4.7 Review

Assessment of anticancer-treatment outcome in patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer-going beyond PSA and imaging, a systematic literature review

Journal

ANNALS OF ONCOLOGY
Volume 26, Issue 11, Pages 2221-2247

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1093/annonc/mdv326

Keywords

castration-resistant prostate cancer; clinical benefit; physical function assessment; quality of life; anticancer-treatment response

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Funding

  1. Ostschweizer Stiftung fur klinische Krebsforschung
  2. Lotex Foundation

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We carried out a systematic review to identify tools to evaluate patient benefit in CRPC patients. QoL and pain assessments are often included as end points; however, many specific needs of the CRPC population are insufficiently captured and objective physical outcome measures are under-represented. In the age of new anticancer drugs, new methods to monitor patient relevant outcomes are of utmost importance.In the past years, there has been significant progress in anticancer drug development for patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC). However, the current instruments to assess clinical treatment response have limitations and may not sufficiently reflect patient benefit. Our objective was to systematically identify tools to evaluate both patient benefit and clinical anticancer-treatment response as basis for an international consensus process and development of a specific pragmatic instrument for men with CRPC. PubMed, Embase and CINAHL were searched to identify currently available tools to assess anticancer-treatment benefit, other than standard imaging procedures and prostate-specific antigen measurements, namely quality of life (QoL), detailed pain assessment, physical function and objective measures of other complex cancer-related syndromes in patients with CRPC. Additionally, all CRPC phase III trials published in the last 5 years were reviewed as well as studies using physical function tools in a general cancer population. The PRIMSA statement was followed for the systematic review process. The search generated 1096 hits, 185 full-text papers were screened and finally 73 publications were included. Additional 89 publications were included by hand-search. We identified a total of 98 tools used in CRPC trials and grouped these into three categories: 22 tools assessing QoL domains and subgroups, 47 tools for pain assessment and 29 tools for objective measures, mainly physical function and assessment of skeletal disease burden. A wide variety of assessment tools and also efforts to standardize and harmonize patient-reported outcomes and pain assessment were identified. However, the specific needs of the increasing CRPC population living longer with their incurable cancer are insufficiently captured and objective physical outcome measures are under-represented. In the age of new anticancer drug targets and principles, new methods to monitor patient relevant outcomes of antineoplastic therapy are of utmost importance.

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