UCL School of Pharmacy / UCL/UCLH Centre for Medicines Optimisation Research and Education, 29-39, Brunswick Square, London, WC1N 1AX, UK.
Department of Oncology, UCL Cancer Institute, 72 Huntley Street, London, WC1 6DD, UK.
BMC Cancer. 2020 Aug 10;20(1):743. doi: 10.1186/s12885-020-07215-3.
The development and rapid uptake of immune checkpoint inhibitors (CPI) has changed the outlook for patients with cancer. However, CPIs have different adverse event (AE) profiles to other systemic therapies, and prompt AE management is essential to assure optimal outcomes. In order to understand what and when adverse events are experienced, reported and managed during CPI treatment, a mixed methods study was conducted, including a case note review of patients who were receiving immunotherapy and semi-structured interviews with patients to understand their experience, management and reporting of AEs after receiving immune CPI treatment.
This mixed methods study was conducted at a large cancer hospital in the United Kingdom. A case note review identified how and where patients reported AEs. Data relating to patients with lung, bladder, prostate and head & neck cancers who received CPI treatment between 01/04/2015 and 31/07/2018 were extracted from e-prescribing databases and clinical data were included for analysis at a single time point (31 July 2018). Semi-structured interviews were conducted with patients receiving CPI treatment, exploring experience of AEs and reasons for delays in AE reporting and management.
Sixty-two patients were included in the case note review, with 78 AEs being experienced by 36 patients (58%), including one patient experiencing 10 AEs. Serious AEs were experienced by 12 patients (19%) and ten AEs (17%) required oral steroids as treatment. The majority of AEs were reported to clinicians prior to further dosing, although milder AEs were often not addressed until subsequent clinic appointments. Interviews with 13 patients yielded major themes: variability, causality, decision making and impact.
Most CPI-associated AEs are manageable if reported and treated promptly. Both the case note review and interviews found that reporting of non-serious AEs is often left until routine clinic visits, despite impacting patient experience, leaving the opportunity for AEs to be left unreported and implying a potential benefit for real time monitoring. Our study highlights a need to provide patients with reminders around AEs and their timely reporting even when apparently innocuous; patients must understand that AEs can occur at any cycle and even following treatment completion.
免疫检查点抑制剂(CPI)的发展和快速应用改变了癌症患者的前景。然而,CPI 与其他全身治疗的不良反应(AE)谱不同,及时处理 AE 对于确保最佳疗效至关重要。为了了解 CPI 治疗期间何时以及如何发生、报告和管理 AE,我们开展了一项混合方法研究,包括对接受免疫治疗的患者进行病历回顾,并对患者进行半结构化访谈,以了解他们在接受免疫 CPI 治疗后 AE 的经历、管理和报告情况。
该混合方法研究在英国的一家大型癌症医院进行。病历回顾确定了患者报告 AE 的方式和地点。从电子处方数据库中提取了 2015 年 4 月 1 日至 2018 年 7 月 31 日期间接受 CPI 治疗的肺癌、膀胱癌、前列腺癌和头颈部癌症患者的数据,并在单个时间点(2018 年 7 月 31 日)进行了临床数据分析。对接受 CPI 治疗的患者进行了半结构化访谈,探讨了 AE 的经历以及报告和管理 AE 延迟的原因。
62 名患者纳入病历回顾,36 名患者(58%)共经历 78 次 AE,其中 1 名患者经历 10 次 AE。12 名患者(19%)经历严重 AE,10 次 AE(17%)需要口服类固醇治疗。大多数 AE 在进一步给药前报告给了临床医生,尽管较轻的 AE 通常要等到后续的临床预约才会得到解决。对 13 名患者的访谈产生了以下主要主题:变异性、因果关系、决策和影响。
如果及时报告和治疗,大多数 CPI 相关 AE 是可以控制的。病历回顾和访谈都发现,非严重 AE 的报告往往留到常规就诊时进行,尽管这会影响患者的体验,但也有机会漏报 AE,并暗示实时监测可能有益。我们的研究强调了即使看似无害,也需要提醒患者注意 AE 及其及时报告;患者必须明白,AE 可能在任何周期发生,甚至在治疗结束后也会发生。