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Ovarian Real-World International Consortium (ORWIC): A multicentre, real-world analysis of epithelial ovarian cancer treatment and outcomes.

Authors :
Cheeseman S
Levick B
Sopwith W
Fenton H
Nam EJ
Kim D
Lim S
Martin E
Frenel JS
Bocquet F
Kubelac P
Achimas-Cadariu P
Vlad C
Chevrier M
Rouzier R
Carton M
Savva-Bordalo J
Magalhães M
Borges M
Wolf A
Becker S
Niklas N
Guergova-Kuras M
Hall G
Source :
Frontiers in oncology [Front Oncol] 2023 Jan 27; Vol. 13, pp. 1114435. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Jan 27 (Print Publication: 2023).
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Introduction: Much drug development and published analysis for epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) focuses on early-line treatment. Full sequences of treatment from diagnosis to death and the impact of later lines of therapy are rarely studied. We describe the establishment of an international network of cancer centers configured to compare real-world treatment pathways in UK, Portugal, Germany, South Korea, France and Romania (the Ovarian Real-World International Consortium; ORWIC).<br />Methods: 3344 patients diagnosed with EOC (2012-2018) were analysed using a common data model and hub and spoke programming approach applied to existing electronic medical records. Consistent definition of line of therapy between sites and an efficient approach to analysis within the limitations of local information governance was achieved.<br />Results: Median age of participants was 53-67 years old and 5-29% were ECOG >1. Between 62% and 84% of patients were diagnosed with late-stage disease (FIGO III-IV). Sites treating younger and fitter patients had higher rates of debulking surgery for those diagnosed at late stage than sites with older, more frail patients. At least 21% of patients treated with systemic anti-cancer therapy (SACT) had recurrent disease following second-line therapy (2L); up to 11 lines of SACT treatment were recorded for some patients. Platinum-based SACT was consistently used across sites at 1L, but choices at 2L varied, with hormone therapies commonly used in the UK and Portugal. The use (and type) of maintenance therapy following 1L also varied. Beyond 2L, there was little consensus between sites on treatment choice: trial compounds and unspecified combinations of other agents were common.<br />Discussion: Specific treatment sequences are reported up to 4L and the establishment of this network facilitates future analysis of comparative outcomes per line of treatment with the aim of optimizing available options for patients with recurrent EOC. In particular, this real-world network can be used to assess the growing use of PARP inhibitors. The real-world optimization of advanced line treatment will be especially important for patients not usually eligible for involvement with clinical trials. The resources to enable this analysis to be implemented elsewhere are supplied and the network will seek to grow in coverage of further sites.<br />Competing Interests: Authors BL, WS, HF, NN and MG-K were employed by IQVIA Oncology Evidence Network. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.<br /> (Copyright © 2023 Cheeseman, Levick, Sopwith, Fenton, Nam, Kim, Lim, Martin, Frenel, Bocquet, Kubelac, Achimas-Cadariu, Vlad, Chevrier, Rouzier, Carton, Savva-Bordalo, Magalhães, Borges, Wolf, Becker, Niklas, Guergova-Kuras and Hall.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2234-943X
Volume :
13
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Frontiers in oncology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
36776297
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2023.1114435