Wilson Brooke E, Desnoyers Alexandra, Nadler Michelle B, Amir Eitan, Booth Christopher M
Department of Oncology, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
Division of Cancer Care and Epidemiology, Queen's Cancer Research Institute, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
Cancer. 2023 Oct 15;129(20):3318-3325. doi: 10.1002/cncr.34911. Epub 2023 Jun 20.
Over one half of cancer diagnoses occur in patients aged 65 and older. The authors quantified how treatment effects differ between older and younger patients in oncology registration trials.
The authors performed a retrospective cohort study of registration trials supporting US Food and Drug Administration approval of cancer drugs (from January 2010 to December 2021). The primary outcome was differential treatment effect by age (younger than 65 years vs. 65 years or older) for progression-free survival and overall survival. Random effects meta-analysis and a pairwise comparison of outcomes by age group also were performed.
Among 263 trials that met the inclusion criteria, 120 trials with 153 end points and 83,152 patients presented age-specific outcome data. Among the included randomized patients, 38% were aged 65 years and older compared with an incidence proportion of 55% in data from the National Cancer Institute's Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results program. Studies evaluating prostate cancer had the highest representation of patients aged 65 years or older (73%), whereas breast cancer studies had the lowest (20%). There were no changes in the proportion of patients aged 65 years or older over time (p = .86). Only 7% of end points showed a statistically significant interaction between outcome and age group. In a pooled analysis, there was an association between treatment effect and age for progression-free survival that approached but did not meet significance (hazard ratio, 0.95; p = .06), and there was no difference for overall survival (hazard ratio, 0.97; p = .79).
Older adults remain under-represented in oncology registration trials. Significant differences in outcomes by age group were uncommon in individual trials and pooled analyses. However, clinical trial participants differ from real-world patients older than 65 years, and increased enrollment and ongoing research into differential treatment effects by age are needed.
超过一半的癌症诊断发生在65岁及以上的患者中。作者在肿瘤学注册试验中量化了老年患者和年轻患者之间治疗效果的差异。
作者对支持美国食品药品监督管理局批准癌症药物的注册试验进行了一项回顾性队列研究(2010年1月至2021年12月)。主要结局是年龄(65岁以下与65岁及以上)对无进展生存期和总生存期的差异治疗效果。还进行了随机效应荟萃分析以及按年龄组对结局进行的成对比较。
在符合纳入标准的263项试验中,120项试验有153个终点和83152名患者提供了特定年龄的结局数据。在纳入的随机分组患者中,38%为65岁及以上,而美国国立癌症研究所监测、流行病学和最终结果计划的数据中的发病比例为55%。评估前列腺癌的研究中65岁及以上患者的比例最高(73%),而乳腺癌研究中的比例最低(20%)。65岁及以上患者的比例随时间没有变化(p = .86)。只有7%的终点显示结局与年龄组之间存在统计学显著的相互作用。在汇总分析中,无进展生存期的治疗效果与年龄之间存在关联,接近但未达到显著性(风险比,0.95;p = .06),总生存期则无差异(风险比,0.97;p = .79)。
老年成年人在肿瘤学注册试验中的代表性仍然不足。在个别试验和汇总分析中,年龄组之间结局的显著差异并不常见。然而,临床试验参与者与65岁以上的现实世界患者不同,需要增加入组人数并持续开展关于年龄差异治疗效果的研究。