1. Survival of African-American and Caucasian men after sipuleucel-T immunotherapy: outcomes from the PROCEED registry
- Author
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Sartor, Oliver, Armstrong, Andrew J, Ahaghotu, Chiledum, McLeod, David G, Cooperberg, Matthew R, Penson, David F, Kantoff, Philip W, Vogelzang, Nicholas J, Hussain, Arif, Pieczonka, Christopher M, Shore, Neal D, Quinn, David I, Small, Eric J, Heath, Elisabeth I, Tutrone, Ronald F, Schellhammer, Paul F, Harmon, Matthew, Chang, Nancy N, Sheikh, Nadeem A, Brown, Bruce, Freedland, Stephen J, and Higano, Celestia S
- Subjects
Cancer ,Prostate Cancer ,Urologic Diseases ,Adult ,Black or African American ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Cancer Vaccines ,Disease Progression ,Follow-Up Studies ,Health Status Disparities ,Humans ,Infusions ,Intravenous ,Kallikreins ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Prostate-Specific Antigen ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Castration-Resistant ,Registries ,Time Factors ,Tissue Extracts ,Treatment Outcome ,White People ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Urology & Nephrology - Abstract
PurposeAfrican Americans experience greater prostate cancer risk and mortality than do Caucasians. An analysis of pooled phase III data suggested differences in overall survival (OS) between African American and Caucasian men receiving sipuleucel-T. We explored this in PROCEED (NCT01306890), an FDA-requested registry in over 1900 patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) treated with sipuleucel-T.Patients and methodsOS for patients who received ≥1 sipuleucel-T infusion was compared between African American and Caucasian men using an all patient set and a baseline prostate-specific antigen (PSA)-matched set (two Caucasians to every one African American with baseline PSAs within 10% of each other). Univariable and multivariable analyses were conducted. Survival data were examined using Kaplan-Meier and Cox proportional hazard methodologies.ResultsMedian follow-up was 46.6 months. Overall survival differed between African American and Caucasian men with hazard ratios (HR) of 0.81 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.68-0.97, P = 0.03) in the all patient set and 0.70 (95% CI: 0.57-0.86, P
- Published
- 2020