.D., MPH, says it’s important to figure out which patients are at greatest risk for HZO and how to prevent it “because of the severity of the disease and potential sight-threatening complications.”
Even though caused by the same virus, shingles is different than chickenpox.
Years after recovering from chickenpox, the virus can become active again, causing shingles, a painful, debilitating infection that can lead to corneal scarring and blindness.
Kellogg researchers found that incidence of herpes zoster ophthalmicus across the United States rose substantially between 2004 and 2016, occurring in 9.4 cases per 100,000 people at the beginning of the study period and growing 3 fold to 30.1 cases per 100,000 by the end of the study period.
Shingles affecting the eye may be more of a problem for women and adults over age 75 (53 cases per 100,000), two groups with the highest rates of infection, the study showed.
While shingles has been cropping up in young adults, it is still considered one of the perils of old age.
“Older patients were at far greater risk for HZO, highlighting just how important it is for older adults to get the shingles vaccination,” says Shekhawat, a comprehensive ophthalmologist at the University of Michigan Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences.
Whites more so than other racial groups were diagnosed with HZO, with rates lower among blacks (23.4), Asians (21.0) and Latinos (14.6). Among whites the rate was 30.6 cases per 100,000.
That females (29.1 cases per 100,000 persons) and white patients had such high infection rates raises interesting questions, Shekhawat says, about their community exposure and whether their immune systems uniquely place them at risk.
The shingles vaccination provides strong protection from shingles and its complications, but the vaccine is not widely used.
Two doses of Shingrix are more than 90% effective at preventing shingles and are recommended for those age 50 and older.
Even if an adult has had shingles in the past, Shingrix can help prevent future occurrences, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease and Protection.
The Kellogg team of vision and health services researchers included statistician Nidhi Talwar and Joshua D. Stein, M.D., a member of the U-M Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation and the U-M Center for Eye Policy and Innovation. They studied demographics and variations in herpes zoster ophthalmicus in the United States with support from Eversight Eye Bank and the Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan Foundation.
The findings were based on health claims data for patients enrolled in a large nationwide managed care plan.
Story Source:
Materials provided by Michigan Medicine – University of MichiganNote: Content may be edited for style and length.

Long exposure to low radiation may up hypertension, cause heart disease, stroke

Prolonged exposure to low doses of ionizing radiation increased the risk of hypertension, according to a study of workers at a nuclear plant in Russia published in the American Heart Association’s journal Hypertension.
Uncontrolled hypertension, also known as high blood pressure, can to lead to heart attack, stroke, heart failure and other serious health problems.
Earlier studies linked exposure to high doses of radiation to increased risk of cardiovascular diseases and death from those diseases. This study is the first to find an increased risk of hypertension to low doses of ionizing radiation among a large group of workers who were chronically exposed over many years.
The study included more than 22,000 workers at the first large-scale nuclear enterprise in Russia known as the Mayak Production Association. The workers were hired between 1948 and 1982, with an average length of time on the job of 18 years. Half had worked there for more than 10 years. All of the workers had comprehensive health check-ups and screening tests at least once a year with advanced evaluations every five years.
The researchers evaluated the workers’ health records up to 2013. More than 8,400 workers (38 percent of the group) were diagnosed with hypertension, as defined in this study as a systolic blood pressure reading of ?140 mm Hg, and a diastolic reading ? 90 mm Hg. Hypertension incidence was found to be significantly associated with the cumulative dose.
To put it in perspective, the hypertension incidence among the workers in the study was higher than that among Japanese survivors of the atomic bomb at the end of World War II, but lower than the risk estimated for clean-up workers following the Chernobyl nuclear accident.
The differences may be explained by variations in exposure among the three groups, according to the researchers. Following the atomic bombing, the Japanese experienced a single, high-dose exposure of radiation, the Chernobyl workers were exposed to radiation for a short time period (days and months), while the Mayak workers were chronically exposed to low doses of radiation over many years.
While the development of cancer is commonly associated with radiation exposure, “we believe that an estimate of the detrimental health consequences of radiation exposure should also include non-cancer health outcomes. We now have evidence suggesting that radiation exposure may also lead to increased risks of hypertension, cardiovascular disease and cerebrovascular disease, as well,” said Tamara Azizova, M.D., lead author of the study at the Southern Urals Biophysics Institute in Russia.
Azizova pointed out that in recent years, the number of people exposed to radiation in everyday life, such as during diagnostic procedures, has increased. “It is necessary to inform the public that not only high doses of radiation, but low to moderate doses also increase the risk of hypertension and other circulatory system diseases, which today contribute significantly to death and disability. As a result, all radiological protection principles and dose limits should be strictly followed for workers and the general public.”
How radiation exposure may increase the risk of hypertension is still a question, according to Azizova. “So far, the mechanisms remain unclear, not only for certain cohorts but also for the general population. One of the main tasks for the coming decade is to study the mechanisms of hypertension and heart and brain atherosclerosis occurring in people who are — and who were exposed — to radiation.”
The authors note that their study is a retrospective one, and while many health conditions and behaviors were documented in the medical records of the workers (such as age, smoking, alcohol consumption and body mass index), other factors, such as stress and nutrition, were unavailable for researchers to be taken into account in this study.
Story Source:
Materials provided by American Heart AssociationNote: Content may be edited for style and length.

Journal Reference:
  1. Tamara Azizova, Ksenia Briks, Maria Bannikova, Evgeniya Grigoryeva. Hypertension Incidence Risk in a Cohort of Russian Workers Exposed to Radiation at the Mayak Production Association Over Prolonged PeriodsHypertension, 2019; DOI: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.118.11719

Alzheimer’s disease is a ‘double-prion disorder’

AB42 cells infected with amyloid beta prions.
Credit: Prusiner lab / UCSF Institute for Neurodegenerative Diseases
Two proteins central to the pathology of Alzheimer’s disease act as prions — misshapen proteins that spread through tissue like an infection by forcing normal proteins to adopt the same misfolded shape — according to new UC San Francisco research.
Using novel laboratory tests, the researchers were able to detect and measure specific, self-propagating prion forms of the proteins amyloid beta (A-β) and tau in postmortem brain tissue of 75 Alzheimer’s patients. In a striking finding, higher levels of these prions in human brain samples were strongly associated with early-onset forms of the disease and younger age at death.
Alzheimer’s disease is currently defined based on the presence of toxic protein aggregations in the brain known as amyloid plaques and tau tangles, accompanied by cognitive decline and dementia. But attempts to treat the disease by clearing out these inert proteins have been unsuccessful. The new evidence that active A-β and tau prions could be driving the disease — published May 1, 2019 in Science Translational Medicine — could lead researchers to explore new therapies that focus on prions directly.
“I believe this shows beyond a shadow of a doubt that amyloid beta and tau are both prions, and that Alzheimer’s disease is a double-prion disorder in which these two rogue proteins together destroy the brain,” said Stanley Prusiner, MD, the study’s senior author and director of the UCSF Institute for Neurodegenerative Diseases, part of the UCSF Weill Institute for Neurosciences. “The fact that prion levels also appear linked to patient longevity should change how we think about the way forward for developing treatments for the disease. We need a sea change in Alzheimer’s disease research, and that is what this paper does. This paper might catalyze a major change in AD research.”
What are Prions?
Prions are misfolded versions of a protein that can spread like an infection by forcing normal copies of that protein into the same self-propagating, misfolded shape. The original prion protein, PrP, was identified by Prusiner in the 1980s as the cause of Creutzfeldt Jakob Disease (CJD) and spongiform bovine encephalopathy, also known as Mad Cow Disease, which spread through consumption of meat and bone meal tainted with PrP prions. This was the first time a disease had been shown to infect people not by an infestation of an organism such as a bacterium or a virus, but through an infectious protein, and Prusiner received a Nobel Prize for that discovery in 1997.
Prusiner and colleagues have long suspected that PrP was not the only protein capable of acting as a self-propagating prion, and that distinct types of prion could be responsible for other neurodegenerative diseases caused by the progressive toxic buildup of misfolded proteins. For example, Alzheimer’s disease is defined by A-β plaques and tau tangles that gradually spread destruction through the brain. Over the past decade, laboratory studies at UCSF and elsewhere have begun to show that amyloid plaques and tau tangles from diseased brains can infect healthy brain tissue much like PrP, but considerably more slowly.
Many scientists have been reluctant to accept that A-β and tau are self-propagating prions — instead referring to their spread as “prion-like” — because unlike PrP prions, they were not thought to be infectious except in highly controlled laboratory studies. However, recent reports have documented rare cases of patients treated with growth hormone derived from human brain tissue, or given transplants of the brain’s protective dura mater, who went on to develop A-β plaques in middle age, long before they should be seen in anyone without a genetic disorder. Prusiner contends that these findings argue that both Aß and tau are prions even though they propagate more slowly than highly aggressive PrP prions.
In response to these debates, Prusiner likes to quote from a 1969 lecture by neuroscientist Bernard Katz: “There is a type of scientist who, if given the choice, would rather use his colleague’s toothbrush than his terminology!”
Laboratory Bioassays Reveal Aß and Tau Prions in Human Postmortem Brain Samples
In the new study, the researchers combined two recently developed laboratory tests to rapidly measure prions in human tissue samples: a new A-β detection system developed in the Prusiner lab and a tau prion assay previously developed by Marc Diamond, PhD, a former UCSF faculty member who is now director of the Center for Alzheimer’s and Neurodegenerative Diseases at UT Southwestern Medical Center.
Unlike earlier animal models that could take months to reveal the slow spread of A-β and/or tau prions, these cell-based assays measure infectious prion levels in just three days, enabling the researchers to effectively quantify for the first time the levels of both tau and A-β prions in processed extracts from post-mortem brain samples. In the new study, they applied the technique to autopsied brain tissue from over 100 individuals who had died of Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of neurodegeneration, which was collected from repositories in the United States, Europe, and Australia.
In assays comparing the samples from Alzheimer’s patients with those who died of other diseases, prion activity corresponded exactly with the distinctive protein pathology that has been established in each disease: in 75 Alzheimer’s disease brains, both A-β and tau prion activity was elevated; in 11 samples from patients with cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA), only A-β prions were seen; and in 10 tau-linked frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) samples, only tau prions were detected. Another recently developed bioassay for alpha-synuclein prions only found these infectious particles in the seven samples from patients with the synuclein-linked degenerative disorder multiple system atrophy (MSA).
“These assays are a game-changer,” said co-author and protein chemist William DeGrado, PhD, a professor of pharmaceutical chemistry and member of the UCSF Cardiovascular Research Institute, who contributed to the design and analysis of the current study. “Previously Alzheimer’s research has been stuck looking at collateral damage in the form of misfolded, dead proteins that form plaques and tangles. Now it turns out that it is prion activity that correlates with disease, rather than the amount of plaques and tangles at the time of autopsy. So if we are going to succeed in developing effective therapies and diagnostics, we need to target the active prion forms, rather than the large amount of protein in plaques and tangles.”
A-β and Tau Prion Activity Linked to Alzheimer’s Patients’ Longevity
The most remarkable finding of the new study may be the discovery that the self-propagating prion forms of tau and A-β are most infectious in the brains of Alzheimer’s patients who died at a young age from inherited, genetically driven forms of the disease, but much less prevalent in patients who died at a more advanced age.
In particular, when compared to measurements of overall tau buildup — which is known to increase with age in Alzheimer’s brains — the researchers found a remarkable exponential decline in the relative abundance of the prion forms of tau with age. When the researchers plotted their data, they saw an extremely strong correlation between tau prions and patients’ age at death: relative to overall tau levels, the quantity of tau prions in the brain of a patient who died at age 40 were on average 32 times higher than in a patient who died at 90.
“I still remember where I was sitting and what time of day it was when I first saw this data over a year ago,” said co-author and leading neurodegeneration researcher William Seeley, MD, a professor of neurology at the UCSF Memory and Aging Center who directs the UCSF Neurodegenerative Disease Brain Bank, which provided tissue used in the study. “I’ve very rarely, if ever, seen this kind of correlation in human biological data. Now the job is to find out what the correlation means.”
The research raises a number of questions that will need to be addressed by future studies, including whether differences in prion infectivity could explain the long-standing mystery of why Alzheimer’s progresses at such different rates in different patients. Other open questions resulting from the research include whether higher prion levels in brain samples from younger patients are linked to the early onset of the disease or how quickly it progressed, and whether lower prion levels in older brains reflect less “infective” prion variants or instead some ability of these patients’ brains to dispose of misfolded proteins.
The evidence that prion forms of A-β and tau play a specific role in Alzheimer’s disease — one that cannot be captured by simply counting amyloid plaques and tau tangles in patient brains — also raises questions on current approaches to Alzheimer’s diagnosis, clinical trial design, and drug discovery, say the authors, who hope their novel assays will spur renewed interest in developing therapies to target the now-measurable prion proteins.
“We have recently seen many seemingly promising Alzheimer’s therapies fail in clinical trials, leading some to speculate that we have been targeting the wrong proteins,” said Carlo Condello, PhD, one of the study’s lead authors. “But what if we just haven’t been designing drugs against the distinctive prion forms of these proteins that actually cause disease? Now that we can effectively measure the prion forms of A-β and tau, there’s hope that we can develop drugs that either prevent them from forming or spreading, or help the brain clear them before they cause damage.”
Story Source:
Materials provided by University of California – San Francisco. Original written by Nicholas Weiler. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.

Journal Reference:
  1. Atsushi Aoyagi, Carlo Condello, Jan Stöhr, Weizhou Yue, Brianna M. Rivera, Joanne C. Lee, Amanda L. Woerman, Glenda Halliday, Sjoerd Van Duinen, Martin Ingelsson, Lars Lannfelt, Caroline Graff, Thomas D. Bird, C. Dirk Keene, William W. Seeley, William F. Degrado, and Stanley B. Prusiner. Aβ and tau prion-like activities decline with longevity in the Alzheimer’s disease human brainScience Translational Medicine, 2019 DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aat8462

FDA Approving Oncology Drugs Off Trials With Weak Controls?

Almost one in five anticancer drugs approved by the FDA from 2013 through 2018 were based on randomized clinical trial data using a control arm that was inferior to the then-current standard of care, a new study found.
As an example, for patients with anaplastic large cell lymphoma, the ALCANZA studycompared the then-investigational agent brentuximab vedotin (Adcetris) with an investigator choice of oral methotrexate or bexarotene (Targretin). However, investigator’s choice did not include use of histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors as a comparator, despite the fact that they had already been approved by the FDA by the time the trial initiated enrollment.
“Future regulatory trials should be optimized to ensure that new anticancer agents being marketed are truly superior to what most clinicians would prescribe outside a clinical trial setting,” Talal Hilal, MD, of the Mayo Clinic in Phoenix, and colleagues wrote in JAMA Oncology.
The study examined 143 anticancer FDA drug approvals from 2013 to 2018, excluding 47 approvals based on a single-arm study. Randomized clinical trials were considered to have a suboptimal control arm if:
  • Restrictions were placed on the choice of control to exclude a recommended agent
  • The control arm was specific, but not the recommended agent
  • Prior randomized clinical data had demonstrated the control agent was inferior to an available alternative
The 98 studies left ultimately led to 96 drug approvals, 16 approvals — or 17% — of which were based on randomized clinical trials with suboptimal control arms. Fifteen of the trials were international and one was based in the U.S.
Results from two of the trials led to accelerated approvals, but the remaining 14 received regular approval and “thereby do not require additional randomized clinical trials to verify clinical benefit,” the researchers noted.
“This is problematic because when an experimental agent has not been proven to be superior to the established standard of care treatment, clinicians are potentially offering patients an agent that may be the equivalent or even inferior to established standard therapy, usually at a higher cost and alternate toxicity profile,” Hilal and colleagues wrote.
Twenty-five percent of these approvals omitted active treatment in the control arm by limiting the investigator’s choice — as in the ALCANZA trial; 63% of trials omitted active treatment in the control arm by using a control agent known to be inferior to other available agents or not allowing combinations.
“Suboptimal control arms may accrue events (e.g., progression of disease or death) faster, leading to successful results sooner, and hastening drugs to market,” they explained.
For example, the control arm in the BFORE trial looking at first-line bosutinib (Bosulif) in chronic-phase chronic myeloid leukemia was imatinib (Gleevec), even though nilotinib (Tasigna) and dasatinib (Sprycel) had already demonstrated better major molecular response compared with imatinib.
Finally, 13% of the approvals with suboptimal control arms used a previously used treatment in the control arm with a known lack of benefit associated with re-exposure. One of these trials was the ALTA trial looking at brigatinib (Alunbrig) in metastatic ALK-positive non-small cell lung cancer after crizotinib. ALTA had high-dose crizotinib as the comparator arm, rather than platinum-based doublet therapy, even though this was an unproven strategy.
Rachel Dear, MBBS, FRACP, PhD, of St. Vincent’s Hospital Sydney in Darlinghurst, Australia, called the findings “concerning.” Dear and colleagues recently conducted a similar studylooking at the use of “standard care” controls in 210 clinical trials of breast cancer from 2004 to 2014, and compared these with recommendations from the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN).
“In our study, we found 29% of randomized breast cancer trials did not have a control group consistent with the world-renowned NCCN guidelines for breast cancer,” Dear said. “Without careful attention to trial design, including an appropriate control arm comparator, trials may produce misleading results, waste research resources, and potentially negatively impact patient care.”
Hilal’s group acknowledged that some of the consideration that goes into assessing a control arm is subjective in nature. “In many instances, one can construct a justification for the control arm,” they wrote.
When contacted for comment, the FDA responded that it “does not comment on specific studies, but evaluates them as part of the body of evidence to further our understanding about a particular issue and assist in our mission to protect public health.”
Hilal reported no conflicts of interest. One co-author reported grants from the Laura and John Arnold Foundation and honoraria for grand rounds/lectures from several universities, medical centers, nonprofit groups, and professional societies.