Kaplan David E, Mehta Rajni, D'Addeo Kathryn, Valderrama Adriana, Taddei Tamar H
Department of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania.
Corporal Michael J. Crescenz VA Medical Center, Philadelphia PA.
Medicine (Baltimore). 2018 Jan;97(4):e9757. doi: 10.1097/MD.0000000000009757.
Sorafenib is the only Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved first-line therapy shown to have survival benefit for patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Patients with advanced HCC are often but not exclusively transferred from non-oncologists to oncologists to initiate systemic therapy. The objective of this study was to assess whether sorafenib prescribing by non-oncologists has any impact on utilization, adverse effects, cost or outcome.This was a retrospective cohort study utilizing data from patients prescribed sorafenib for HCC within Veterans Health Administration hospitals with 100% chart abstraction to confirm HCC diagnosis, identify prescribing provider specialty (oncology versus gastroenterology/hepatology), and obtain data required for cancer staging by the Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer (BCLC) system. The primary outcome was overall survival from the time of sorafenib prescription.A total of 4903 patients who prescribed sorafenib for HCC were identified, for whom 340 patients (6.9%) were prescribed drug by a non-oncologist (Onc). BCLC Stage, age, Child-Turcotte-Pugh score, and comorbidity indices were similar between patients prescribed sorafenib by oncologists and non-oncologists. Oncologists more often discontinued sorafenib due to progression, whereas non-oncologists were more likely to continue sorafenib until death resulting in greater pill utilization and cost. Overall survival in both unadjusted and multivariable models showed no significant impact of prescriber type on survival (222 vs 217 days, P = .96), confirmed with propensity-matched subcohorts.Similar survival outcomes were observed for patients with HCC prescribed sorafenib by non-oncologists and oncologists, suggesting that non-oncologists with expertise in the management of HCC can safely and effectively administer sorafenib.
索拉非尼是唯一获得美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)批准的一线治疗药物,已证实对晚期肝细胞癌(HCC)患者具有生存获益。晚期HCC患者通常(但不限于)从非肿瘤专科医生转诊至肿瘤专科医生处开始进行系统治疗。本研究的目的是评估非肿瘤专科医生开具索拉非尼处方是否会对药物使用、不良反应、成本或治疗结果产生任何影响。
这是一项回顾性队列研究,利用退伍军人健康管理局医院中开具索拉非尼治疗HCC患者的数据,通过100%查阅病历以确认HCC诊断、确定处方医生专业(肿瘤学与胃肠病学/肝病学),并获取巴塞罗那临床肝癌(BCLC)系统进行癌症分期所需的数据。主要结局是从索拉非尼处方开具时间起的总生存期。
共识别出4903例开具索拉非尼治疗HCC的患者,其中340例(6.9%)由非肿瘤专科医生(Onc)开具药物。肿瘤专科医生和非肿瘤专科医生开具索拉非尼的患者之间,BCLC分期、年龄、Child-Turcotte-Pugh评分和合并症指数相似。肿瘤专科医生更常因疾病进展而停用索拉非尼,而非肿瘤专科医生更可能持续使用索拉非尼直至患者死亡,从而导致更高的药物使用量和成本。在未调整和多变量模型中,总体生存期显示处方医生类型对生存无显著影响(222天对217天,P = 0.96),倾向匹配亚组分析也证实了这一点。
非肿瘤专科医生和肿瘤专科医生开具索拉非尼治疗HCC的患者观察到相似的生存结局,这表明在HCC管理方面具有专业知识的非肿瘤专科医生可以安全有效地使用索拉非尼。