Publikation

Interrogating Metastatic Prostate Cancer Treatment Switch Decisions: A Multi-institutional Survey

Wissenschaftlicher Artikel/Review - 10.10.2016

Bereiche
PubMed
DOI

Zitation
Lorente D, Hall E, IJzerman M, Terstappen L, Payne H, Mateo J, Perez R, Tunariu N, Bianchini D, Porta N, Kolinsky M, Rescigno P, Miranda M, Gilman A, Omlin A, Pezaro C, Mehra N, Ravi P, de Bono J. Interrogating Metastatic Prostate Cancer Treatment Switch Decisions: A Multi-institutional Survey. Eur Urol Focus 2016; 4:235-244.
Art
Wissenschaftlicher Artikel/Review (Englisch)
Zeitschrift
Eur Urol Focus 2016; 4
Veröffentlichungsdatum
10.10.2016
eISSN (Online)
2405-4569
Seiten
235-244
Kurzbeschreibung/Zielsetzung

BACKGROUND
Evaluation of responses to treatment for metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) remains challenging. Consensus criteria based on prostate-specific antigen (PSA) and clinical and radiologic biomarkers are inconsistently utilized. Circulating tumor cell (CTC) counts can inform prognosis and response, but are not routinely used.

OBJECTIVE
To evaluate the use of biomarkers and trends in clinical decision-making in current mCRPC treatment.

DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS
A 23-part online questionnaire was completed by physicians treating mCRPC.

OUTCOME MEASURES AND STATISTICAL ANALYSIS
Results are presented as the proportion (%) of physicians responding to each of the options. We used χ and Fisher's tests to compare differences.

RESULTS AND LIMITATIONS
A total of 118 physicians (22.1%) responded. Of these, 69.4% treated ≥50 mCRPC patients/year. More physicians administered four or fewer courses of cabazitaxel (27.9%) than for docetaxel (10.4%), with no significant difference in the number of courses between bone-only disease and Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumours (RECIST)-evaluable disease. Some 74.5% of respondents considered current biomarkers useful for monitoring disease, but only 39.6% used the Prostate Cancer Working Group (PCWG2) criteria in clinical practice. PSA was considered an important biomarker by 55.7%, but only 41.4% discarded changes in PSA before 12 wk, and only 39.4% were able to identify bone-scan progression according to PCWG2. The vast majority of physicians (90.5%) considered clinical progression to be important for switching treatment. The proportion considering biomarkers important was 71.6% for RECIST, 47.4% for bone scans, 23.2% for CTCs, and 21.1% for PSA. Although 53.1% acknowledged that baseline CTC counts are prognostic, only 33.7% would use CTC changes alone to switch treatment in patients with bone-only disease. The main challenges in using CTC counts were access to CTC technology (84.7%), cost (74.5%), and uncertainty over utility as a response indicator (58.2%).

CONCLUSIONS
A significant proportion of physicians discontinue treatment for mCRPC before 12 wk, raising concerns about inadequate response assessment. Many physicians find current biomarkers useful, but most rely on symptoms to drive treatment switch decisions, suggesting there is a need for more precise biomarkers.

PATIENT SUMMARY
In this report we analyse the results of a questionnaire evaluating tools for clinical decision-making completed by 118 prostate cancer specialists. We found that most physicians favour clinical progression over prostate-specific antigen or imaging, and that criteria established by the Prostate Cancer Working Group are not widely used.