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Poster Display

612P - Is the juice worth the squeeze? Overall survival gain per unit treatment time as a metric of clinical benefit of systemic treatment in incurable cancers

Date

02 Dec 2023

Session

Poster Display

Presenters

Vodathi Bamunuarachchi

Citation

Annals of Oncology (2023) 34 (suppl_4): S1707-S1716. 10.1016/annonc/annonc1380

Authors

V. Bamunuarachchi1, A.C.N. Joseph2, V. Peiris3, S.G. Wijesekera1, D. Rajapaksha4, D.S. Gunasekera1

Author affiliations

  • 1 Clinical Oncology Dept., Apeksha Hospital Maharagama, 10280 - Maharagama/LK
  • 2 Clinical Oncology Department, District General Hospital, Hambantota, Hambantota/LK
  • 3 Clinical Oncology Dept., District General Hospital, Vavuniya, Vavuniya/LK
  • 4 Department Of Oncology, Teaching Hospital, Ratnapura, Ratnapura/LK

Resources

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Abstract 612P

Background

Novel systemic therapeutic options such as enzyme inhibitors and monoclonal antibodies have transformed the practice of medical oncology in the recent past. However, survival gains remain modest in most cases. Quantifying the magnitude of benefit against financial and non-financial toxicity of treatment is pivotal in deciding treatment. We describe a novel metric which can be used to assess effectiveness novel therapeutics for incurable cancers.

Methods

The median overall survival was divided by the median duration of treatment to obtain the overall survival gain per treatment time which was the primary end-point of the study. This parameter was compared with the European Society of Medical Oncology Magnitude of clinical benefit scale (ESMO-MCBS) score. Spearman’s rank correlation coefficient was used to test the association between the novel metric and the ESMO-MCBS scores.

Results

Data were available for 30 drugs across 60 indications. The median overall survival per unit treatment was 0.68 (range 0.2-0.51). Only 18/60 indications had a ratio greater than 1 while 13/60 indications had a ratio less than 0.5. The median treatment duration was not mentioned in 11 indications and median progression free survival was substituted for the analysis. The ESMO-MCBS score was available for 49 of the indications. The Spearman’s rank correlation coefficient was 0.44575 and showed a statistically significant association between survival gain per unit treatment time and the ESMO-MCBS score (p = 0.00133).

Conclusions

Along with other metrics, the ratio of survival gain over treatment duration is a useful parameter to assess effectiveness of novel therapeutics in the palliative setting.

Clinical trial identification

Editorial acknowledgement

Legal entity responsible for the study

The authors.

Funding

Has not received any funding.

Disclosure

All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.

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