Abstract 674P
Background
Insufficient patient enrollment per month (=accrual) is the leading cause of cancer trial termination. This study identifies and quantifies factors associated with patient accrual in trials leading to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval of new cancer drugs.
Methods
All cancer drugs with FDA approval were identified in the Drugs@FDA database (2000-2022). Data on drug indication’s background-, treatment-, disease-, and trial-related factors were collected from FDA labels, clinicaltrials.gov, and the Global Burden of Disease study. The association between patient accrual and collected variables was assessed in Poisson regression models reporting adjusted rate ratios (aRR) for randomized and single-arm trials.
Results
We identified 170 drugs with approval in 455 cancer indications based on 292 randomized and 163 single-arm trials. Among randomized trials, accrual rates were 0.30-times (p<0.001), 0.73-times (p<0.001), and 0.88-times (p=0.361) lower for ultra-rare, rare, and common than non-orphan indications. Accrual was positively associated with disease burden (aRR: 1.0003 per DALY, p<0.001), trial sites (aRR: 1.001 per site, p<0.001), participating countries (aRR: 1.02 per country, p<0.001), and phase 3 vs. 1/2 trials (aRR: 1.64, p=0.037). Enrollment was negatively associated with advanced-line vs. first-line treatments (aRR: 0.81, p=0.010) and monotherapy vs. combination treatments (aRR: 0.80, p=0.007). Accrual was 0.80-times lower (p=0.209) in government-sponsored vs. industry-sponsored trials. Results were consistent for single-arm trials.
Conclusions
Disease incidence and burden alongside the number of study sites and participating countries were significantly associated with patient accrual. For rare disease trials, greater financial incentives could expedite patient enrollment. Novel trial design features, including skewed randomization, crossover, or open-label masking, did not entice patient enrollment.
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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