Management of patients with multiple myeloma beyond the clinical-trial setting: understanding the balance between efficacy, safety and tolerability, and quality of life

Standard

Management of patients with multiple myeloma beyond the clinical-trial setting: understanding the balance between efficacy, safety and tolerability, and quality of life. / Terpos, Evangelos; Mikhael, Joseph; Hajek, Roman; Chari, Ajai; Zweegman, Sonja; Lee, Hans C; Mateos, María-Victoria; Larocca, Alessandra; Ramasamy, Karthik; Kaiser, Martin; Cook, Gordon; Weisel, Katja C; Costello, Caitlin L; Elliott, Jennifer; Palumbo, Antonio; Usmani, Saad Z.

in: BLOOD CANCER J, Jahrgang 11, Nr. 2, 18.02.2021, S. 40.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ReviewForschung

Harvard

Terpos, E, Mikhael, J, Hajek, R, Chari, A, Zweegman, S, Lee, HC, Mateos, M-V, Larocca, A, Ramasamy, K, Kaiser, M, Cook, G, Weisel, KC, Costello, CL, Elliott, J, Palumbo, A & Usmani, SZ 2021, 'Management of patients with multiple myeloma beyond the clinical-trial setting: understanding the balance between efficacy, safety and tolerability, and quality of life', BLOOD CANCER J, Jg. 11, Nr. 2, S. 40. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41408-021-00432-4

APA

Terpos, E., Mikhael, J., Hajek, R., Chari, A., Zweegman, S., Lee, H. C., Mateos, M-V., Larocca, A., Ramasamy, K., Kaiser, M., Cook, G., Weisel, K. C., Costello, C. L., Elliott, J., Palumbo, A., & Usmani, S. Z. (2021). Management of patients with multiple myeloma beyond the clinical-trial setting: understanding the balance between efficacy, safety and tolerability, and quality of life. BLOOD CANCER J, 11(2), 40. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41408-021-00432-4

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{ec6e218f55d7424483f5c61a927cc667,
title = "Management of patients with multiple myeloma beyond the clinical-trial setting: understanding the balance between efficacy, safety and tolerability, and quality of life",
abstract = "Treatment options in multiple myeloma (MM) are increasing with the introduction of complex multi-novel-agent-based regimens investigated in randomized clinical trials. However, application in the real-world setting, including feasibility of and adherence to these regimens, may be limited due to varying patient-, treatment-, and disease-related factors. Furthermore, approximately 40% of real-world MM patients do not meet the criteria for phase 3 studies on which approvals are based, resulting in a lack of representative phase 3 data for these patients. Therefore, treatment decisions must be tailored based on additional considerations beyond clinical trial efficacy and safety, such as treatment feasibility (including frequency of clinic/hospital attendance), tolerability, effects on quality of life (QoL), and impact of comorbidities. There are multiple factors of importance to real-world MM patients, including disease symptoms, treatment burden and toxicities, ability to participate in daily activities, financial burden, access to treatment and treatment centers, and convenience of treatment. All of these factors are drivers of QoL and treatment satisfaction/compliance. Importantly, given the heterogeneity of MM, individual patients may have different perspectives regarding the most relevant considerations and goals of their treatment. Patient perspectives/goals may also change as they move through their treatment course. Thus, the 'efficacy' of treatment means different things to different patients, and treatment decision-making in the context of personalized medicine must be guided by an individual's composite definition of what constitutes the best treatment choice. This review summarizes the various factors of importance and practical issues that must be considered when determining real-world treatment choices. It assesses the current instruments, methodologies, and recent initiatives for analyzing the MM patient experience. Finally, it suggests options for enhancing data collection on patients and treatments to provide a more holistic definition of the effectiveness of a regimen in the real-world setting.",
author = "Evangelos Terpos and Joseph Mikhael and Roman Hajek and Ajai Chari and Sonja Zweegman and Lee, {Hans C} and Mar{\'i}a-Victoria Mateos and Alessandra Larocca and Karthik Ramasamy and Martin Kaiser and Gordon Cook and Weisel, {Katja C} and Costello, {Caitlin L} and Jennifer Elliott and Antonio Palumbo and Usmani, {Saad Z}",
year = "2021",
month = feb,
day = "18",
doi = "10.1038/s41408-021-00432-4",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
pages = "40",
journal = "BLOOD CANCER J",
issn = "2044-5385",
publisher = "NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Management of patients with multiple myeloma beyond the clinical-trial setting: understanding the balance between efficacy, safety and tolerability, and quality of life

AU - Terpos, Evangelos

AU - Mikhael, Joseph

AU - Hajek, Roman

AU - Chari, Ajai

AU - Zweegman, Sonja

AU - Lee, Hans C

AU - Mateos, María-Victoria

AU - Larocca, Alessandra

AU - Ramasamy, Karthik

AU - Kaiser, Martin

AU - Cook, Gordon

AU - Weisel, Katja C

AU - Costello, Caitlin L

AU - Elliott, Jennifer

AU - Palumbo, Antonio

AU - Usmani, Saad Z

PY - 2021/2/18

Y1 - 2021/2/18

N2 - Treatment options in multiple myeloma (MM) are increasing with the introduction of complex multi-novel-agent-based regimens investigated in randomized clinical trials. However, application in the real-world setting, including feasibility of and adherence to these regimens, may be limited due to varying patient-, treatment-, and disease-related factors. Furthermore, approximately 40% of real-world MM patients do not meet the criteria for phase 3 studies on which approvals are based, resulting in a lack of representative phase 3 data for these patients. Therefore, treatment decisions must be tailored based on additional considerations beyond clinical trial efficacy and safety, such as treatment feasibility (including frequency of clinic/hospital attendance), tolerability, effects on quality of life (QoL), and impact of comorbidities. There are multiple factors of importance to real-world MM patients, including disease symptoms, treatment burden and toxicities, ability to participate in daily activities, financial burden, access to treatment and treatment centers, and convenience of treatment. All of these factors are drivers of QoL and treatment satisfaction/compliance. Importantly, given the heterogeneity of MM, individual patients may have different perspectives regarding the most relevant considerations and goals of their treatment. Patient perspectives/goals may also change as they move through their treatment course. Thus, the 'efficacy' of treatment means different things to different patients, and treatment decision-making in the context of personalized medicine must be guided by an individual's composite definition of what constitutes the best treatment choice. This review summarizes the various factors of importance and practical issues that must be considered when determining real-world treatment choices. It assesses the current instruments, methodologies, and recent initiatives for analyzing the MM patient experience. Finally, it suggests options for enhancing data collection on patients and treatments to provide a more holistic definition of the effectiveness of a regimen in the real-world setting.

AB - Treatment options in multiple myeloma (MM) are increasing with the introduction of complex multi-novel-agent-based regimens investigated in randomized clinical trials. However, application in the real-world setting, including feasibility of and adherence to these regimens, may be limited due to varying patient-, treatment-, and disease-related factors. Furthermore, approximately 40% of real-world MM patients do not meet the criteria for phase 3 studies on which approvals are based, resulting in a lack of representative phase 3 data for these patients. Therefore, treatment decisions must be tailored based on additional considerations beyond clinical trial efficacy and safety, such as treatment feasibility (including frequency of clinic/hospital attendance), tolerability, effects on quality of life (QoL), and impact of comorbidities. There are multiple factors of importance to real-world MM patients, including disease symptoms, treatment burden and toxicities, ability to participate in daily activities, financial burden, access to treatment and treatment centers, and convenience of treatment. All of these factors are drivers of QoL and treatment satisfaction/compliance. Importantly, given the heterogeneity of MM, individual patients may have different perspectives regarding the most relevant considerations and goals of their treatment. Patient perspectives/goals may also change as they move through their treatment course. Thus, the 'efficacy' of treatment means different things to different patients, and treatment decision-making in the context of personalized medicine must be guided by an individual's composite definition of what constitutes the best treatment choice. This review summarizes the various factors of importance and practical issues that must be considered when determining real-world treatment choices. It assesses the current instruments, methodologies, and recent initiatives for analyzing the MM patient experience. Finally, it suggests options for enhancing data collection on patients and treatments to provide a more holistic definition of the effectiveness of a regimen in the real-world setting.

U2 - 10.1038/s41408-021-00432-4

DO - 10.1038/s41408-021-00432-4

M3 - SCORING: Review article

C2 - 33602913

VL - 11

SP - 40

JO - BLOOD CANCER J

JF - BLOOD CANCER J

SN - 2044-5385

IS - 2

ER -