Abstract 1796P
Background
Androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) was the standard of care (SOC) for patients with metastatic Hormone Sensitive Prostate Cancer (mHSPC); recently, emerging therapies associated with ADT have proven to be more effective than ADT alone, however there is an unmet need of standardization of randomized control trials (RCTs) comparing the various combinations of available drugs. Real Word Data (RWD) may be used to identify relevant outcomes with unmet clinical needs with a greater likelihood of benefiting from new therapies. We aim to describe demographics, clinical characteristics, treatment patterns and clinical outcomes of a large multicenter cohort of patients with mHSPC in RWD under the PIONEER project.
Methods
Data of patients with mHSPC across a distributed network of observational databases were collected. Male patients without prior orchiectomy with mHSPC were enrolled in Cohort 1, while Cohort 2 was defined as the start of ADT as a surrogate definition of mHSPC disease, both in metachronous and synchronous disease settings.
Results
Overall, 94,261 mHSPC patients were included among which 77,123 patients received treatment. 28% of mHSPC diagnosed were not on ADT monotherapy. More than half of the patients were over 70 years old (54%), older than the average age on the available RCT. In cohort 2, 2,819 patients were metachronous and 55,502 patients were synchronous. Most of the patients are treated with ADT only; after a Median follow-up (ranged from 398-699 days) in the metachronous setting 22% of them discontinued the treatment. Regarding the clinical outcomes, time to admission to hospital or emergency Department, adverse events and death increase with time, but noticeably events are more common in synchronous disease.
Conclusions
This is the largest study in Europe with RWD in the mHSPC setting. Landscape of prostate cancer treatment is constantly evolving, so it is important to understand the behavior of the disease in real-world setting, so we are able to fill gaps or create new questions to create evidence. In RWD that patients are older, with more co-mobilities and 1/3 of them do not undergo a SCO treatment when compared to RCT.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
PIONEER consortium.
Funding
PIONEER is funded through the IMI2 Joint Undertaking and is listed under grant agreement No. 777492. IMI2 receives support from the European Union`s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme and the European Federation of Pharmaceutical Industries and Associations (EFPIA). The views communicated within are those of PIONEER. Neither the IMI nor the European Union, EFPIA or any associated partners are responsible for any use that may be made of the information contained herein.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
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