OVARIAN CANCER and US: clinical trial mortality rates

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Showing posts with label clinical trial mortality rates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label clinical trial mortality rates. Show all posts

Saturday, March 17, 2012

abstract: Patient Selection for Oncology Phase I Trials: A Multi-Institutional Study of Prognostic Factors [Phase I and Clinical Pharmacology]



Patient Selection for Oncology Phase I Trials: A Multi-Institutional Study of Prognostic Factors [Phase I and Clinical Pharmacology]:

Purpose
The appropriate selection of patients for early clinical trials presents a major challenge. Previous analyses focusing on this problem were limited by small size and by interpractice heterogeneity. This study aims to define prognostic factors to guide risk-benefit assessments by using a large patient database from multiple phase I trials.

Patients and Methods
Data were collected from 2,182 eligible patients treated in phase I trials between 2005 and 2007 in 14 European institutions. We derived and validated independent prognostic factors for 90-day mortality by using multivariate logistic regression analysis.

Results
The 90-day mortality was 16.5% with a drug-related death rate of 0.4%. Trial discontinuation within 3 weeks occurred in 14% of patients primarily because of disease progression. Eight different prognostic variables for 90-day mortality were validated: performance status (PS), albumin, lactate dehydrogenase, alkaline phosphatase, number of metastatic sites, clinical tumor growth rate, lymphocytes, and WBC. Two different models of prognostic scores for 90-day mortality were generated by using these factors, including or excluding PS; both achieved specificities of more than 85% and sensitivities of approximately 50% when using a score cutoff of 5 or higher. These models were not superior to the previously published Royal Marsden Hospital score in their ability to predict 90-day mortality.

Conclusion
Patient selection using any of these prognostic scores will reduce non–drug-related 90-day mortality among patients enrolled in phase I trials by 50%. However, this can be achieved only by an overall reduction in recruitment to phase I studies of 20%, more than half of whom would in fact have survived beyond 90 days.