Impact of enzalutamide on quality of life in men with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer after chemotherapy: Additional analyses from the AFFIRM randomized clinical trial - Abstract

BACKGROUND: To present longitudinal changes in Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Prostate (FACT-P) scores during 25-week treatment with enzalutamide or placebo in men with progressive metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) after chemotherapy in the AFFIRM trial.

PATIENTS AND METHODS: Patients were randomly assigned to enzalutamide 160 mg/day or placebo. FACT-P was completed prior to randomization, at weeks 13, 17, 21, and 25, and every 12 weeks thereafter while on study treatment. Longitudinal changes in FACT-P scores from baseline to 25 weeks were analyzed using a mixed effects model for repeated measures (MMRM), with a pattern mixture model (PMM) applied as secondary analysis to address non-ignorable missing data. Cumulative distribution function (CDF) plots were generated and different methodological approaches and models for handling missing data were applied. Due to the exploratory nature of the analyses, adjustments for multiple comparisons were not made. AFFIRM is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00974311.

RESULTS: The intention-to-treat FACT-P population included 938 patients (enzalutamide, n=674; placebo n=264) with evaluable FACT-P assessments at baseline and ≥1 post-baseline assessment. After 25 weeks, mean FACT-P total score decreased by 1.52 points with enzalutamide compared with 13.73 points with placebo (P< 0.001). In addition, significant treatment differences at week 25 favoring enzalutamide were evident for all FACT-P subscales and indices, whether analyzed by MMRM or PMM. CDF plots revealed differences favoring enzalutamide compared with placebo across the full range of possible response levels for FACT-P total and all disease- and symptom-specific subscales/indices.

CONCLUSION: In men with progressive mCRPC after docetaxel-based chemotherapy, enzalutamide is superior to placebo in health-related quality of life outcomes, regardless of analysis model or threshold selected for meaningful response.

Written by:
Cella D, Ivanescu C, Holmstrom S, Bui CN, Spalding J, Fizazi K.   Are you the author?
Department of Medical Social Sciences, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, USA; Consulting, Quintiles, Hoofddorp, The Netherlands; Global Data Science, Health Economics & Outcomes Research, Astellas Pharma Global Development, Leiden, The Netherlands; Health Economics & Clinical Outcomes Research, Astellas Pharma US, Inc., Northbrook, USA; Institut Gustave Roussy, University of Paris Sud, Villejuif, France.  

Reference: Ann Oncol. 2014 Oct 30. pii: mdu510.
doi: 10.1093/annonc/mdu510

 
PubMed Abstract
PMID: 25361992

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