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Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on treatment patterns for US patients with metastatic solid cancer

Authors :
Roger Y. Kim
Efrat Dotan
Gabrielle B. Rocque
Daniel Vader
Philippe E Spiess
Natalia Neparidze
Gaurav Goyal
Daniel J. Lee
Amy S. Clark
E. Paul Wileyto
Gregory S. Calip
Ronac Mamtani
Will Ferrell
Caleb M Hearn
Practice Investigators
Rebecca A. Hubbard
Ravi B. Parikh
Samuel U Takvorian
Pooja Phull
Daniel M. Geynisman
Lawrence N. Shulman
Rebecca A. Miksad
Amy J Davidoff
Cary P. Gross
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

BackgroundThe COVID-19 pandemic has led to delays in patients seeking care for life-threatening conditions; however, its impact on treatment patterns for patients with metastatic cancer is unknown. We assessed the COVID-19 pandemic’s impact on time to treatment initiation (TTI) and treatment selection for patients newly diagnosed with metastatic solid cancer.MethodsWe used an electronic health record-derived longitudinal database curated via technology-enabled abstraction to identify 14,136 US patients newly diagnosed with de novo or recurrent metastatic solid cancer between January 1 and July 31 in 2019 or 2020. Patients received care at ∼280 predominantly community-based oncology practices. Controlled interrupted time series analyses assessed the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic period (April-July 2020) on TTI, defined as the number of days from metastatic diagnosis to receipt of first-line systemic therapy, and use of myelosuppressive therapy.ResultsThe adjusted probability of treatment within 30 days of diagnosis [95% confidence interval] was similar across periods: January-March 2019 41.7% [32.2%, 51.1%]; April-July 2019 42.6% [32.4%, 52.7%]; January-March 2020 44.5% [30.4%, 58.6%]; April-July 2020 46.8% [34.6%, 59.0%]; adjusted percentage-point difference-in-differences 1.4% [-2.7%, 5.5%]. Among 5,962 patients who received first-line systemic therapy, there was no association between the pandemic period and use of myelosuppressive therapy (adjusted percentage-point difference-in-differences 1.6% [-2.6%, 5.8%]). There was no meaningful effect modification by cancer type, race, or age.ConclusionsDespite known pandemic-related delays in surveillance and diagnosis, the COVID-19 pandemic did not impact time to treatment initiation or treatment selection for patients with metastatic solid cancers.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bc8e4fd483b3d01b430a8a9fe16fcb74
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.09.22.21263964