Many patients, doctors unaware of advancements in cancer care

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Tue, 01/17/2023 - 11:16

Many patients with cancer, as well as doctors in fields other than oncology, are unaware of just how much progress has been made in recent years in the treatment of cancer, particularly with immunotherapy.

This is the main finding from two studies presented at the 2021 European Society for Medical Oncology Congress.

The survey of patients found that most don’t understand how immunotherapy works, and the survey of doctors found that many working outside of the cancer field are using information on survival that is wildly out of date.

When a patient is first told they have cancer, counseling is usually done by a surgeon or general medical doctor and not an oncologist, said Conleth Murphy, MD, of Bon Secours Hospital Cork, Ireland, and coauthor of the second study.

Noncancer doctors often grossly underestimate patients’ chances of survival, Dr. Murphy’s study found. This suggests that doctors who practice outside of cancer care may be working with the same information they learned in medical school, he said.

“These patients must be spared the traumatic effects of being handed a death sentence that no longer reflects the current reality,” Dr. Murphy said.

After receiving a diagnosis of cancer, “patients often immediately have pressing questions about what it means for their future,” he noted. A common question is: “How long do I have left?”

Nononcologists should refrain from answering patients’ questions with numbers, Dr. Murphy said.

Family doctors are likely to be influenced by the experience they have had with specific cancer patients in their practice, said Cyril Bonin, MD, a general practitioner in Usson-du-Poitou, France, who has 900 patients in his practice.

He sees about 10 patients with a new diagnosis of cancer each year. In addition, about 50 of his patients are in active treatment for cancer or have finished treatment and are considered cancer survivors.

“It is not entirely realistic for us to expect practitioners who deal with hundreds of different diseases to keep up with every facet of a rapidly changing oncology landscape,” said Marco Donia, MD, an expert in immunotherapy from the University of Copenhagen.

That landscape has changed dramatically in recent years, particularly since immunotherapy was added to the arsenal. Immunotherapy is a way to fine-tune your immune system to fight cancer.

For example, in the past, patients with metastatic melanoma would have an average survival of about 1 year. But now, some patients who have responded to immunotherapy are still alive 10 years later.
 

Findings from the patient survey

It is important that patients stay well informed because immunotherapy is a “complex treatment that is too often mistaken for a miracle cure,” said Paris Kosmidis, MD, the co-author of the patient survey.

“The more patients know about it, the better the communication with their medical team and thus the better their outcomes are likely to be,” said Dr. Kosmidis, who is co-founder and chief medical officer of CareAcross, an online service that provides personalized education for cancer patients

The survey was of 5,589 patients with cancer who were recruited from CareAcross clients from the United Kingdom, France, Italy, Spain, and Germany.

The survey asked them about how immunotherapy works, what it costs, and its side effects.

Almost half responded “not sure/do not know,” but about a third correctly answered that immunotherapy “activates the immune system to kill cancer cells.”

Similarly, more than half thought that immunotherapy started working right away, while only 20% correctly answered that it takes several weeks to become effective.

“This is important because patients need to start their therapy with realistic expectations, for example to avoid disappointment when their symptoms take some time to disappear,” Dr. Kosmidis said.

A small group of 24 patients with lung cancer who had been treated with immunotherapy got many correct answers, but they overestimated the intensity of side effects, compared with other therapies.

“Well-informed patients who know what to expect can do 90% of the job of preventing side effects from becoming severe by having them treated early,” said Dr. Donia, of the University of Copenhagen.

Most cancer patients were also unaware of the cost of immunotherapy, which can exceed $100,000 a year, Dr. Kosmidis said.
 

 

 

Results of the doctor survey

The other survey presented at the meeting looked at how much doctors know about survival for 12 of the most common cancers.

Dr. Murphy and colleagues asked 301 noncancer doctors and 46 cancer specialists to estimate the percentage of patients who could be expected to live for 5 years after diagnosis (a measure known as the 5-year survival rate).

Answers from the two groups were compared and graded according to cancer survival statistics from the National Cancer Registry of Ireland.

Both groups of doctors had a hard time estimating the survival of common cancers.

Nononcologists accurately predicted 5-year survival for just two of the cancer types, while the cancer specialists got it right for four cancer types.

However, the noncancer doctors had a more pessimistic outlook on cancer survival generally and severely underestimated the chances of survival in specific cancers, particularly stage IV breast cancer. The survival for this cancer has “evolved considerably over time and now reaches 40% in Ireland,” Dr. Murphy pointed out.

“These results are in line with what we had expected because most physicians’ knowledge of oncology dates back to whatever education they received during their years of training, so their perceptions of cancer prognosis are likely to lag behind the major survival gains achieved in the recent past,” Dr. Murphy said.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Many patients with cancer, as well as doctors in fields other than oncology, are unaware of just how much progress has been made in recent years in the treatment of cancer, particularly with immunotherapy.

This is the main finding from two studies presented at the 2021 European Society for Medical Oncology Congress.

The survey of patients found that most don’t understand how immunotherapy works, and the survey of doctors found that many working outside of the cancer field are using information on survival that is wildly out of date.

When a patient is first told they have cancer, counseling is usually done by a surgeon or general medical doctor and not an oncologist, said Conleth Murphy, MD, of Bon Secours Hospital Cork, Ireland, and coauthor of the second study.

Noncancer doctors often grossly underestimate patients’ chances of survival, Dr. Murphy’s study found. This suggests that doctors who practice outside of cancer care may be working with the same information they learned in medical school, he said.

“These patients must be spared the traumatic effects of being handed a death sentence that no longer reflects the current reality,” Dr. Murphy said.

After receiving a diagnosis of cancer, “patients often immediately have pressing questions about what it means for their future,” he noted. A common question is: “How long do I have left?”

Nononcologists should refrain from answering patients’ questions with numbers, Dr. Murphy said.

Family doctors are likely to be influenced by the experience they have had with specific cancer patients in their practice, said Cyril Bonin, MD, a general practitioner in Usson-du-Poitou, France, who has 900 patients in his practice.

He sees about 10 patients with a new diagnosis of cancer each year. In addition, about 50 of his patients are in active treatment for cancer or have finished treatment and are considered cancer survivors.

“It is not entirely realistic for us to expect practitioners who deal with hundreds of different diseases to keep up with every facet of a rapidly changing oncology landscape,” said Marco Donia, MD, an expert in immunotherapy from the University of Copenhagen.

That landscape has changed dramatically in recent years, particularly since immunotherapy was added to the arsenal. Immunotherapy is a way to fine-tune your immune system to fight cancer.

For example, in the past, patients with metastatic melanoma would have an average survival of about 1 year. But now, some patients who have responded to immunotherapy are still alive 10 years later.
 

Findings from the patient survey

It is important that patients stay well informed because immunotherapy is a “complex treatment that is too often mistaken for a miracle cure,” said Paris Kosmidis, MD, the co-author of the patient survey.

“The more patients know about it, the better the communication with their medical team and thus the better their outcomes are likely to be,” said Dr. Kosmidis, who is co-founder and chief medical officer of CareAcross, an online service that provides personalized education for cancer patients

The survey was of 5,589 patients with cancer who were recruited from CareAcross clients from the United Kingdom, France, Italy, Spain, and Germany.

The survey asked them about how immunotherapy works, what it costs, and its side effects.

Almost half responded “not sure/do not know,” but about a third correctly answered that immunotherapy “activates the immune system to kill cancer cells.”

Similarly, more than half thought that immunotherapy started working right away, while only 20% correctly answered that it takes several weeks to become effective.

“This is important because patients need to start their therapy with realistic expectations, for example to avoid disappointment when their symptoms take some time to disappear,” Dr. Kosmidis said.

A small group of 24 patients with lung cancer who had been treated with immunotherapy got many correct answers, but they overestimated the intensity of side effects, compared with other therapies.

“Well-informed patients who know what to expect can do 90% of the job of preventing side effects from becoming severe by having them treated early,” said Dr. Donia, of the University of Copenhagen.

Most cancer patients were also unaware of the cost of immunotherapy, which can exceed $100,000 a year, Dr. Kosmidis said.
 

 

 

Results of the doctor survey

The other survey presented at the meeting looked at how much doctors know about survival for 12 of the most common cancers.

Dr. Murphy and colleagues asked 301 noncancer doctors and 46 cancer specialists to estimate the percentage of patients who could be expected to live for 5 years after diagnosis (a measure known as the 5-year survival rate).

Answers from the two groups were compared and graded according to cancer survival statistics from the National Cancer Registry of Ireland.

Both groups of doctors had a hard time estimating the survival of common cancers.

Nononcologists accurately predicted 5-year survival for just two of the cancer types, while the cancer specialists got it right for four cancer types.

However, the noncancer doctors had a more pessimistic outlook on cancer survival generally and severely underestimated the chances of survival in specific cancers, particularly stage IV breast cancer. The survival for this cancer has “evolved considerably over time and now reaches 40% in Ireland,” Dr. Murphy pointed out.

“These results are in line with what we had expected because most physicians’ knowledge of oncology dates back to whatever education they received during their years of training, so their perceptions of cancer prognosis are likely to lag behind the major survival gains achieved in the recent past,” Dr. Murphy said.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Many patients with cancer, as well as doctors in fields other than oncology, are unaware of just how much progress has been made in recent years in the treatment of cancer, particularly with immunotherapy.

This is the main finding from two studies presented at the 2021 European Society for Medical Oncology Congress.

The survey of patients found that most don’t understand how immunotherapy works, and the survey of doctors found that many working outside of the cancer field are using information on survival that is wildly out of date.

When a patient is first told they have cancer, counseling is usually done by a surgeon or general medical doctor and not an oncologist, said Conleth Murphy, MD, of Bon Secours Hospital Cork, Ireland, and coauthor of the second study.

Noncancer doctors often grossly underestimate patients’ chances of survival, Dr. Murphy’s study found. This suggests that doctors who practice outside of cancer care may be working with the same information they learned in medical school, he said.

“These patients must be spared the traumatic effects of being handed a death sentence that no longer reflects the current reality,” Dr. Murphy said.

After receiving a diagnosis of cancer, “patients often immediately have pressing questions about what it means for their future,” he noted. A common question is: “How long do I have left?”

Nononcologists should refrain from answering patients’ questions with numbers, Dr. Murphy said.

Family doctors are likely to be influenced by the experience they have had with specific cancer patients in their practice, said Cyril Bonin, MD, a general practitioner in Usson-du-Poitou, France, who has 900 patients in his practice.

He sees about 10 patients with a new diagnosis of cancer each year. In addition, about 50 of his patients are in active treatment for cancer or have finished treatment and are considered cancer survivors.

“It is not entirely realistic for us to expect practitioners who deal with hundreds of different diseases to keep up with every facet of a rapidly changing oncology landscape,” said Marco Donia, MD, an expert in immunotherapy from the University of Copenhagen.

That landscape has changed dramatically in recent years, particularly since immunotherapy was added to the arsenal. Immunotherapy is a way to fine-tune your immune system to fight cancer.

For example, in the past, patients with metastatic melanoma would have an average survival of about 1 year. But now, some patients who have responded to immunotherapy are still alive 10 years later.
 

Findings from the patient survey

It is important that patients stay well informed because immunotherapy is a “complex treatment that is too often mistaken for a miracle cure,” said Paris Kosmidis, MD, the co-author of the patient survey.

“The more patients know about it, the better the communication with their medical team and thus the better their outcomes are likely to be,” said Dr. Kosmidis, who is co-founder and chief medical officer of CareAcross, an online service that provides personalized education for cancer patients

The survey was of 5,589 patients with cancer who were recruited from CareAcross clients from the United Kingdom, France, Italy, Spain, and Germany.

The survey asked them about how immunotherapy works, what it costs, and its side effects.

Almost half responded “not sure/do not know,” but about a third correctly answered that immunotherapy “activates the immune system to kill cancer cells.”

Similarly, more than half thought that immunotherapy started working right away, while only 20% correctly answered that it takes several weeks to become effective.

“This is important because patients need to start their therapy with realistic expectations, for example to avoid disappointment when their symptoms take some time to disappear,” Dr. Kosmidis said.

A small group of 24 patients with lung cancer who had been treated with immunotherapy got many correct answers, but they overestimated the intensity of side effects, compared with other therapies.

“Well-informed patients who know what to expect can do 90% of the job of preventing side effects from becoming severe by having them treated early,” said Dr. Donia, of the University of Copenhagen.

Most cancer patients were also unaware of the cost of immunotherapy, which can exceed $100,000 a year, Dr. Kosmidis said.
 

 

 

Results of the doctor survey

The other survey presented at the meeting looked at how much doctors know about survival for 12 of the most common cancers.

Dr. Murphy and colleagues asked 301 noncancer doctors and 46 cancer specialists to estimate the percentage of patients who could be expected to live for 5 years after diagnosis (a measure known as the 5-year survival rate).

Answers from the two groups were compared and graded according to cancer survival statistics from the National Cancer Registry of Ireland.

Both groups of doctors had a hard time estimating the survival of common cancers.

Nononcologists accurately predicted 5-year survival for just two of the cancer types, while the cancer specialists got it right for four cancer types.

However, the noncancer doctors had a more pessimistic outlook on cancer survival generally and severely underestimated the chances of survival in specific cancers, particularly stage IV breast cancer. The survival for this cancer has “evolved considerably over time and now reaches 40% in Ireland,” Dr. Murphy pointed out.

“These results are in line with what we had expected because most physicians’ knowledge of oncology dates back to whatever education they received during their years of training, so their perceptions of cancer prognosis are likely to lag behind the major survival gains achieved in the recent past,” Dr. Murphy said.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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‘Dawn of a new era’ in the treatment of renal cell carcinoma

Article Type
Changed
Wed, 09/08/2021 - 07:50

The decades-long search for a safe, effective adjuvant therapy for patients with resected kidney cancer at high risk of recurrence appears to have taken a big step in the right direction, according to expert opinion.

The high hopes have been generated by results from the randomized, phase 3 KEYNOTE-564 trial, showing that monotherapy with pembrolizumab (Keytruda, Merck) was associated with significantly longer disease-free survival (DFS) after nephrectomy than placebo (77.3% vs. 68.1%, respectively). Median follow-up was 24 months.

The results come from the trial’s first interim analysis of data from 994 patients with clear-cell renal cell carcinoma (RCC) at high risk of recurrence.

For the pembrolizumab group, the estimated percentage alive at 24 months was 96.6%, compared with 93.5% in the placebo group (hazard ratio for death, 0.54), said Toni Choueiri, MD, of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, and colleagues.

However, grade 3 or higher adverse events (any cause) occurred at almost twice the rate in the pembrolizumab versus the placebo group (32.4% vs. 17.7%). The new study was published online Aug. 18, 2021, in the New England Journal of Medicine.

The study results were first presented at the 2021 American Society of Clinical Oncology annual meeting and described as likely to be practice changing in this setting, as reported by this news organization.

Currently, this patient population has “no options for adjuvant therapy to reduce the risk of recurrence that have high levels of supporting evidence,” observed the authors.

That’s about to change, as the trial results “herald the dawn of a new era in the treatment of renal cell carcinoma,” Rana McKay, MD, University of California San Diego Health, wrote in an accompanying editorial.

Multiple studies have investigated potential adjuvant therapies in RCC since the 1980s, she observed.

“For the first time, we now have an effective adjuvant immunotherapy option for patients with resected renal cell carcinoma at high risk of recurrence,” Dr. McKay said in an interview.

To date, the lack of clinically beneficial adjuvant therapy options in RCC has been “humbling,” Dr. Choueiri said in an interview. “We hope we can push the envelope further and get more patients with RCC some good options that make them live longer and better.”

Although the standard of care for patients diagnosed with locoregional RCC is partial or total nephrectomy, nearly half of patients eventually experience disease recurrence following surgery, Dr. Choueiri noted.

“No standard, globally approved adjuvant therapy options are currently available for this population,” he said. Clinical guidelines recommend patients at high risk of disease recurrence after surgery be entered into a clinical trial or undergo active surveillance.

Researchers will continue to follow the results for overall survival, a secondary endpoint. “The very early look suggests encouraging results [in overall survival] with an HR of 0.54,” Dr. Choueiri noted.

In the meantime, the prolongation of DFS represents a clear clinical benefit, said Dr. McKay, “given the magnitude of the increase” and “the limited incidence of toxic effects.”

KEYNOTE-564 will alter the adjuvant treatment landscape for RCC as a positive phase 3 trial of adjuvant immunotherapy for the disease, she added.

A number of earlier studies have investigated the use of adjuvant vascular endothelial growth factor–targeting agents in RCC. Only the 2016 Sunitinib Treatment of Renal Adjuvant Cancer (S-TRAC) trial showed improved DFS with sunitinib, compared with placebo (6.8 vs. 5.6 years). Subsequently, sunitinib was approved for adjuvant use in the United States. However, the S-TRAC trial also showed that sunitinib therapy was associated with an increased incidence of toxic effects and lower quality of life scores, and researchers did not observe any benefit in overall survival.

“Despite regulatory approval in the U.S., sunitinib is not approved for adjuvant use by the European Medicines Agency and has limited utilization in clinical practice given the low benefit-risk ratio,” Dr. McKay pointed out.
 

 

 

Study details

KEYNOTE-564 involved 996 patients with clear-cell RCC at high risk for recurrence after nephrectomy, with or without metastasectomy. They were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to receive a 200-mg dose of adjuvant pembrolizumab or placebo given intravenously once every 3 weeks for up to 17 cycles for approximately 1 year.

The vast majority of patients enrolled in the study had localized disease with no evidence of metastases (M0) and intermediate to high or high risk of disease recurrence after partial or complete nephrectomy. However, 5.8% of patients in both the pembrolizumab and placebo groups had M1 NED (metastatic stage 1, no evidence of disease) status after nephrectomy and resection of metastatic lesions. These patients were also at intermediate to high or high risk of recurrence.

The benefit of pembrolizumab, compared with placebo, was maintained in this subgroup, said the investigators. “At this point, we continue to look at the data, but we know that there was a benefit for DFS in the population we included,” said Dr. Choueiri. “When we looked at several subgroups such as PD-L1 status, geography, gender, performance status, M0/M1, all HRs were less than 1 suggesting benefit from pembrolizumab over placebo.”

“Subset analyses by stage are going to be important to determine which group of patients will derive the most benefit,” asserted Dr. McKay. “While those with M1 NED appear to derive benefit with HR for DFS of 0.29, those with M1 NED comprise a small percentage of patient enrolled in the trial.”

Studies exploring tissue- and blood-based biomarkers, including circulating tumor DNA, will be key to identify patients at highest risk for recurrence or adjuvant treatment, Dr. McKay emphasized. “The adoption of adjuvant immune checkpoint inhibitors brings along new questions regarding patient selection, therapeutic use in patients with non–clear-cell renal cell carcinoma, and systemic treatment after recurrence during or after the receipt of adjuvant therapy.”

KEYNOTE-564 was funded by Merck. Multiple study authors including Dr. Choueiri have financial ties to the pharmaceutical industry, including Merck.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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The decades-long search for a safe, effective adjuvant therapy for patients with resected kidney cancer at high risk of recurrence appears to have taken a big step in the right direction, according to expert opinion.

The high hopes have been generated by results from the randomized, phase 3 KEYNOTE-564 trial, showing that monotherapy with pembrolizumab (Keytruda, Merck) was associated with significantly longer disease-free survival (DFS) after nephrectomy than placebo (77.3% vs. 68.1%, respectively). Median follow-up was 24 months.

The results come from the trial’s first interim analysis of data from 994 patients with clear-cell renal cell carcinoma (RCC) at high risk of recurrence.

For the pembrolizumab group, the estimated percentage alive at 24 months was 96.6%, compared with 93.5% in the placebo group (hazard ratio for death, 0.54), said Toni Choueiri, MD, of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, and colleagues.

However, grade 3 or higher adverse events (any cause) occurred at almost twice the rate in the pembrolizumab versus the placebo group (32.4% vs. 17.7%). The new study was published online Aug. 18, 2021, in the New England Journal of Medicine.

The study results were first presented at the 2021 American Society of Clinical Oncology annual meeting and described as likely to be practice changing in this setting, as reported by this news organization.

Currently, this patient population has “no options for adjuvant therapy to reduce the risk of recurrence that have high levels of supporting evidence,” observed the authors.

That’s about to change, as the trial results “herald the dawn of a new era in the treatment of renal cell carcinoma,” Rana McKay, MD, University of California San Diego Health, wrote in an accompanying editorial.

Multiple studies have investigated potential adjuvant therapies in RCC since the 1980s, she observed.

“For the first time, we now have an effective adjuvant immunotherapy option for patients with resected renal cell carcinoma at high risk of recurrence,” Dr. McKay said in an interview.

To date, the lack of clinically beneficial adjuvant therapy options in RCC has been “humbling,” Dr. Choueiri said in an interview. “We hope we can push the envelope further and get more patients with RCC some good options that make them live longer and better.”

Although the standard of care for patients diagnosed with locoregional RCC is partial or total nephrectomy, nearly half of patients eventually experience disease recurrence following surgery, Dr. Choueiri noted.

“No standard, globally approved adjuvant therapy options are currently available for this population,” he said. Clinical guidelines recommend patients at high risk of disease recurrence after surgery be entered into a clinical trial or undergo active surveillance.

Researchers will continue to follow the results for overall survival, a secondary endpoint. “The very early look suggests encouraging results [in overall survival] with an HR of 0.54,” Dr. Choueiri noted.

In the meantime, the prolongation of DFS represents a clear clinical benefit, said Dr. McKay, “given the magnitude of the increase” and “the limited incidence of toxic effects.”

KEYNOTE-564 will alter the adjuvant treatment landscape for RCC as a positive phase 3 trial of adjuvant immunotherapy for the disease, she added.

A number of earlier studies have investigated the use of adjuvant vascular endothelial growth factor–targeting agents in RCC. Only the 2016 Sunitinib Treatment of Renal Adjuvant Cancer (S-TRAC) trial showed improved DFS with sunitinib, compared with placebo (6.8 vs. 5.6 years). Subsequently, sunitinib was approved for adjuvant use in the United States. However, the S-TRAC trial also showed that sunitinib therapy was associated with an increased incidence of toxic effects and lower quality of life scores, and researchers did not observe any benefit in overall survival.

“Despite regulatory approval in the U.S., sunitinib is not approved for adjuvant use by the European Medicines Agency and has limited utilization in clinical practice given the low benefit-risk ratio,” Dr. McKay pointed out.
 

 

 

Study details

KEYNOTE-564 involved 996 patients with clear-cell RCC at high risk for recurrence after nephrectomy, with or without metastasectomy. They were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to receive a 200-mg dose of adjuvant pembrolizumab or placebo given intravenously once every 3 weeks for up to 17 cycles for approximately 1 year.

The vast majority of patients enrolled in the study had localized disease with no evidence of metastases (M0) and intermediate to high or high risk of disease recurrence after partial or complete nephrectomy. However, 5.8% of patients in both the pembrolizumab and placebo groups had M1 NED (metastatic stage 1, no evidence of disease) status after nephrectomy and resection of metastatic lesions. These patients were also at intermediate to high or high risk of recurrence.

The benefit of pembrolizumab, compared with placebo, was maintained in this subgroup, said the investigators. “At this point, we continue to look at the data, but we know that there was a benefit for DFS in the population we included,” said Dr. Choueiri. “When we looked at several subgroups such as PD-L1 status, geography, gender, performance status, M0/M1, all HRs were less than 1 suggesting benefit from pembrolizumab over placebo.”

“Subset analyses by stage are going to be important to determine which group of patients will derive the most benefit,” asserted Dr. McKay. “While those with M1 NED appear to derive benefit with HR for DFS of 0.29, those with M1 NED comprise a small percentage of patient enrolled in the trial.”

Studies exploring tissue- and blood-based biomarkers, including circulating tumor DNA, will be key to identify patients at highest risk for recurrence or adjuvant treatment, Dr. McKay emphasized. “The adoption of adjuvant immune checkpoint inhibitors brings along new questions regarding patient selection, therapeutic use in patients with non–clear-cell renal cell carcinoma, and systemic treatment after recurrence during or after the receipt of adjuvant therapy.”

KEYNOTE-564 was funded by Merck. Multiple study authors including Dr. Choueiri have financial ties to the pharmaceutical industry, including Merck.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

The decades-long search for a safe, effective adjuvant therapy for patients with resected kidney cancer at high risk of recurrence appears to have taken a big step in the right direction, according to expert opinion.

The high hopes have been generated by results from the randomized, phase 3 KEYNOTE-564 trial, showing that monotherapy with pembrolizumab (Keytruda, Merck) was associated with significantly longer disease-free survival (DFS) after nephrectomy than placebo (77.3% vs. 68.1%, respectively). Median follow-up was 24 months.

The results come from the trial’s first interim analysis of data from 994 patients with clear-cell renal cell carcinoma (RCC) at high risk of recurrence.

For the pembrolizumab group, the estimated percentage alive at 24 months was 96.6%, compared with 93.5% in the placebo group (hazard ratio for death, 0.54), said Toni Choueiri, MD, of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, and colleagues.

However, grade 3 or higher adverse events (any cause) occurred at almost twice the rate in the pembrolizumab versus the placebo group (32.4% vs. 17.7%). The new study was published online Aug. 18, 2021, in the New England Journal of Medicine.

The study results were first presented at the 2021 American Society of Clinical Oncology annual meeting and described as likely to be practice changing in this setting, as reported by this news organization.

Currently, this patient population has “no options for adjuvant therapy to reduce the risk of recurrence that have high levels of supporting evidence,” observed the authors.

That’s about to change, as the trial results “herald the dawn of a new era in the treatment of renal cell carcinoma,” Rana McKay, MD, University of California San Diego Health, wrote in an accompanying editorial.

Multiple studies have investigated potential adjuvant therapies in RCC since the 1980s, she observed.

“For the first time, we now have an effective adjuvant immunotherapy option for patients with resected renal cell carcinoma at high risk of recurrence,” Dr. McKay said in an interview.

To date, the lack of clinically beneficial adjuvant therapy options in RCC has been “humbling,” Dr. Choueiri said in an interview. “We hope we can push the envelope further and get more patients with RCC some good options that make them live longer and better.”

Although the standard of care for patients diagnosed with locoregional RCC is partial or total nephrectomy, nearly half of patients eventually experience disease recurrence following surgery, Dr. Choueiri noted.

“No standard, globally approved adjuvant therapy options are currently available for this population,” he said. Clinical guidelines recommend patients at high risk of disease recurrence after surgery be entered into a clinical trial or undergo active surveillance.

Researchers will continue to follow the results for overall survival, a secondary endpoint. “The very early look suggests encouraging results [in overall survival] with an HR of 0.54,” Dr. Choueiri noted.

In the meantime, the prolongation of DFS represents a clear clinical benefit, said Dr. McKay, “given the magnitude of the increase” and “the limited incidence of toxic effects.”

KEYNOTE-564 will alter the adjuvant treatment landscape for RCC as a positive phase 3 trial of adjuvant immunotherapy for the disease, she added.

A number of earlier studies have investigated the use of adjuvant vascular endothelial growth factor–targeting agents in RCC. Only the 2016 Sunitinib Treatment of Renal Adjuvant Cancer (S-TRAC) trial showed improved DFS with sunitinib, compared with placebo (6.8 vs. 5.6 years). Subsequently, sunitinib was approved for adjuvant use in the United States. However, the S-TRAC trial also showed that sunitinib therapy was associated with an increased incidence of toxic effects and lower quality of life scores, and researchers did not observe any benefit in overall survival.

“Despite regulatory approval in the U.S., sunitinib is not approved for adjuvant use by the European Medicines Agency and has limited utilization in clinical practice given the low benefit-risk ratio,” Dr. McKay pointed out.
 

 

 

Study details

KEYNOTE-564 involved 996 patients with clear-cell RCC at high risk for recurrence after nephrectomy, with or without metastasectomy. They were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to receive a 200-mg dose of adjuvant pembrolizumab or placebo given intravenously once every 3 weeks for up to 17 cycles for approximately 1 year.

The vast majority of patients enrolled in the study had localized disease with no evidence of metastases (M0) and intermediate to high or high risk of disease recurrence after partial or complete nephrectomy. However, 5.8% of patients in both the pembrolizumab and placebo groups had M1 NED (metastatic stage 1, no evidence of disease) status after nephrectomy and resection of metastatic lesions. These patients were also at intermediate to high or high risk of recurrence.

The benefit of pembrolizumab, compared with placebo, was maintained in this subgroup, said the investigators. “At this point, we continue to look at the data, but we know that there was a benefit for DFS in the population we included,” said Dr. Choueiri. “When we looked at several subgroups such as PD-L1 status, geography, gender, performance status, M0/M1, all HRs were less than 1 suggesting benefit from pembrolizumab over placebo.”

“Subset analyses by stage are going to be important to determine which group of patients will derive the most benefit,” asserted Dr. McKay. “While those with M1 NED appear to derive benefit with HR for DFS of 0.29, those with M1 NED comprise a small percentage of patient enrolled in the trial.”

Studies exploring tissue- and blood-based biomarkers, including circulating tumor DNA, will be key to identify patients at highest risk for recurrence or adjuvant treatment, Dr. McKay emphasized. “The adoption of adjuvant immune checkpoint inhibitors brings along new questions regarding patient selection, therapeutic use in patients with non–clear-cell renal cell carcinoma, and systemic treatment after recurrence during or after the receipt of adjuvant therapy.”

KEYNOTE-564 was funded by Merck. Multiple study authors including Dr. Choueiri have financial ties to the pharmaceutical industry, including Merck.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Lack of after care leaves cancer patients in ‘survivorship abyss’

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Changed
Thu, 07/22/2021 - 10:40

 

Although prostate cancer is the second most common cancer in men worldwide, it is not a lethal cancer: Improvements in early detection and treatment have boosted the 10-year relative survival rate to 98%.

But for many men, life after treatment is an ongoing struggle.

One of the first qualitative survey studies of long-term prostate cancer survivorship in Australia found that many survivors are living with adverse effects such as urinary incontinence and sexual dysfunction and that they continue to have heightened feelings of distress.

Many of the patients surveyed said that they had not received follow-up care and felt they had been “abandoned” by their health care professionals.

One man called it “the survivorship abyss.”

“As the prevalence of prostate cancer survivors continues to grow globally, the absence of integrated shared survivorship care models into clinical practice, such as survivorship care guidelines/plans and/or interventions, will perpetuate the sense of abandonment and the overwhelming burden of care of men lost in the PC [prostate cancer] ‘survivorship abyss,’” say the authors.

The report was published online in Psycho-Oncology.

“The good news is that more men than ever before are surviving prostate cancer,” commented lead author Carolyn G. Mazariego, PhD, a research fellow at the Daffodil Center of the Cancer Council New South Wales and the University of Sydney.

“As our population grows and ages, an increasing number of men are facing these survivorship challenges, and the need for clear survivorship care guidelines becomes increasingly vital,” Dr. Mazariego told this news organization.
 

Details of the survey findings

To find participants for their study, the team drew upon a cohort of 578 men who were included in the 15-year follow-up phase of the longitudinal New South Wales Prostate Cancer Care and Outcomes Study (PCOS).

The researchers interviewed 37 men for the study. The majority (88.6%) had been diagnosed with localized disease, and just over half (54%) had undergone radical prostatectomy as their primary treatment.

Some expressed regret over having had surgery. One respondent, a 15-year survivor, commented: “I really didn’t know how intrusive [surgery] was as far as losing the length of my penis and its functions. To this day, I sometimes can’t believe it’s happened. It’s devastating.”

The survey also found that most survivors viewed active treatment as the only way to avoid death.

In hindsight, some questioned whether radical treatment was necessary and whether they might have been better served by active surveillance.

Many said they were never given a chance to discuss sexual dysfunction, and others said their questions sparked an awkward, limited conversation. Many said they suffered in silence.

“We know that there is a sort of ‘cycle of silence’ between patients and health care providers about sexual issues, and that was particularly true for the men we spoke to,” Dr. Mazariego said. “This cycle of silence can stem from confusion and ambiguity as to who men should speak with regarding these ongoing issues.”

“It’s just like being part of a secret society,” said one survivor. “Like you don’t know about it until you’re in it ... I don’t think people want to know if they have it [prostate cancer] or want it known. It’s all hush hush.”

Prostate cancer patients often feel uncomfortable talking about sexual function, Dr. Mazariego pointed out. “Many men instead internalized these thoughts or concerns and just ‘got on’ with life.”

One survey participant said: “Well, you just gotta deal with it [issues relating to prostate cancer]. Just got to try and wipe out the thoughts, that’s all you can do. Suck it up and carry on.”
 

 

 

Discussions must be part of standard of care

Dr. Mazariego emphasized that for prostate cancer survivorship to improve, conversations about the psychosocial needs of patients must be normalized and made routine. Discussions about post-treatment side effects that cause functional impairments and are stressful to relationships must be embedded into the standards of care, she added. This will allow physicians to use these kinds of conversations “as a springboard for referrals to appropriate care.”

“Patients of all ages will have concerns related to sex and sexual function, whether you ask about them or not,” said Brad Zebrack, PhD, MSW, MPH, professor at the University of Michigan School of Social Work, Ann Arbor, who was approached for comment.

At the very least, physicians should be prepared to “acknowledge and describe possible effects of therapy on sex and sexual function and follow up by describing available supports for education and either individual or couples counseling,” said Dr. Zebrack, who is also a member of the health behavior and outcomes research program at the Rogel Cancer Center.

Physicians can also refer patients to evidence-based resources and toolkits, he said. He noted that Will2Love offers self-help programs for cancer-related sexual problems and is “an outstanding resource.”
 

Distress screening needed

Universal psychosocial distress screening is needed to identify men with prostate cancer who have high levels of distress, argues Jeff Dunn, AO, PhD, who is CEO of the Prostate Cancer Foundation of Australia (PCFA), in Sydney.

Without this, men will not seek help for their unmet needs, Dr. Dunn noted in a 2019 editorial in the European Journal of Cancer Care.

The unmet psychosocial needs of prostate cancer patients and their partners “are highly prevalent,” said Dr. Dunn and co-author Suzanne K. Chambers, AO, PhD, dean of the Faculty of Health at the University of Technology Sydney. “...[F]or many prostate cancer survivors, the physical, social, psychological and relationship challenges will be long term, if not lifelong,” they write.

Even in Australia, where 1 in every 6 men are expected to be diagnosed with prostate cancer by age 85, efforts to improve survivorship care have not produced the desired results, they note.

In 2019, the PCFA published a monograph in which the organization recommended routine distress screenings and referrals to evidence-based psychosocial care for prostate cancer survivors. The foundation predicted that it would be “a game-changer for every Australian man impacted by the disease.”

“Yet, we still do not have a national survivorship care plan for prostate cancer survivors in Australia,” Dr. Mazariego said.

Left untreated, the psychosocial effects of prostate cancer “are considerable and certainly factors that should be considered as a threat to well-being,” she emphasized.

“Certainly, accumulation of unmet psychosocial needs increases risks for depression and suicide, which is true in both cancer and noncancer populations,” said Dr. Zebrack.

Data back this up. One study of patients with prostate cancer found that after diagnosis, 1 in 4 experienced anxiety, and 1 in 5 experienced depression. Another study found that the risk for suicide was higher among men with prostate cancer during the first year after diagnosis than among men with other solid-organ malignancies.

More recently, a 2018 population-based Australian cohort study of men in New South Wales revealed that the risk for death by suicide was 70% higher among men who had been diagnosed with prostate cancer compared with men in the general population. This risk was higher within the first year following diagnosis and was higher in men with nonlocalized disease, those who were single, those who were living in a major city, and those who were unmarried.

Dr. Mazariego and the team reporting the survey found that men who received supportive care had a greater chance of reconciling living with functional impairments. “Receiving adequate survivorship care and trusting patient-clinician relationships appeared to be associated with greater resilience and positivity in the men’s acceptance of cancer-related, long-term challenges and personal limitations,” they note.
 

 

 

Developing postcancer identity

Survivors also appeared to have developed a post-cancer identity that was more invested in personal relationships or in taking a more active role in their own health.

“Treating my prostate cancer gave me a second chance,” said one survivor. “Yeah, I’m a survivor, but more importantly, I’m a loving husband now. I know I wasn’t as giving back then.”

Another man admitted that before his diagnosis, he never went to the doctor. “I go much more often now,” he said. “You need to check up on yourself, at least once a year. Could have caught the cancer earlier if I was doing that.”

These comments appear to be borne out by data released last year by the American Cancer Society (ACS), which found that the number of number of cancer-related suicides in the United States was on the decline, as reported by this news organization.

Some of the biggest decreases occurred in men with prostate cancer, although prostate cancer was associated with 15% of cancer-related suicides. Only lung cancer was associated with more cancer-related suicides, at 18%.

A factor in the decrease in cancer-related suicides was likely to be an increase in the use of supportive care services, the ACS researchers commented.

“Although no causal relationship can be established, our findings suggest an evolving role of psycho-oncology care and palliative and hospice care given the promotion and increased utilization of these services among cancer patients during this period,” they commented.

The study was funded by the Cancer Institute NSW. Dr. Mazariego and colleagues have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Although prostate cancer is the second most common cancer in men worldwide, it is not a lethal cancer: Improvements in early detection and treatment have boosted the 10-year relative survival rate to 98%.

But for many men, life after treatment is an ongoing struggle.

One of the first qualitative survey studies of long-term prostate cancer survivorship in Australia found that many survivors are living with adverse effects such as urinary incontinence and sexual dysfunction and that they continue to have heightened feelings of distress.

Many of the patients surveyed said that they had not received follow-up care and felt they had been “abandoned” by their health care professionals.

One man called it “the survivorship abyss.”

“As the prevalence of prostate cancer survivors continues to grow globally, the absence of integrated shared survivorship care models into clinical practice, such as survivorship care guidelines/plans and/or interventions, will perpetuate the sense of abandonment and the overwhelming burden of care of men lost in the PC [prostate cancer] ‘survivorship abyss,’” say the authors.

The report was published online in Psycho-Oncology.

“The good news is that more men than ever before are surviving prostate cancer,” commented lead author Carolyn G. Mazariego, PhD, a research fellow at the Daffodil Center of the Cancer Council New South Wales and the University of Sydney.

“As our population grows and ages, an increasing number of men are facing these survivorship challenges, and the need for clear survivorship care guidelines becomes increasingly vital,” Dr. Mazariego told this news organization.
 

Details of the survey findings

To find participants for their study, the team drew upon a cohort of 578 men who were included in the 15-year follow-up phase of the longitudinal New South Wales Prostate Cancer Care and Outcomes Study (PCOS).

The researchers interviewed 37 men for the study. The majority (88.6%) had been diagnosed with localized disease, and just over half (54%) had undergone radical prostatectomy as their primary treatment.

Some expressed regret over having had surgery. One respondent, a 15-year survivor, commented: “I really didn’t know how intrusive [surgery] was as far as losing the length of my penis and its functions. To this day, I sometimes can’t believe it’s happened. It’s devastating.”

The survey also found that most survivors viewed active treatment as the only way to avoid death.

In hindsight, some questioned whether radical treatment was necessary and whether they might have been better served by active surveillance.

Many said they were never given a chance to discuss sexual dysfunction, and others said their questions sparked an awkward, limited conversation. Many said they suffered in silence.

“We know that there is a sort of ‘cycle of silence’ between patients and health care providers about sexual issues, and that was particularly true for the men we spoke to,” Dr. Mazariego said. “This cycle of silence can stem from confusion and ambiguity as to who men should speak with regarding these ongoing issues.”

“It’s just like being part of a secret society,” said one survivor. “Like you don’t know about it until you’re in it ... I don’t think people want to know if they have it [prostate cancer] or want it known. It’s all hush hush.”

Prostate cancer patients often feel uncomfortable talking about sexual function, Dr. Mazariego pointed out. “Many men instead internalized these thoughts or concerns and just ‘got on’ with life.”

One survey participant said: “Well, you just gotta deal with it [issues relating to prostate cancer]. Just got to try and wipe out the thoughts, that’s all you can do. Suck it up and carry on.”
 

 

 

Discussions must be part of standard of care

Dr. Mazariego emphasized that for prostate cancer survivorship to improve, conversations about the psychosocial needs of patients must be normalized and made routine. Discussions about post-treatment side effects that cause functional impairments and are stressful to relationships must be embedded into the standards of care, she added. This will allow physicians to use these kinds of conversations “as a springboard for referrals to appropriate care.”

“Patients of all ages will have concerns related to sex and sexual function, whether you ask about them or not,” said Brad Zebrack, PhD, MSW, MPH, professor at the University of Michigan School of Social Work, Ann Arbor, who was approached for comment.

At the very least, physicians should be prepared to “acknowledge and describe possible effects of therapy on sex and sexual function and follow up by describing available supports for education and either individual or couples counseling,” said Dr. Zebrack, who is also a member of the health behavior and outcomes research program at the Rogel Cancer Center.

Physicians can also refer patients to evidence-based resources and toolkits, he said. He noted that Will2Love offers self-help programs for cancer-related sexual problems and is “an outstanding resource.”
 

Distress screening needed

Universal psychosocial distress screening is needed to identify men with prostate cancer who have high levels of distress, argues Jeff Dunn, AO, PhD, who is CEO of the Prostate Cancer Foundation of Australia (PCFA), in Sydney.

Without this, men will not seek help for their unmet needs, Dr. Dunn noted in a 2019 editorial in the European Journal of Cancer Care.

The unmet psychosocial needs of prostate cancer patients and their partners “are highly prevalent,” said Dr. Dunn and co-author Suzanne K. Chambers, AO, PhD, dean of the Faculty of Health at the University of Technology Sydney. “...[F]or many prostate cancer survivors, the physical, social, psychological and relationship challenges will be long term, if not lifelong,” they write.

Even in Australia, where 1 in every 6 men are expected to be diagnosed with prostate cancer by age 85, efforts to improve survivorship care have not produced the desired results, they note.

In 2019, the PCFA published a monograph in which the organization recommended routine distress screenings and referrals to evidence-based psychosocial care for prostate cancer survivors. The foundation predicted that it would be “a game-changer for every Australian man impacted by the disease.”

“Yet, we still do not have a national survivorship care plan for prostate cancer survivors in Australia,” Dr. Mazariego said.

Left untreated, the psychosocial effects of prostate cancer “are considerable and certainly factors that should be considered as a threat to well-being,” she emphasized.

“Certainly, accumulation of unmet psychosocial needs increases risks for depression and suicide, which is true in both cancer and noncancer populations,” said Dr. Zebrack.

Data back this up. One study of patients with prostate cancer found that after diagnosis, 1 in 4 experienced anxiety, and 1 in 5 experienced depression. Another study found that the risk for suicide was higher among men with prostate cancer during the first year after diagnosis than among men with other solid-organ malignancies.

More recently, a 2018 population-based Australian cohort study of men in New South Wales revealed that the risk for death by suicide was 70% higher among men who had been diagnosed with prostate cancer compared with men in the general population. This risk was higher within the first year following diagnosis and was higher in men with nonlocalized disease, those who were single, those who were living in a major city, and those who were unmarried.

Dr. Mazariego and the team reporting the survey found that men who received supportive care had a greater chance of reconciling living with functional impairments. “Receiving adequate survivorship care and trusting patient-clinician relationships appeared to be associated with greater resilience and positivity in the men’s acceptance of cancer-related, long-term challenges and personal limitations,” they note.
 

 

 

Developing postcancer identity

Survivors also appeared to have developed a post-cancer identity that was more invested in personal relationships or in taking a more active role in their own health.

“Treating my prostate cancer gave me a second chance,” said one survivor. “Yeah, I’m a survivor, but more importantly, I’m a loving husband now. I know I wasn’t as giving back then.”

Another man admitted that before his diagnosis, he never went to the doctor. “I go much more often now,” he said. “You need to check up on yourself, at least once a year. Could have caught the cancer earlier if I was doing that.”

These comments appear to be borne out by data released last year by the American Cancer Society (ACS), which found that the number of number of cancer-related suicides in the United States was on the decline, as reported by this news organization.

Some of the biggest decreases occurred in men with prostate cancer, although prostate cancer was associated with 15% of cancer-related suicides. Only lung cancer was associated with more cancer-related suicides, at 18%.

A factor in the decrease in cancer-related suicides was likely to be an increase in the use of supportive care services, the ACS researchers commented.

“Although no causal relationship can be established, our findings suggest an evolving role of psycho-oncology care and palliative and hospice care given the promotion and increased utilization of these services among cancer patients during this period,” they commented.

The study was funded by the Cancer Institute NSW. Dr. Mazariego and colleagues have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

 

Although prostate cancer is the second most common cancer in men worldwide, it is not a lethal cancer: Improvements in early detection and treatment have boosted the 10-year relative survival rate to 98%.

But for many men, life after treatment is an ongoing struggle.

One of the first qualitative survey studies of long-term prostate cancer survivorship in Australia found that many survivors are living with adverse effects such as urinary incontinence and sexual dysfunction and that they continue to have heightened feelings of distress.

Many of the patients surveyed said that they had not received follow-up care and felt they had been “abandoned” by their health care professionals.

One man called it “the survivorship abyss.”

“As the prevalence of prostate cancer survivors continues to grow globally, the absence of integrated shared survivorship care models into clinical practice, such as survivorship care guidelines/plans and/or interventions, will perpetuate the sense of abandonment and the overwhelming burden of care of men lost in the PC [prostate cancer] ‘survivorship abyss,’” say the authors.

The report was published online in Psycho-Oncology.

“The good news is that more men than ever before are surviving prostate cancer,” commented lead author Carolyn G. Mazariego, PhD, a research fellow at the Daffodil Center of the Cancer Council New South Wales and the University of Sydney.

“As our population grows and ages, an increasing number of men are facing these survivorship challenges, and the need for clear survivorship care guidelines becomes increasingly vital,” Dr. Mazariego told this news organization.
 

Details of the survey findings

To find participants for their study, the team drew upon a cohort of 578 men who were included in the 15-year follow-up phase of the longitudinal New South Wales Prostate Cancer Care and Outcomes Study (PCOS).

The researchers interviewed 37 men for the study. The majority (88.6%) had been diagnosed with localized disease, and just over half (54%) had undergone radical prostatectomy as their primary treatment.

Some expressed regret over having had surgery. One respondent, a 15-year survivor, commented: “I really didn’t know how intrusive [surgery] was as far as losing the length of my penis and its functions. To this day, I sometimes can’t believe it’s happened. It’s devastating.”

The survey also found that most survivors viewed active treatment as the only way to avoid death.

In hindsight, some questioned whether radical treatment was necessary and whether they might have been better served by active surveillance.

Many said they were never given a chance to discuss sexual dysfunction, and others said their questions sparked an awkward, limited conversation. Many said they suffered in silence.

“We know that there is a sort of ‘cycle of silence’ between patients and health care providers about sexual issues, and that was particularly true for the men we spoke to,” Dr. Mazariego said. “This cycle of silence can stem from confusion and ambiguity as to who men should speak with regarding these ongoing issues.”

“It’s just like being part of a secret society,” said one survivor. “Like you don’t know about it until you’re in it ... I don’t think people want to know if they have it [prostate cancer] or want it known. It’s all hush hush.”

Prostate cancer patients often feel uncomfortable talking about sexual function, Dr. Mazariego pointed out. “Many men instead internalized these thoughts or concerns and just ‘got on’ with life.”

One survey participant said: “Well, you just gotta deal with it [issues relating to prostate cancer]. Just got to try and wipe out the thoughts, that’s all you can do. Suck it up and carry on.”
 

 

 

Discussions must be part of standard of care

Dr. Mazariego emphasized that for prostate cancer survivorship to improve, conversations about the psychosocial needs of patients must be normalized and made routine. Discussions about post-treatment side effects that cause functional impairments and are stressful to relationships must be embedded into the standards of care, she added. This will allow physicians to use these kinds of conversations “as a springboard for referrals to appropriate care.”

“Patients of all ages will have concerns related to sex and sexual function, whether you ask about them or not,” said Brad Zebrack, PhD, MSW, MPH, professor at the University of Michigan School of Social Work, Ann Arbor, who was approached for comment.

At the very least, physicians should be prepared to “acknowledge and describe possible effects of therapy on sex and sexual function and follow up by describing available supports for education and either individual or couples counseling,” said Dr. Zebrack, who is also a member of the health behavior and outcomes research program at the Rogel Cancer Center.

Physicians can also refer patients to evidence-based resources and toolkits, he said. He noted that Will2Love offers self-help programs for cancer-related sexual problems and is “an outstanding resource.”
 

Distress screening needed

Universal psychosocial distress screening is needed to identify men with prostate cancer who have high levels of distress, argues Jeff Dunn, AO, PhD, who is CEO of the Prostate Cancer Foundation of Australia (PCFA), in Sydney.

Without this, men will not seek help for their unmet needs, Dr. Dunn noted in a 2019 editorial in the European Journal of Cancer Care.

The unmet psychosocial needs of prostate cancer patients and their partners “are highly prevalent,” said Dr. Dunn and co-author Suzanne K. Chambers, AO, PhD, dean of the Faculty of Health at the University of Technology Sydney. “...[F]or many prostate cancer survivors, the physical, social, psychological and relationship challenges will be long term, if not lifelong,” they write.

Even in Australia, where 1 in every 6 men are expected to be diagnosed with prostate cancer by age 85, efforts to improve survivorship care have not produced the desired results, they note.

In 2019, the PCFA published a monograph in which the organization recommended routine distress screenings and referrals to evidence-based psychosocial care for prostate cancer survivors. The foundation predicted that it would be “a game-changer for every Australian man impacted by the disease.”

“Yet, we still do not have a national survivorship care plan for prostate cancer survivors in Australia,” Dr. Mazariego said.

Left untreated, the psychosocial effects of prostate cancer “are considerable and certainly factors that should be considered as a threat to well-being,” she emphasized.

“Certainly, accumulation of unmet psychosocial needs increases risks for depression and suicide, which is true in both cancer and noncancer populations,” said Dr. Zebrack.

Data back this up. One study of patients with prostate cancer found that after diagnosis, 1 in 4 experienced anxiety, and 1 in 5 experienced depression. Another study found that the risk for suicide was higher among men with prostate cancer during the first year after diagnosis than among men with other solid-organ malignancies.

More recently, a 2018 population-based Australian cohort study of men in New South Wales revealed that the risk for death by suicide was 70% higher among men who had been diagnosed with prostate cancer compared with men in the general population. This risk was higher within the first year following diagnosis and was higher in men with nonlocalized disease, those who were single, those who were living in a major city, and those who were unmarried.

Dr. Mazariego and the team reporting the survey found that men who received supportive care had a greater chance of reconciling living with functional impairments. “Receiving adequate survivorship care and trusting patient-clinician relationships appeared to be associated with greater resilience and positivity in the men’s acceptance of cancer-related, long-term challenges and personal limitations,” they note.
 

 

 

Developing postcancer identity

Survivors also appeared to have developed a post-cancer identity that was more invested in personal relationships or in taking a more active role in their own health.

“Treating my prostate cancer gave me a second chance,” said one survivor. “Yeah, I’m a survivor, but more importantly, I’m a loving husband now. I know I wasn’t as giving back then.”

Another man admitted that before his diagnosis, he never went to the doctor. “I go much more often now,” he said. “You need to check up on yourself, at least once a year. Could have caught the cancer earlier if I was doing that.”

These comments appear to be borne out by data released last year by the American Cancer Society (ACS), which found that the number of number of cancer-related suicides in the United States was on the decline, as reported by this news organization.

Some of the biggest decreases occurred in men with prostate cancer, although prostate cancer was associated with 15% of cancer-related suicides. Only lung cancer was associated with more cancer-related suicides, at 18%.

A factor in the decrease in cancer-related suicides was likely to be an increase in the use of supportive care services, the ACS researchers commented.

“Although no causal relationship can be established, our findings suggest an evolving role of psycho-oncology care and palliative and hospice care given the promotion and increased utilization of these services among cancer patients during this period,” they commented.

The study was funded by the Cancer Institute NSW. Dr. Mazariego and colleagues have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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New road map for CRC screening: Use more stool tests, says AGA

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Changed
Wed, 05/26/2021 - 13:43

A radical change in screening for colorectal cancer (CRC) is being proposed in the United States, where the default screening modality to date has been colonoscopy.

Instead, the American Gastroenterological Association is proposing new approaches that combine better risk assessment, more use of noninvasive testing (such as fecal occult blood tests), and more targeted referrals for colonoscopy. Such changes could increase patient compliance and “save countless lives.”

“We need to improve our strategies to curb the cancer that ranks second for deaths in the U.S.,” commented Srinadh Komanduri, MD, chair of the AGA Center for GI Innovation and Technology, in a statement.

“Approximately 67% of eligible Americans are screened for colorectal cancer,” he said, which means that a third (33%) are not.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, the proportion of individuals not being screened has increased. One report of medical claims data showed that colonoscopies dropped by 90% during April.

The proposed changes are outlined in an AGA white paper: “Roadmap for the Future of Colorectal Cancer Screening in the United States.”

The report, written following consultation with 60 gastroenterology and research experts, was published online in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology.

It proposed that alternative testing modalities to colonoscopy will need to be integrated into organized screening programs.

Rather than offering colonoscopy as the default screening method for all patients at risk, the AGA advised that it be offered initially only to patients at high risk, which would increase access for those who need it most. For patients at lower risk, noninvasive screening methods, such as fecal occult blood testing, could be offered initially and then integrated with colonoscopy.

“If we offered tests that were convenient, accurate, and of lower cost, and we could help people choose the best option based on their individual cancer risks, we would save more lives,” Joshua E. Melson, MD, MPH, lead author of the AGA white paper and professor at Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, said in an interview.

Screening can reduce CRC mortality by more than 50%, he added.

“Screening should be thought of as a process over time, not a single test isolated in time,” Dr. Melson commented. A clinical practice that has historically used only colonoscopy will need an organized, structured program to incorporate noninvasive testing, he said.

To date, efforts to increase CRC screening uptake have met with limited success, the AGA says. In 2014, the National Colorectal Cancer Round Table set the bar high with a 2018 screening goal of 80% for adults 50 years of age and older. As of 2020, some states had almost reached this goal, but most had not.

“In the opportunistic screening environment in the U.S., where colonoscopy is the most prevalent method, CRC screening has not reached aspirational goals in terms of uptake, reduction in CRC incidence, and disease burden,” the AGA said. “It is questionable if 80% uptake is achievable in a primarily opportunistic screening environment.”

In the proposed revamping of the current CRC screening infrastructure, patients whose physicians recommend CRC screening would no longer be left to their own devices to follow up. Clinicians would initiate CRC screening and oversee follow-up testing at defined intervals and would employ ongoing surveillance.

Ensuring that appropriate screening is readily available to at-risk individuals with no social, racial, or economic disparities is crucial, the AGA says. Racial disparities in access to screening disproportionately burden Blacks and Latin Americans as well as people living in rural areas. Screening differences account for 42% of the disparity in CRC incidence between Black and White Americans and 19% of the disparity in CRC mortality.

Compared with colonoscopy, which requires bowel preparation, time off from work, and a hospital or clinic procedure, the fecal immunochemical test (FIT), for which a patient provides stool samples that are examined for the presence of blood, is much less stressful: it is noninvasive, and the patients collect the samples themselves in their own home. Studies show that, in diverse environments, patients prefer FIT over colonoscopy.

In a controlled trial that involved more than 55,000 patients who were randomly assigned to undergo either FIT or colonoscopy, the participation rate in the first cycle was greater for FIT than for colonoscopy (34.2% vs. 24.6%). This partially offset the lower single-application sensitivity for CRC of FIT, the researchers said.

Results from a study with a cluster randomized design showed that offering up-front stool testing as an option in addition to colonoscopy increased screening uptake. Of patients offered fecal occult blood testing or colonoscopy, 69% completed the noninvasive screening, compared with 38% of those offered colonoscopy alone. Notably, non-White participants were more adherent to stool testing.

The success of the AGA’s new initiative hinges largely upon the development of affordable, highly accurate, easy-to-use, noninvasive tests. In this regard, the organization has challenged scientists and industry partners with an aspirational target that is “far superior to current methodologies in terms of sensitivity and specificity,” said Dr. Melson, who is associate professor at Rush Medical College, Chicago, and a member of the AGA Center for GI Innovation and Technology.

The AGA wants new CRC screening tests that are capable of detecting advanced adenomas and advanced serrated lesions with a one-time sensitivity and specificity of 90% or higher, which is comparable with colonoscopy.

The FIT test has a sensitivity of less than 50% for detecting an advanced polyp of 10 mm or larger, said Dr. Melson.

The multitarget stool DNA (MT-sDNA) test may offer some improvement.

In a 2014 pivotal trial that compared FIT with the MT-sDNA in patients at average risk, the MT-sDNA test had higher sensitivity for detecting nonadvanced CRC lesions than FIT (92% vs. 74%) but less specificity (87% vs. 95%). The rate of detection of polyps with high-grade dysplasia was 69.2% with DNA testing and 46.2% with FIT.

However, the MT-sDNA test costs more than $500, compared with $25 for the FIT test, Dr. Melson pointed out.

To help identify the most appropriate screening for individual patients, better understanding and more thorough identification of risk factors are needed. “Risk assessment is definitely not where it could be,” Dr. Melson said.

The accuracy of risk assessment can be improved by sharing information from electronic health records on past colonoscopy polyp data, the presence of molecular markers, and family history, the AGA said. “With clearer risk assessment, shared decision-making on the most appropriate test becomes more clear and screening rates would benefit from patient buy-in and from easier access.”

The AGA recommended that research focus on the cost-effectiveness of screening younger patients, because the proportion of CRC cases in adults aged younger than 50 years has doubled since 1990.

This has raised the question as to whether the age for initial CRC screening should be lowered to 45 years (it already has been by the American Cancer Society), but there is much debate over this move.

Dr. Melson has received consulting fees from Clinical Genomics and research support from Boston Scientific Corporation and holds stocks in Virgo Imaging. A number of AGA white paper coauthors have disclosed relevant financial relationships.

 

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

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A radical change in screening for colorectal cancer (CRC) is being proposed in the United States, where the default screening modality to date has been colonoscopy.

Instead, the American Gastroenterological Association is proposing new approaches that combine better risk assessment, more use of noninvasive testing (such as fecal occult blood tests), and more targeted referrals for colonoscopy. Such changes could increase patient compliance and “save countless lives.”

“We need to improve our strategies to curb the cancer that ranks second for deaths in the U.S.,” commented Srinadh Komanduri, MD, chair of the AGA Center for GI Innovation and Technology, in a statement.

“Approximately 67% of eligible Americans are screened for colorectal cancer,” he said, which means that a third (33%) are not.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, the proportion of individuals not being screened has increased. One report of medical claims data showed that colonoscopies dropped by 90% during April.

The proposed changes are outlined in an AGA white paper: “Roadmap for the Future of Colorectal Cancer Screening in the United States.”

The report, written following consultation with 60 gastroenterology and research experts, was published online in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology.

It proposed that alternative testing modalities to colonoscopy will need to be integrated into organized screening programs.

Rather than offering colonoscopy as the default screening method for all patients at risk, the AGA advised that it be offered initially only to patients at high risk, which would increase access for those who need it most. For patients at lower risk, noninvasive screening methods, such as fecal occult blood testing, could be offered initially and then integrated with colonoscopy.

“If we offered tests that were convenient, accurate, and of lower cost, and we could help people choose the best option based on their individual cancer risks, we would save more lives,” Joshua E. Melson, MD, MPH, lead author of the AGA white paper and professor at Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, said in an interview.

Screening can reduce CRC mortality by more than 50%, he added.

“Screening should be thought of as a process over time, not a single test isolated in time,” Dr. Melson commented. A clinical practice that has historically used only colonoscopy will need an organized, structured program to incorporate noninvasive testing, he said.

To date, efforts to increase CRC screening uptake have met with limited success, the AGA says. In 2014, the National Colorectal Cancer Round Table set the bar high with a 2018 screening goal of 80% for adults 50 years of age and older. As of 2020, some states had almost reached this goal, but most had not.

“In the opportunistic screening environment in the U.S., where colonoscopy is the most prevalent method, CRC screening has not reached aspirational goals in terms of uptake, reduction in CRC incidence, and disease burden,” the AGA said. “It is questionable if 80% uptake is achievable in a primarily opportunistic screening environment.”

In the proposed revamping of the current CRC screening infrastructure, patients whose physicians recommend CRC screening would no longer be left to their own devices to follow up. Clinicians would initiate CRC screening and oversee follow-up testing at defined intervals and would employ ongoing surveillance.

Ensuring that appropriate screening is readily available to at-risk individuals with no social, racial, or economic disparities is crucial, the AGA says. Racial disparities in access to screening disproportionately burden Blacks and Latin Americans as well as people living in rural areas. Screening differences account for 42% of the disparity in CRC incidence between Black and White Americans and 19% of the disparity in CRC mortality.

Compared with colonoscopy, which requires bowel preparation, time off from work, and a hospital or clinic procedure, the fecal immunochemical test (FIT), for which a patient provides stool samples that are examined for the presence of blood, is much less stressful: it is noninvasive, and the patients collect the samples themselves in their own home. Studies show that, in diverse environments, patients prefer FIT over colonoscopy.

In a controlled trial that involved more than 55,000 patients who were randomly assigned to undergo either FIT or colonoscopy, the participation rate in the first cycle was greater for FIT than for colonoscopy (34.2% vs. 24.6%). This partially offset the lower single-application sensitivity for CRC of FIT, the researchers said.

Results from a study with a cluster randomized design showed that offering up-front stool testing as an option in addition to colonoscopy increased screening uptake. Of patients offered fecal occult blood testing or colonoscopy, 69% completed the noninvasive screening, compared with 38% of those offered colonoscopy alone. Notably, non-White participants were more adherent to stool testing.

The success of the AGA’s new initiative hinges largely upon the development of affordable, highly accurate, easy-to-use, noninvasive tests. In this regard, the organization has challenged scientists and industry partners with an aspirational target that is “far superior to current methodologies in terms of sensitivity and specificity,” said Dr. Melson, who is associate professor at Rush Medical College, Chicago, and a member of the AGA Center for GI Innovation and Technology.

The AGA wants new CRC screening tests that are capable of detecting advanced adenomas and advanced serrated lesions with a one-time sensitivity and specificity of 90% or higher, which is comparable with colonoscopy.

The FIT test has a sensitivity of less than 50% for detecting an advanced polyp of 10 mm or larger, said Dr. Melson.

The multitarget stool DNA (MT-sDNA) test may offer some improvement.

In a 2014 pivotal trial that compared FIT with the MT-sDNA in patients at average risk, the MT-sDNA test had higher sensitivity for detecting nonadvanced CRC lesions than FIT (92% vs. 74%) but less specificity (87% vs. 95%). The rate of detection of polyps with high-grade dysplasia was 69.2% with DNA testing and 46.2% with FIT.

However, the MT-sDNA test costs more than $500, compared with $25 for the FIT test, Dr. Melson pointed out.

To help identify the most appropriate screening for individual patients, better understanding and more thorough identification of risk factors are needed. “Risk assessment is definitely not where it could be,” Dr. Melson said.

The accuracy of risk assessment can be improved by sharing information from electronic health records on past colonoscopy polyp data, the presence of molecular markers, and family history, the AGA said. “With clearer risk assessment, shared decision-making on the most appropriate test becomes more clear and screening rates would benefit from patient buy-in and from easier access.”

The AGA recommended that research focus on the cost-effectiveness of screening younger patients, because the proportion of CRC cases in adults aged younger than 50 years has doubled since 1990.

This has raised the question as to whether the age for initial CRC screening should be lowered to 45 years (it already has been by the American Cancer Society), but there is much debate over this move.

Dr. Melson has received consulting fees from Clinical Genomics and research support from Boston Scientific Corporation and holds stocks in Virgo Imaging. A number of AGA white paper coauthors have disclosed relevant financial relationships.

 

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

A radical change in screening for colorectal cancer (CRC) is being proposed in the United States, where the default screening modality to date has been colonoscopy.

Instead, the American Gastroenterological Association is proposing new approaches that combine better risk assessment, more use of noninvasive testing (such as fecal occult blood tests), and more targeted referrals for colonoscopy. Such changes could increase patient compliance and “save countless lives.”

“We need to improve our strategies to curb the cancer that ranks second for deaths in the U.S.,” commented Srinadh Komanduri, MD, chair of the AGA Center for GI Innovation and Technology, in a statement.

“Approximately 67% of eligible Americans are screened for colorectal cancer,” he said, which means that a third (33%) are not.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, the proportion of individuals not being screened has increased. One report of medical claims data showed that colonoscopies dropped by 90% during April.

The proposed changes are outlined in an AGA white paper: “Roadmap for the Future of Colorectal Cancer Screening in the United States.”

The report, written following consultation with 60 gastroenterology and research experts, was published online in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology.

It proposed that alternative testing modalities to colonoscopy will need to be integrated into organized screening programs.

Rather than offering colonoscopy as the default screening method for all patients at risk, the AGA advised that it be offered initially only to patients at high risk, which would increase access for those who need it most. For patients at lower risk, noninvasive screening methods, such as fecal occult blood testing, could be offered initially and then integrated with colonoscopy.

“If we offered tests that were convenient, accurate, and of lower cost, and we could help people choose the best option based on their individual cancer risks, we would save more lives,” Joshua E. Melson, MD, MPH, lead author of the AGA white paper and professor at Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, said in an interview.

Screening can reduce CRC mortality by more than 50%, he added.

“Screening should be thought of as a process over time, not a single test isolated in time,” Dr. Melson commented. A clinical practice that has historically used only colonoscopy will need an organized, structured program to incorporate noninvasive testing, he said.

To date, efforts to increase CRC screening uptake have met with limited success, the AGA says. In 2014, the National Colorectal Cancer Round Table set the bar high with a 2018 screening goal of 80% for adults 50 years of age and older. As of 2020, some states had almost reached this goal, but most had not.

“In the opportunistic screening environment in the U.S., where colonoscopy is the most prevalent method, CRC screening has not reached aspirational goals in terms of uptake, reduction in CRC incidence, and disease burden,” the AGA said. “It is questionable if 80% uptake is achievable in a primarily opportunistic screening environment.”

In the proposed revamping of the current CRC screening infrastructure, patients whose physicians recommend CRC screening would no longer be left to their own devices to follow up. Clinicians would initiate CRC screening and oversee follow-up testing at defined intervals and would employ ongoing surveillance.

Ensuring that appropriate screening is readily available to at-risk individuals with no social, racial, or economic disparities is crucial, the AGA says. Racial disparities in access to screening disproportionately burden Blacks and Latin Americans as well as people living in rural areas. Screening differences account for 42% of the disparity in CRC incidence between Black and White Americans and 19% of the disparity in CRC mortality.

Compared with colonoscopy, which requires bowel preparation, time off from work, and a hospital or clinic procedure, the fecal immunochemical test (FIT), for which a patient provides stool samples that are examined for the presence of blood, is much less stressful: it is noninvasive, and the patients collect the samples themselves in their own home. Studies show that, in diverse environments, patients prefer FIT over colonoscopy.

In a controlled trial that involved more than 55,000 patients who were randomly assigned to undergo either FIT or colonoscopy, the participation rate in the first cycle was greater for FIT than for colonoscopy (34.2% vs. 24.6%). This partially offset the lower single-application sensitivity for CRC of FIT, the researchers said.

Results from a study with a cluster randomized design showed that offering up-front stool testing as an option in addition to colonoscopy increased screening uptake. Of patients offered fecal occult blood testing or colonoscopy, 69% completed the noninvasive screening, compared with 38% of those offered colonoscopy alone. Notably, non-White participants were more adherent to stool testing.

The success of the AGA’s new initiative hinges largely upon the development of affordable, highly accurate, easy-to-use, noninvasive tests. In this regard, the organization has challenged scientists and industry partners with an aspirational target that is “far superior to current methodologies in terms of sensitivity and specificity,” said Dr. Melson, who is associate professor at Rush Medical College, Chicago, and a member of the AGA Center for GI Innovation and Technology.

The AGA wants new CRC screening tests that are capable of detecting advanced adenomas and advanced serrated lesions with a one-time sensitivity and specificity of 90% or higher, which is comparable with colonoscopy.

The FIT test has a sensitivity of less than 50% for detecting an advanced polyp of 10 mm or larger, said Dr. Melson.

The multitarget stool DNA (MT-sDNA) test may offer some improvement.

In a 2014 pivotal trial that compared FIT with the MT-sDNA in patients at average risk, the MT-sDNA test had higher sensitivity for detecting nonadvanced CRC lesions than FIT (92% vs. 74%) but less specificity (87% vs. 95%). The rate of detection of polyps with high-grade dysplasia was 69.2% with DNA testing and 46.2% with FIT.

However, the MT-sDNA test costs more than $500, compared with $25 for the FIT test, Dr. Melson pointed out.

To help identify the most appropriate screening for individual patients, better understanding and more thorough identification of risk factors are needed. “Risk assessment is definitely not where it could be,” Dr. Melson said.

The accuracy of risk assessment can be improved by sharing information from electronic health records on past colonoscopy polyp data, the presence of molecular markers, and family history, the AGA said. “With clearer risk assessment, shared decision-making on the most appropriate test becomes more clear and screening rates would benefit from patient buy-in and from easier access.”

The AGA recommended that research focus on the cost-effectiveness of screening younger patients, because the proportion of CRC cases in adults aged younger than 50 years has doubled since 1990.

This has raised the question as to whether the age for initial CRC screening should be lowered to 45 years (it already has been by the American Cancer Society), but there is much debate over this move.

Dr. Melson has received consulting fees from Clinical Genomics and research support from Boston Scientific Corporation and holds stocks in Virgo Imaging. A number of AGA white paper coauthors have disclosed relevant financial relationships.

 

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

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Does obesity reduce drug efficacy in breast cancer?

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Obesity has been shown to have an impact on the risk of developing breast cancer and on prognosis. A new study suggests that it may also have an effect on treatment.

A high body mass index (BMI) at the time of breast cancer diagnosis could reduce the efficacy of taxane-based adjuvant chemotherapy, worsening survival outcomes, the study suggests.

That study investigated docetaxel (Taxotere), which is a “lipophilic drug, suggesting that fat present in the body could absorb part of the drug before it can reach the tumor,” commented lead author Christine Desmedt, PhD, of the Laboratory for Translational Breast Cancer Research, Department of Oncology, Leuven, Belgium.

“These results also make us wonder whether other chemotherapy drugs from the same family, like paclitaxel (Taxol), will show the same effect,” she said in a statement.

If follow-up research confirms that the findings are related solely to the pharmacologic characteristics of docetaxel, the results may also apply to its use in other types of cancer, including prostate cancer and lung cancer, she added.

The finding that taxane chemotherapy was less effective in overweight patients “is a provocative observation,” commented Harold Burstein, MD, PhD, an oncologist and clinical investigator at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts.

“It should be explored in other trials that looked at adding taxanes to standard chemotherapy,” he told Medscape Medical News.
 

Worse outcomes in patients with high BMI

The study, published online in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, was a retrospective reanalysis of data from the phase 3 BIG 2-98 trial.

It shows that overweight and obese patients treated with a chemotherapy regimen based on docetaxel had significantly worse disease-free survival (DFS) and overall survival (OS) compared with lean patients treated with the same chemotherapy regimen.

Conversely, for patients treated with an adjuvant chemotherapy regimen that did not include docetaxel, there was no difference in DFS, OS, or in the rates of distant metastases in regard to BMI.

The finding “highlights a differential response to docetaxel according to BMI, which calls for a body composition–based re-evaluation of the risk-benefit ratio of the use of taxanes in breast cancer,” say the researchers. “These results now must be confirmed in additional series.”

The findings call into question results from earlier randomized clinical trials that did not evaluate the efficacy of most cancer drugs on the basis of patient adiposity, the researchers say.

Desmedt emphasized that more research is needed “before changes in treatment can be implemented.”

Experts approached by Medscape Medical News for comment agreed.

“It is important to remember that breast cancer patients needing chemotherapy should still receive the usual chemotherapy regimens, including taxanes, regardless of their weight or habitus,” commented Burstein, who is also professor of medicine at Harvard University.

These data highlight a persistent disparity in breast cancer outcomes, he told Medscape Medical News. Previous studies have shown that overweight patients often have less favorable outcomes. “There are many contributors to poor health outcomes in people with higher BMI, including concurrent health issues such as diabetes and/or hypertension, and unfortunately, the clear link between socioeconomic status and obesity,” he added.

Megan Kruse, MD, of the department of hematology and medical oncology at the Cleveland Clinic, said she “would not make changes in my treatment recommendations based on this study alone.”

Kruse was surprised that when the analysis was restricted to patients who received a relative dose intensity ≥85% for docetaxel, the same reduced rates of DFS and OS were seen as in patients with a high BMI.

“One may have suspected, based on the overall results, that patients with inferior survival outcomes actually received less chemotherapy due to [the] tendency to cap doses of chemotherapy in patients with high BMIs,” she explained.

“Since this analysis keeps dose intensity in mind, the association between BMI and survival outcomes is stronger in my mind. It does not, however, rule out that there are other confounding factors,” Kruse told Medscape Medical News.

Whether the results can be replicated in other retrospective clinical trials remains to be seen, she commented. Noting that the investigators plan to develop a prospective pharmacokinetics study across the BMI spectrum, Kruse added: “This will be of great interest as we plan curative-intent chemotherapy trials moving forward.”

 

 



Study details

For the current study, the investigators analyzed data from all 2,887 breast cancer patients enrolled in the adjuvant BIG 2-98 trial. They compared the survival outcomes of those who received docetaxel-based chemotherapy with those who received non-docetaxel-based chemotherapy in relation to their BMI. Patients with a BMI of 18.5 to 25 kg/m were classified as lean; patients with a BMI of 25-30 were classified as overweight; and those with a BMI ≥30 were classified as obese.

The researchers also assessed a second-order interaction on the basis of treatment, BMI, and estrogen receptor (ER) status.

The results showed that in the overweight women, compared with lean women, the adjusted hazard ratios (HRs) for DFS and OS were 1.12 (95% CI, 98 – 1.50; P = .21) and 1.27 (95% CI,101 – 1.60; P = .04), respectively. For obese vs lean patients, the HRs for DFS and OS were 1.32 (95% CI, 108 – 162; P = .007) and 1.63 (95% CI, 1.27 – 2.09; P < .001), respectively.

The survival outcomes were similar when only those patients who received a relative dose intensity ≥85% for docetaxel were considered. However, when ER-negative and ER-positive tumors were considered separately, the researchers found evidence of a joint modifying role of BMI and ER status on treatment effect for DFS (adjusted P =.06) and OS (adjusted P = .04).

“[I]t appears that the benefit for docetaxel-based versus nondocetaxel-based treatment could be limited to lean and overweight patients with ER-positive tumors and, possibly, to lean patients with ER-negative tumors…,” Desmedt and colleagues comment.

It may even be possible that docetaxel-based treatment could be detrimental for overweight patients with ER-negative tumors, they note, but warn that these results should be interpreted with caution.

The investigators note that, worldwide, the proportion of women with increased adiposity has been increasing for decades. In Europe, it is estimated that more than 50% of women are overweight and obese. In the United States, almost 64% of women have a BMI >25 kg/mg2.

Previous studies have shown that, in postmenopausal women, a high BMI is associated with a higher risk of developing breast cancer and that, in women who do develop breast cancer, the prognosis is worse. In addition, a recent study demonstrated that increased adiposity can raise the risk for breast cancer in postmenopausal women whose BMI is in the normal range.

The study was funded in part by Fondation Cancer Luxemburg and Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro AIRC. Desmedt has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. A number of study coauthors reported relationships with industry.

This story first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Obesity has been shown to have an impact on the risk of developing breast cancer and on prognosis. A new study suggests that it may also have an effect on treatment.

A high body mass index (BMI) at the time of breast cancer diagnosis could reduce the efficacy of taxane-based adjuvant chemotherapy, worsening survival outcomes, the study suggests.

That study investigated docetaxel (Taxotere), which is a “lipophilic drug, suggesting that fat present in the body could absorb part of the drug before it can reach the tumor,” commented lead author Christine Desmedt, PhD, of the Laboratory for Translational Breast Cancer Research, Department of Oncology, Leuven, Belgium.

“These results also make us wonder whether other chemotherapy drugs from the same family, like paclitaxel (Taxol), will show the same effect,” she said in a statement.

If follow-up research confirms that the findings are related solely to the pharmacologic characteristics of docetaxel, the results may also apply to its use in other types of cancer, including prostate cancer and lung cancer, she added.

The finding that taxane chemotherapy was less effective in overweight patients “is a provocative observation,” commented Harold Burstein, MD, PhD, an oncologist and clinical investigator at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts.

“It should be explored in other trials that looked at adding taxanes to standard chemotherapy,” he told Medscape Medical News.
 

Worse outcomes in patients with high BMI

The study, published online in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, was a retrospective reanalysis of data from the phase 3 BIG 2-98 trial.

It shows that overweight and obese patients treated with a chemotherapy regimen based on docetaxel had significantly worse disease-free survival (DFS) and overall survival (OS) compared with lean patients treated with the same chemotherapy regimen.

Conversely, for patients treated with an adjuvant chemotherapy regimen that did not include docetaxel, there was no difference in DFS, OS, or in the rates of distant metastases in regard to BMI.

The finding “highlights a differential response to docetaxel according to BMI, which calls for a body composition–based re-evaluation of the risk-benefit ratio of the use of taxanes in breast cancer,” say the researchers. “These results now must be confirmed in additional series.”

The findings call into question results from earlier randomized clinical trials that did not evaluate the efficacy of most cancer drugs on the basis of patient adiposity, the researchers say.

Desmedt emphasized that more research is needed “before changes in treatment can be implemented.”

Experts approached by Medscape Medical News for comment agreed.

“It is important to remember that breast cancer patients needing chemotherapy should still receive the usual chemotherapy regimens, including taxanes, regardless of their weight or habitus,” commented Burstein, who is also professor of medicine at Harvard University.

These data highlight a persistent disparity in breast cancer outcomes, he told Medscape Medical News. Previous studies have shown that overweight patients often have less favorable outcomes. “There are many contributors to poor health outcomes in people with higher BMI, including concurrent health issues such as diabetes and/or hypertension, and unfortunately, the clear link between socioeconomic status and obesity,” he added.

Megan Kruse, MD, of the department of hematology and medical oncology at the Cleveland Clinic, said she “would not make changes in my treatment recommendations based on this study alone.”

Kruse was surprised that when the analysis was restricted to patients who received a relative dose intensity ≥85% for docetaxel, the same reduced rates of DFS and OS were seen as in patients with a high BMI.

“One may have suspected, based on the overall results, that patients with inferior survival outcomes actually received less chemotherapy due to [the] tendency to cap doses of chemotherapy in patients with high BMIs,” she explained.

“Since this analysis keeps dose intensity in mind, the association between BMI and survival outcomes is stronger in my mind. It does not, however, rule out that there are other confounding factors,” Kruse told Medscape Medical News.

Whether the results can be replicated in other retrospective clinical trials remains to be seen, she commented. Noting that the investigators plan to develop a prospective pharmacokinetics study across the BMI spectrum, Kruse added: “This will be of great interest as we plan curative-intent chemotherapy trials moving forward.”

 

 



Study details

For the current study, the investigators analyzed data from all 2,887 breast cancer patients enrolled in the adjuvant BIG 2-98 trial. They compared the survival outcomes of those who received docetaxel-based chemotherapy with those who received non-docetaxel-based chemotherapy in relation to their BMI. Patients with a BMI of 18.5 to 25 kg/m were classified as lean; patients with a BMI of 25-30 were classified as overweight; and those with a BMI ≥30 were classified as obese.

The researchers also assessed a second-order interaction on the basis of treatment, BMI, and estrogen receptor (ER) status.

The results showed that in the overweight women, compared with lean women, the adjusted hazard ratios (HRs) for DFS and OS were 1.12 (95% CI, 98 – 1.50; P = .21) and 1.27 (95% CI,101 – 1.60; P = .04), respectively. For obese vs lean patients, the HRs for DFS and OS were 1.32 (95% CI, 108 – 162; P = .007) and 1.63 (95% CI, 1.27 – 2.09; P < .001), respectively.

The survival outcomes were similar when only those patients who received a relative dose intensity ≥85% for docetaxel were considered. However, when ER-negative and ER-positive tumors were considered separately, the researchers found evidence of a joint modifying role of BMI and ER status on treatment effect for DFS (adjusted P =.06) and OS (adjusted P = .04).

“[I]t appears that the benefit for docetaxel-based versus nondocetaxel-based treatment could be limited to lean and overweight patients with ER-positive tumors and, possibly, to lean patients with ER-negative tumors…,” Desmedt and colleagues comment.

It may even be possible that docetaxel-based treatment could be detrimental for overweight patients with ER-negative tumors, they note, but warn that these results should be interpreted with caution.

The investigators note that, worldwide, the proportion of women with increased adiposity has been increasing for decades. In Europe, it is estimated that more than 50% of women are overweight and obese. In the United States, almost 64% of women have a BMI >25 kg/mg2.

Previous studies have shown that, in postmenopausal women, a high BMI is associated with a higher risk of developing breast cancer and that, in women who do develop breast cancer, the prognosis is worse. In addition, a recent study demonstrated that increased adiposity can raise the risk for breast cancer in postmenopausal women whose BMI is in the normal range.

The study was funded in part by Fondation Cancer Luxemburg and Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro AIRC. Desmedt has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. A number of study coauthors reported relationships with industry.

This story first appeared on Medscape.com.

Obesity has been shown to have an impact on the risk of developing breast cancer and on prognosis. A new study suggests that it may also have an effect on treatment.

A high body mass index (BMI) at the time of breast cancer diagnosis could reduce the efficacy of taxane-based adjuvant chemotherapy, worsening survival outcomes, the study suggests.

That study investigated docetaxel (Taxotere), which is a “lipophilic drug, suggesting that fat present in the body could absorb part of the drug before it can reach the tumor,” commented lead author Christine Desmedt, PhD, of the Laboratory for Translational Breast Cancer Research, Department of Oncology, Leuven, Belgium.

“These results also make us wonder whether other chemotherapy drugs from the same family, like paclitaxel (Taxol), will show the same effect,” she said in a statement.

If follow-up research confirms that the findings are related solely to the pharmacologic characteristics of docetaxel, the results may also apply to its use in other types of cancer, including prostate cancer and lung cancer, she added.

The finding that taxane chemotherapy was less effective in overweight patients “is a provocative observation,” commented Harold Burstein, MD, PhD, an oncologist and clinical investigator at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts.

“It should be explored in other trials that looked at adding taxanes to standard chemotherapy,” he told Medscape Medical News.
 

Worse outcomes in patients with high BMI

The study, published online in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, was a retrospective reanalysis of data from the phase 3 BIG 2-98 trial.

It shows that overweight and obese patients treated with a chemotherapy regimen based on docetaxel had significantly worse disease-free survival (DFS) and overall survival (OS) compared with lean patients treated with the same chemotherapy regimen.

Conversely, for patients treated with an adjuvant chemotherapy regimen that did not include docetaxel, there was no difference in DFS, OS, or in the rates of distant metastases in regard to BMI.

The finding “highlights a differential response to docetaxel according to BMI, which calls for a body composition–based re-evaluation of the risk-benefit ratio of the use of taxanes in breast cancer,” say the researchers. “These results now must be confirmed in additional series.”

The findings call into question results from earlier randomized clinical trials that did not evaluate the efficacy of most cancer drugs on the basis of patient adiposity, the researchers say.

Desmedt emphasized that more research is needed “before changes in treatment can be implemented.”

Experts approached by Medscape Medical News for comment agreed.

“It is important to remember that breast cancer patients needing chemotherapy should still receive the usual chemotherapy regimens, including taxanes, regardless of their weight or habitus,” commented Burstein, who is also professor of medicine at Harvard University.

These data highlight a persistent disparity in breast cancer outcomes, he told Medscape Medical News. Previous studies have shown that overweight patients often have less favorable outcomes. “There are many contributors to poor health outcomes in people with higher BMI, including concurrent health issues such as diabetes and/or hypertension, and unfortunately, the clear link between socioeconomic status and obesity,” he added.

Megan Kruse, MD, of the department of hematology and medical oncology at the Cleveland Clinic, said she “would not make changes in my treatment recommendations based on this study alone.”

Kruse was surprised that when the analysis was restricted to patients who received a relative dose intensity ≥85% for docetaxel, the same reduced rates of DFS and OS were seen as in patients with a high BMI.

“One may have suspected, based on the overall results, that patients with inferior survival outcomes actually received less chemotherapy due to [the] tendency to cap doses of chemotherapy in patients with high BMIs,” she explained.

“Since this analysis keeps dose intensity in mind, the association between BMI and survival outcomes is stronger in my mind. It does not, however, rule out that there are other confounding factors,” Kruse told Medscape Medical News.

Whether the results can be replicated in other retrospective clinical trials remains to be seen, she commented. Noting that the investigators plan to develop a prospective pharmacokinetics study across the BMI spectrum, Kruse added: “This will be of great interest as we plan curative-intent chemotherapy trials moving forward.”

 

 



Study details

For the current study, the investigators analyzed data from all 2,887 breast cancer patients enrolled in the adjuvant BIG 2-98 trial. They compared the survival outcomes of those who received docetaxel-based chemotherapy with those who received non-docetaxel-based chemotherapy in relation to their BMI. Patients with a BMI of 18.5 to 25 kg/m were classified as lean; patients with a BMI of 25-30 were classified as overweight; and those with a BMI ≥30 were classified as obese.

The researchers also assessed a second-order interaction on the basis of treatment, BMI, and estrogen receptor (ER) status.

The results showed that in the overweight women, compared with lean women, the adjusted hazard ratios (HRs) for DFS and OS were 1.12 (95% CI, 98 – 1.50; P = .21) and 1.27 (95% CI,101 – 1.60; P = .04), respectively. For obese vs lean patients, the HRs for DFS and OS were 1.32 (95% CI, 108 – 162; P = .007) and 1.63 (95% CI, 1.27 – 2.09; P < .001), respectively.

The survival outcomes were similar when only those patients who received a relative dose intensity ≥85% for docetaxel were considered. However, when ER-negative and ER-positive tumors were considered separately, the researchers found evidence of a joint modifying role of BMI and ER status on treatment effect for DFS (adjusted P =.06) and OS (adjusted P = .04).

“[I]t appears that the benefit for docetaxel-based versus nondocetaxel-based treatment could be limited to lean and overweight patients with ER-positive tumors and, possibly, to lean patients with ER-negative tumors…,” Desmedt and colleagues comment.

It may even be possible that docetaxel-based treatment could be detrimental for overweight patients with ER-negative tumors, they note, but warn that these results should be interpreted with caution.

The investigators note that, worldwide, the proportion of women with increased adiposity has been increasing for decades. In Europe, it is estimated that more than 50% of women are overweight and obese. In the United States, almost 64% of women have a BMI >25 kg/mg2.

Previous studies have shown that, in postmenopausal women, a high BMI is associated with a higher risk of developing breast cancer and that, in women who do develop breast cancer, the prognosis is worse. In addition, a recent study demonstrated that increased adiposity can raise the risk for breast cancer in postmenopausal women whose BMI is in the normal range.

The study was funded in part by Fondation Cancer Luxemburg and Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro AIRC. Desmedt has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. A number of study coauthors reported relationships with industry.

This story first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Medscape Article

Liver cancer risk reduced by aspirin in chronic viral hepatitis

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Wed, 05/26/2021 - 13:45

 

The risk of liver cancer and liver-related death in patients with chronic viral hepatitis was substantially reduced with the use of low-dose aspirin, results from a nationwide study from Sweden suggest.

The risk of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) was reduced by 31% compared with no aspirin use, and liver-related mortality dropped by 27%, as long as aspirin use continued.

“We were excited to find for the first time in a nationwide Western population that low-dose aspirin use was associated with substantial reduction in risk of developing incident HCC,” lead author Tracey G. Simon, MD, MPH, of Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston, told Medscape Medical News.

The study was published in the March 12 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.

HCC is the fourth-leading cause of cancer mortality worldwide, and is driven mostly by viral hepatitis B (HBV) and viral hepatitis C (HCV) infection, noted Jennifer A. Flemming, MD, of Queen’s University, Kingston, Canada, an expert not involved with the study. HCC is also one of the only cancers to show a rising incidence over the past several decades, she added .

However, the results of this do not change clinical practice. “It is premature to prescribe low dose ASA [acetylsalicylic acid] in patients with viral hepatitis for the sole indication of HCC prevention in routine clinical practice without support from prospective randomized data,” she said.

“The results of this study make it clear that a prospective randomized study comparing ASA to placebo in patients with viral hepatitis without an indication for low-dose ASA is justified to evaluate the risk of incident HCC,” she told Medscape Medical News.

The study authors agree, and they also emphasize that the findings from this observational study “should not yet change clinical practice.”

More research is needed in populations with compensated and decompensated cirrhosis to determine the optimal timing of aspirin initiation — or cessation of therapy — that will maximize benefit and prevent adverse events, said Simon.

Study Details

Although several earlier studies have suggested a duration-dependent benefit of aspirin use in preventing HCC in smaller populations, this study is the first to confirm a duration-response relationship with low-dose aspirin use in an unselected European population with confirmed viral hepatitis, Simon pointed out.

For their study, Simon and colleagues used the Swedish Register for Surveillance of Communicable Diseases database to identify 50,275 adults diagnosed between 2005 and 2015 with acute and chronic HBV and HCV infection. Some 13,276 adults had HBV and 36,999 had HCV, and this included 14,205 low-dose (75 mg or 160 mg) aspirin users and 36,070 nonusers.

The analysis showed that in aspirin users, the 10-year cumulative incidence of HCC was 4% compared with 8.3% in nonusers. After multivariable adjustment, aspirin users had a risk of HCC that was 31% lower compared with nonusers (adjusted subhazard ratio, 0.69; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.62 - 0.76).

Patients taking low-dose aspirin had a 10-year liver-related mortality of 11% compared with 17.9% among nonusers. The adjusted risk of liver-related mortality was 27% lower in aspirin users than in nonusers.

There was no significant difference in the 10-year risk of gastrointestinal bleeding between users and nonusers of aspirin (7.8% and 6.9%, respectively). In addition, the analysis showed that the risks of any gastrointestinal bleeding were similar among aspirin-users with compensated cirrhosis and those without cirrhosis (8.3% and 7.5%, respectively).

Notably, the risk of HCC was significantly lower after 3 to 5 years of aspirin use and after 5 or more years of use (adjusted hazard ratio [HR], 0.66, 0.57, respectively) compared with short-term use (3 months to <1 year; adjusted HR, 0.90) or with intermittent, discontinued, or no aspirin use. But when those with chronic viral hepatitis stopped taking aspirin, their risk of HCC rose to become 22% higher compared with peers who continued to use aspirin.

The risk of liver-related death also rose by 31% in aspirin users who stopped taking aspirin compared with those who did not stop (subhazard ratio, 1.31). Again, this relationship appeared to be duration-dependent, with the risk of incident HCC rising sharply among those who discontinued aspirin and increasing in magnitude over time.

The consistency of aspirin use also influenced risk. In individuals who had an on-again, off-again pattern of aspirin use, the incidence of HCC was 5.9% compared with 1.1% in those who used it consistently.

“Our results were consistent regardless of sex, cause of hepatitis, or underlying compensated cirrhosis,” the authors write. “The consistent duration-response associations lend further credence to a potential causal relationship.”

 

 

Limitations of the Study

The current study findings are not new, but this is the best-designed study to date, commented Flemming. Still, there were a number of limitations, she noted. Although cirrhosis is the strongest risk factor for HCC in patients with viral hepatitis, for instance, it was assessed only at cohort entry, and not during the median 8 years of follow-up. There was also a lack of information about sustained virologic response (SVR) rates.

Since less than 25% of patients with HCV received HCV therapy, this indicates they were likely treated with interferon-based therapy, Flemming suggested. Interferon-based therapy is associated with much lower SVR rates than direct acting antiviral (DAA) therapy, which can produce SVR in approximately 95% of patients, she pointed out.

“Therefore, a large proportion of the study patients were likely viremic and at a higher baseline risk of HCC than contemporary HCV populations.”

Evidence from a number of studies indicates that achieving SVR with DAA therapy is associated with a 70% risk reduction for incident HCC and liver-related events, Flemming said. “Whether the use of ASA in patients who have achieved SVR provides the same HCC risk reduction and decrease in hepatic outcomes is unknown.”

Also, the study did not provide information on the specific type of HBV therapy used in patients with HBV, Flemming noted. When considering the prevention of HCC in patients with chronic HBV infection, recent data support a differential protective effect of tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (multiple brands) compared with entecavir (Baraclude, Bristol-Myers Squibb), she pointed out. As previously reported by Medscape Medical News, these data also indicate that tenofovir may be more effective than entecavir in reducing the risk of liver failure and all-cause mortality.

This study was funded by the US National Institutes of Health, Nyckelfonden, Region Stockholm County, the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, Boston Nutrition Obesity Research Council, Region Örebro County, and Karolinska Institutet. Simon has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. A number of study coauthors disclosed having relationships with industry; the full list can be found with the original article. Flemming reported relationships with Gilead Sciences Canada, AbbVie, and Lupin Pharmaceuticals.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

N Engl J Med. 2020 Mar 12. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa1912035.

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The risk of liver cancer and liver-related death in patients with chronic viral hepatitis was substantially reduced with the use of low-dose aspirin, results from a nationwide study from Sweden suggest.

The risk of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) was reduced by 31% compared with no aspirin use, and liver-related mortality dropped by 27%, as long as aspirin use continued.

“We were excited to find for the first time in a nationwide Western population that low-dose aspirin use was associated with substantial reduction in risk of developing incident HCC,” lead author Tracey G. Simon, MD, MPH, of Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston, told Medscape Medical News.

The study was published in the March 12 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.

HCC is the fourth-leading cause of cancer mortality worldwide, and is driven mostly by viral hepatitis B (HBV) and viral hepatitis C (HCV) infection, noted Jennifer A. Flemming, MD, of Queen’s University, Kingston, Canada, an expert not involved with the study. HCC is also one of the only cancers to show a rising incidence over the past several decades, she added .

However, the results of this do not change clinical practice. “It is premature to prescribe low dose ASA [acetylsalicylic acid] in patients with viral hepatitis for the sole indication of HCC prevention in routine clinical practice without support from prospective randomized data,” she said.

“The results of this study make it clear that a prospective randomized study comparing ASA to placebo in patients with viral hepatitis without an indication for low-dose ASA is justified to evaluate the risk of incident HCC,” she told Medscape Medical News.

The study authors agree, and they also emphasize that the findings from this observational study “should not yet change clinical practice.”

More research is needed in populations with compensated and decompensated cirrhosis to determine the optimal timing of aspirin initiation — or cessation of therapy — that will maximize benefit and prevent adverse events, said Simon.

Study Details

Although several earlier studies have suggested a duration-dependent benefit of aspirin use in preventing HCC in smaller populations, this study is the first to confirm a duration-response relationship with low-dose aspirin use in an unselected European population with confirmed viral hepatitis, Simon pointed out.

For their study, Simon and colleagues used the Swedish Register for Surveillance of Communicable Diseases database to identify 50,275 adults diagnosed between 2005 and 2015 with acute and chronic HBV and HCV infection. Some 13,276 adults had HBV and 36,999 had HCV, and this included 14,205 low-dose (75 mg or 160 mg) aspirin users and 36,070 nonusers.

The analysis showed that in aspirin users, the 10-year cumulative incidence of HCC was 4% compared with 8.3% in nonusers. After multivariable adjustment, aspirin users had a risk of HCC that was 31% lower compared with nonusers (adjusted subhazard ratio, 0.69; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.62 - 0.76).

Patients taking low-dose aspirin had a 10-year liver-related mortality of 11% compared with 17.9% among nonusers. The adjusted risk of liver-related mortality was 27% lower in aspirin users than in nonusers.

There was no significant difference in the 10-year risk of gastrointestinal bleeding between users and nonusers of aspirin (7.8% and 6.9%, respectively). In addition, the analysis showed that the risks of any gastrointestinal bleeding were similar among aspirin-users with compensated cirrhosis and those without cirrhosis (8.3% and 7.5%, respectively).

Notably, the risk of HCC was significantly lower after 3 to 5 years of aspirin use and after 5 or more years of use (adjusted hazard ratio [HR], 0.66, 0.57, respectively) compared with short-term use (3 months to <1 year; adjusted HR, 0.90) or with intermittent, discontinued, or no aspirin use. But when those with chronic viral hepatitis stopped taking aspirin, their risk of HCC rose to become 22% higher compared with peers who continued to use aspirin.

The risk of liver-related death also rose by 31% in aspirin users who stopped taking aspirin compared with those who did not stop (subhazard ratio, 1.31). Again, this relationship appeared to be duration-dependent, with the risk of incident HCC rising sharply among those who discontinued aspirin and increasing in magnitude over time.

The consistency of aspirin use also influenced risk. In individuals who had an on-again, off-again pattern of aspirin use, the incidence of HCC was 5.9% compared with 1.1% in those who used it consistently.

“Our results were consistent regardless of sex, cause of hepatitis, or underlying compensated cirrhosis,” the authors write. “The consistent duration-response associations lend further credence to a potential causal relationship.”

 

 

Limitations of the Study

The current study findings are not new, but this is the best-designed study to date, commented Flemming. Still, there were a number of limitations, she noted. Although cirrhosis is the strongest risk factor for HCC in patients with viral hepatitis, for instance, it was assessed only at cohort entry, and not during the median 8 years of follow-up. There was also a lack of information about sustained virologic response (SVR) rates.

Since less than 25% of patients with HCV received HCV therapy, this indicates they were likely treated with interferon-based therapy, Flemming suggested. Interferon-based therapy is associated with much lower SVR rates than direct acting antiviral (DAA) therapy, which can produce SVR in approximately 95% of patients, she pointed out.

“Therefore, a large proportion of the study patients were likely viremic and at a higher baseline risk of HCC than contemporary HCV populations.”

Evidence from a number of studies indicates that achieving SVR with DAA therapy is associated with a 70% risk reduction for incident HCC and liver-related events, Flemming said. “Whether the use of ASA in patients who have achieved SVR provides the same HCC risk reduction and decrease in hepatic outcomes is unknown.”

Also, the study did not provide information on the specific type of HBV therapy used in patients with HBV, Flemming noted. When considering the prevention of HCC in patients with chronic HBV infection, recent data support a differential protective effect of tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (multiple brands) compared with entecavir (Baraclude, Bristol-Myers Squibb), she pointed out. As previously reported by Medscape Medical News, these data also indicate that tenofovir may be more effective than entecavir in reducing the risk of liver failure and all-cause mortality.

This study was funded by the US National Institutes of Health, Nyckelfonden, Region Stockholm County, the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, Boston Nutrition Obesity Research Council, Region Örebro County, and Karolinska Institutet. Simon has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. A number of study coauthors disclosed having relationships with industry; the full list can be found with the original article. Flemming reported relationships with Gilead Sciences Canada, AbbVie, and Lupin Pharmaceuticals.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

N Engl J Med. 2020 Mar 12. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa1912035.

 

The risk of liver cancer and liver-related death in patients with chronic viral hepatitis was substantially reduced with the use of low-dose aspirin, results from a nationwide study from Sweden suggest.

The risk of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) was reduced by 31% compared with no aspirin use, and liver-related mortality dropped by 27%, as long as aspirin use continued.

“We were excited to find for the first time in a nationwide Western population that low-dose aspirin use was associated with substantial reduction in risk of developing incident HCC,” lead author Tracey G. Simon, MD, MPH, of Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston, told Medscape Medical News.

The study was published in the March 12 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.

HCC is the fourth-leading cause of cancer mortality worldwide, and is driven mostly by viral hepatitis B (HBV) and viral hepatitis C (HCV) infection, noted Jennifer A. Flemming, MD, of Queen’s University, Kingston, Canada, an expert not involved with the study. HCC is also one of the only cancers to show a rising incidence over the past several decades, she added .

However, the results of this do not change clinical practice. “It is premature to prescribe low dose ASA [acetylsalicylic acid] in patients with viral hepatitis for the sole indication of HCC prevention in routine clinical practice without support from prospective randomized data,” she said.

“The results of this study make it clear that a prospective randomized study comparing ASA to placebo in patients with viral hepatitis without an indication for low-dose ASA is justified to evaluate the risk of incident HCC,” she told Medscape Medical News.

The study authors agree, and they also emphasize that the findings from this observational study “should not yet change clinical practice.”

More research is needed in populations with compensated and decompensated cirrhosis to determine the optimal timing of aspirin initiation — or cessation of therapy — that will maximize benefit and prevent adverse events, said Simon.

Study Details

Although several earlier studies have suggested a duration-dependent benefit of aspirin use in preventing HCC in smaller populations, this study is the first to confirm a duration-response relationship with low-dose aspirin use in an unselected European population with confirmed viral hepatitis, Simon pointed out.

For their study, Simon and colleagues used the Swedish Register for Surveillance of Communicable Diseases database to identify 50,275 adults diagnosed between 2005 and 2015 with acute and chronic HBV and HCV infection. Some 13,276 adults had HBV and 36,999 had HCV, and this included 14,205 low-dose (75 mg or 160 mg) aspirin users and 36,070 nonusers.

The analysis showed that in aspirin users, the 10-year cumulative incidence of HCC was 4% compared with 8.3% in nonusers. After multivariable adjustment, aspirin users had a risk of HCC that was 31% lower compared with nonusers (adjusted subhazard ratio, 0.69; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.62 - 0.76).

Patients taking low-dose aspirin had a 10-year liver-related mortality of 11% compared with 17.9% among nonusers. The adjusted risk of liver-related mortality was 27% lower in aspirin users than in nonusers.

There was no significant difference in the 10-year risk of gastrointestinal bleeding between users and nonusers of aspirin (7.8% and 6.9%, respectively). In addition, the analysis showed that the risks of any gastrointestinal bleeding were similar among aspirin-users with compensated cirrhosis and those without cirrhosis (8.3% and 7.5%, respectively).

Notably, the risk of HCC was significantly lower after 3 to 5 years of aspirin use and after 5 or more years of use (adjusted hazard ratio [HR], 0.66, 0.57, respectively) compared with short-term use (3 months to <1 year; adjusted HR, 0.90) or with intermittent, discontinued, or no aspirin use. But when those with chronic viral hepatitis stopped taking aspirin, their risk of HCC rose to become 22% higher compared with peers who continued to use aspirin.

The risk of liver-related death also rose by 31% in aspirin users who stopped taking aspirin compared with those who did not stop (subhazard ratio, 1.31). Again, this relationship appeared to be duration-dependent, with the risk of incident HCC rising sharply among those who discontinued aspirin and increasing in magnitude over time.

The consistency of aspirin use also influenced risk. In individuals who had an on-again, off-again pattern of aspirin use, the incidence of HCC was 5.9% compared with 1.1% in those who used it consistently.

“Our results were consistent regardless of sex, cause of hepatitis, or underlying compensated cirrhosis,” the authors write. “The consistent duration-response associations lend further credence to a potential causal relationship.”

 

 

Limitations of the Study

The current study findings are not new, but this is the best-designed study to date, commented Flemming. Still, there were a number of limitations, she noted. Although cirrhosis is the strongest risk factor for HCC in patients with viral hepatitis, for instance, it was assessed only at cohort entry, and not during the median 8 years of follow-up. There was also a lack of information about sustained virologic response (SVR) rates.

Since less than 25% of patients with HCV received HCV therapy, this indicates they were likely treated with interferon-based therapy, Flemming suggested. Interferon-based therapy is associated with much lower SVR rates than direct acting antiviral (DAA) therapy, which can produce SVR in approximately 95% of patients, she pointed out.

“Therefore, a large proportion of the study patients were likely viremic and at a higher baseline risk of HCC than contemporary HCV populations.”

Evidence from a number of studies indicates that achieving SVR with DAA therapy is associated with a 70% risk reduction for incident HCC and liver-related events, Flemming said. “Whether the use of ASA in patients who have achieved SVR provides the same HCC risk reduction and decrease in hepatic outcomes is unknown.”

Also, the study did not provide information on the specific type of HBV therapy used in patients with HBV, Flemming noted. When considering the prevention of HCC in patients with chronic HBV infection, recent data support a differential protective effect of tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (multiple brands) compared with entecavir (Baraclude, Bristol-Myers Squibb), she pointed out. As previously reported by Medscape Medical News, these data also indicate that tenofovir may be more effective than entecavir in reducing the risk of liver failure and all-cause mortality.

This study was funded by the US National Institutes of Health, Nyckelfonden, Region Stockholm County, the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, Boston Nutrition Obesity Research Council, Region Örebro County, and Karolinska Institutet. Simon has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. A number of study coauthors disclosed having relationships with industry; the full list can be found with the original article. Flemming reported relationships with Gilead Sciences Canada, AbbVie, and Lupin Pharmaceuticals.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

N Engl J Med. 2020 Mar 12. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa1912035.

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Medscape Article

COVID-19: Older patients with cancer especially vulnerable

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Changed
Mon, 03/22/2021 - 14:08

For oncologists and other clinicians caring for patients with cancer, the COVID-19 pandemic represents a dynamic clinical challenge that is changing daily and that can feel overwhelming at times, say experts.

“Oncology clinicians are well versed in caring for immunosuppressed patients with cancer, of all ages,” Merry-Jennifer Markham, MD, interim chief of the Division of Hematology and Oncology at the University of Florida Health, Gainesville, told Medscape Medical News.

However, she emphasized that, during this COVID-19 outbreak, “we must be especially diligent about screening for symptoms and exposure, and we must recognize that our older patients with cancer may be especially vulnerable.”

Patients with cancer who are in active treatment are immunosuppressed and are more susceptible to infection and to complications from infection, Markham pointed out. “While we don’t yet have much data on how COVID-19 impacts patients with cancer, I have to suspect that patients undergoing active cancer treatment may be especially vulnerable to the more severe illness associated with COVID-19,” she said.

Indeed, a recent report from China that was published in the Lancet Oncology supports this. The authors suggest that patients with cancer are at higher risk for COVID-19 and have a worse prognosis if they become infected than do those without cancer.
 

Commonsense rules

Commonsense rules apply for all patients with cancer, regardless of age, said Markham. Measures include thorough handwashing, staying home when sick, and avoiding sick contacts.

Markham, who acts as an expert spokesperson for the American Society of Clinical Oncology, provides information on what patients with cancer need to know about COVID-19 at Cancer.net, the society’s website for patients with cancer.

“Unfortunately, this outbreak of COVID-19 is happening rapidly and in real time,” Markham noted. “The entire medical community is learning as we go, rather than having the luxury of years of evidence-based literature to guide us.”

Another expert agrees. “Unfortunately, there are not a lot of data on how COVID-19 affects cancer patients,” Cardinale Smith, MD, PhD, director of Quality for Cancer Services in the Mount Sinai Health System, New York City, said in an interview.

“We need to minimize the risk for patients and minimize our own exposure by treating this situation like we would a really bad flu season,” Smith told Medscape Medical News. “Some patients have had a bad outcome, but the vast majority do not. The best we can do is stay calm and focused.”

At Mount Sinai, for patients with cancer, routine, nonurgent appointments are being rescheduled for May, Smith said. Those in active treatment are screened by telephone 24 to 48 hours before arrival, after which they undergo a full risk assessment in an isolation room. Those with a respiratory infection are given a mask.

“Patients are very anxious and worried about COVID-19,” said Smith, who has young children and an elderly parent at home. “We don’t have all the answers, and this can heighten anxiety.”

To help allay fears, social workers are asking patients with cancer who express anxiety to discuss their concerns and provide information. A one-page handout on both flu and COVID-10 is available in the waiting room.

The Web portal MyChart gives patients access to updated information on COVID-19 precautions and provides links to the hospital website and to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Patients who are not feeling well can speak to someone or get answers if they have additional questions.

When counseling patients, Smith advises them to use “an abundance of caution” and to be creative in efforts to minimize risk. “My suggestion is to use FaceTime and Skype to connect and communicate with your community,” she said.

Some churches are conducting services via teleconferencing to minimize risk, and seniors’ centers that offer yoga and other classes are also beginning to provide services virtually, she pointed out.
 

 

 

Data from China

A report published February 14 in the Lancet Oncology appears to be the first analysis in the literature to focus on COVID-19 in patients with cancer.

“Patients with cancer are more susceptible to infection than individuals without cancer because of their systemic immunosuppressive state caused by the malignancy and anticancer treatments, such as chemotherapy or surgery,” write the authors, led by Wenhua Liang, MD, of Guangzhou Medical University. However, in correspondence published in the Lancet Oncology, other experts in China question some of Liang’s and colleagues’ findings.

The report by Liang and colleagues concerns a prospective cohort of 1590 patients with COVID-19.

There were 2007 laboratory-confirmed cases of COVID-19 among patients admitted to 575 hospitals throughout China as of January 31. Of those cases, 417 were excluded from the analysis because of insufficient information regarding disease history.

The team reports that of 18 patients with cancer and COVID-19, 39% were at significantly higher risk for “severe events.” By comparison, of 1572 patients with COVID-19 who did not have cancer, 8% were at significantly higher risk (P = .0003). These events included rapid clinical deterioration that required admission to intensive care; invasive ventilation; or death.

Patients with cancer experienced a much more rapid deterioration in clinical status than did those without cancer. The median time to severe events was 13 days, vs 43 days (hazard ratio [HR] adjusted for age, 3.56; P < .0001).

The analysis also shows that patients who underwent chemotherapy or surgery in the past month had a 75% risk of experiencing clinically severe events, compared with a 43% risk for those who had not received recent treatment.

After adjusting for other risk factors, including age and smoking history, older age was the only risk factor for severe events (odds ratio [OR], 1.43; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.97 – 2.12; P = .072), the study authors say.

Patients with lung cancer did not have a higher probability of severe events compared with patients with other cancer types (20% vs 62%, respectively; P = .294).

Liang and colleagues conclude that these findings provide “a timely reminder to physicians that more intensive attention should be paid to patients with cancer, in case of rapid deterioration.”

The team also proposes three strategies for managing patients with cancer who are at risk for COVID-19 or any other severe infectious disease. They recommend that intentional postponement of adjuvant chemotherapy or elective surgery be considered for patients with stable cancer who live in areas where disease is endemic. Stronger “personal protection provisions” could also be made for patients with cancer or for cancer survivors. Lastly, for patients with cancer who have COVID-19, especially those who are older or who have comorbidities, more intensive surveillance or treatment should be considered.

However, in comments in the Lancet Oncology, other authors in China say these findings should be interpreted with caution.

One group suggests that the increased susceptibility to COVID-19 in patients with cancer could be the result of higher rates of smoking compared with patients who did not have cancer. “Overall, current evidence remains insufficient to explain a conclusive association between cancer and COVID-19,” say Huahao Shen, PhD, of Zhejiang University School of Medicine, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, and colleagues.

Another group suggests that the significantly higher median age of patients with cancer compared with noncancer patients (63 years vs 49 years) may have contributed to poor prognosis.

These authors, led by Li Zhang, MD, PhD, and Hanping Wang, MD, of Peking Union Medical College and the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Beijing, emphasize that patients with cancer need online medical counseling and that critical cases need to be identified and treated.

“In endemic areas outside Wuhan, decisions on whether or not to postpone cancer treatment need to made on a patient-by-patient basis and according to the risk to the patient and the prevailing situation because delays could lead to tumor progression and ultimately poorer outcomes,” they write.

The study was funded by the China National Science Foundation and the Key Project of Guangzhou Scientific Research Project. Liang and coauthors, Shen and coauthors, Zhang, Wang, and Smith have disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Markham has relationships with Aduro Biotech, Lilly, Tesaro, Novartis, and VBL Therapeutics.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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For oncologists and other clinicians caring for patients with cancer, the COVID-19 pandemic represents a dynamic clinical challenge that is changing daily and that can feel overwhelming at times, say experts.

“Oncology clinicians are well versed in caring for immunosuppressed patients with cancer, of all ages,” Merry-Jennifer Markham, MD, interim chief of the Division of Hematology and Oncology at the University of Florida Health, Gainesville, told Medscape Medical News.

However, she emphasized that, during this COVID-19 outbreak, “we must be especially diligent about screening for symptoms and exposure, and we must recognize that our older patients with cancer may be especially vulnerable.”

Patients with cancer who are in active treatment are immunosuppressed and are more susceptible to infection and to complications from infection, Markham pointed out. “While we don’t yet have much data on how COVID-19 impacts patients with cancer, I have to suspect that patients undergoing active cancer treatment may be especially vulnerable to the more severe illness associated with COVID-19,” she said.

Indeed, a recent report from China that was published in the Lancet Oncology supports this. The authors suggest that patients with cancer are at higher risk for COVID-19 and have a worse prognosis if they become infected than do those without cancer.
 

Commonsense rules

Commonsense rules apply for all patients with cancer, regardless of age, said Markham. Measures include thorough handwashing, staying home when sick, and avoiding sick contacts.

Markham, who acts as an expert spokesperson for the American Society of Clinical Oncology, provides information on what patients with cancer need to know about COVID-19 at Cancer.net, the society’s website for patients with cancer.

“Unfortunately, this outbreak of COVID-19 is happening rapidly and in real time,” Markham noted. “The entire medical community is learning as we go, rather than having the luxury of years of evidence-based literature to guide us.”

Another expert agrees. “Unfortunately, there are not a lot of data on how COVID-19 affects cancer patients,” Cardinale Smith, MD, PhD, director of Quality for Cancer Services in the Mount Sinai Health System, New York City, said in an interview.

“We need to minimize the risk for patients and minimize our own exposure by treating this situation like we would a really bad flu season,” Smith told Medscape Medical News. “Some patients have had a bad outcome, but the vast majority do not. The best we can do is stay calm and focused.”

At Mount Sinai, for patients with cancer, routine, nonurgent appointments are being rescheduled for May, Smith said. Those in active treatment are screened by telephone 24 to 48 hours before arrival, after which they undergo a full risk assessment in an isolation room. Those with a respiratory infection are given a mask.

“Patients are very anxious and worried about COVID-19,” said Smith, who has young children and an elderly parent at home. “We don’t have all the answers, and this can heighten anxiety.”

To help allay fears, social workers are asking patients with cancer who express anxiety to discuss their concerns and provide information. A one-page handout on both flu and COVID-10 is available in the waiting room.

The Web portal MyChart gives patients access to updated information on COVID-19 precautions and provides links to the hospital website and to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Patients who are not feeling well can speak to someone or get answers if they have additional questions.

When counseling patients, Smith advises them to use “an abundance of caution” and to be creative in efforts to minimize risk. “My suggestion is to use FaceTime and Skype to connect and communicate with your community,” she said.

Some churches are conducting services via teleconferencing to minimize risk, and seniors’ centers that offer yoga and other classes are also beginning to provide services virtually, she pointed out.
 

 

 

Data from China

A report published February 14 in the Lancet Oncology appears to be the first analysis in the literature to focus on COVID-19 in patients with cancer.

“Patients with cancer are more susceptible to infection than individuals without cancer because of their systemic immunosuppressive state caused by the malignancy and anticancer treatments, such as chemotherapy or surgery,” write the authors, led by Wenhua Liang, MD, of Guangzhou Medical University. However, in correspondence published in the Lancet Oncology, other experts in China question some of Liang’s and colleagues’ findings.

The report by Liang and colleagues concerns a prospective cohort of 1590 patients with COVID-19.

There were 2007 laboratory-confirmed cases of COVID-19 among patients admitted to 575 hospitals throughout China as of January 31. Of those cases, 417 were excluded from the analysis because of insufficient information regarding disease history.

The team reports that of 18 patients with cancer and COVID-19, 39% were at significantly higher risk for “severe events.” By comparison, of 1572 patients with COVID-19 who did not have cancer, 8% were at significantly higher risk (P = .0003). These events included rapid clinical deterioration that required admission to intensive care; invasive ventilation; or death.

Patients with cancer experienced a much more rapid deterioration in clinical status than did those without cancer. The median time to severe events was 13 days, vs 43 days (hazard ratio [HR] adjusted for age, 3.56; P < .0001).

The analysis also shows that patients who underwent chemotherapy or surgery in the past month had a 75% risk of experiencing clinically severe events, compared with a 43% risk for those who had not received recent treatment.

After adjusting for other risk factors, including age and smoking history, older age was the only risk factor for severe events (odds ratio [OR], 1.43; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.97 – 2.12; P = .072), the study authors say.

Patients with lung cancer did not have a higher probability of severe events compared with patients with other cancer types (20% vs 62%, respectively; P = .294).

Liang and colleagues conclude that these findings provide “a timely reminder to physicians that more intensive attention should be paid to patients with cancer, in case of rapid deterioration.”

The team also proposes three strategies for managing patients with cancer who are at risk for COVID-19 or any other severe infectious disease. They recommend that intentional postponement of adjuvant chemotherapy or elective surgery be considered for patients with stable cancer who live in areas where disease is endemic. Stronger “personal protection provisions” could also be made for patients with cancer or for cancer survivors. Lastly, for patients with cancer who have COVID-19, especially those who are older or who have comorbidities, more intensive surveillance or treatment should be considered.

However, in comments in the Lancet Oncology, other authors in China say these findings should be interpreted with caution.

One group suggests that the increased susceptibility to COVID-19 in patients with cancer could be the result of higher rates of smoking compared with patients who did not have cancer. “Overall, current evidence remains insufficient to explain a conclusive association between cancer and COVID-19,” say Huahao Shen, PhD, of Zhejiang University School of Medicine, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, and colleagues.

Another group suggests that the significantly higher median age of patients with cancer compared with noncancer patients (63 years vs 49 years) may have contributed to poor prognosis.

These authors, led by Li Zhang, MD, PhD, and Hanping Wang, MD, of Peking Union Medical College and the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Beijing, emphasize that patients with cancer need online medical counseling and that critical cases need to be identified and treated.

“In endemic areas outside Wuhan, decisions on whether or not to postpone cancer treatment need to made on a patient-by-patient basis and according to the risk to the patient and the prevailing situation because delays could lead to tumor progression and ultimately poorer outcomes,” they write.

The study was funded by the China National Science Foundation and the Key Project of Guangzhou Scientific Research Project. Liang and coauthors, Shen and coauthors, Zhang, Wang, and Smith have disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Markham has relationships with Aduro Biotech, Lilly, Tesaro, Novartis, and VBL Therapeutics.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

For oncologists and other clinicians caring for patients with cancer, the COVID-19 pandemic represents a dynamic clinical challenge that is changing daily and that can feel overwhelming at times, say experts.

“Oncology clinicians are well versed in caring for immunosuppressed patients with cancer, of all ages,” Merry-Jennifer Markham, MD, interim chief of the Division of Hematology and Oncology at the University of Florida Health, Gainesville, told Medscape Medical News.

However, she emphasized that, during this COVID-19 outbreak, “we must be especially diligent about screening for symptoms and exposure, and we must recognize that our older patients with cancer may be especially vulnerable.”

Patients with cancer who are in active treatment are immunosuppressed and are more susceptible to infection and to complications from infection, Markham pointed out. “While we don’t yet have much data on how COVID-19 impacts patients with cancer, I have to suspect that patients undergoing active cancer treatment may be especially vulnerable to the more severe illness associated with COVID-19,” she said.

Indeed, a recent report from China that was published in the Lancet Oncology supports this. The authors suggest that patients with cancer are at higher risk for COVID-19 and have a worse prognosis if they become infected than do those without cancer.
 

Commonsense rules

Commonsense rules apply for all patients with cancer, regardless of age, said Markham. Measures include thorough handwashing, staying home when sick, and avoiding sick contacts.

Markham, who acts as an expert spokesperson for the American Society of Clinical Oncology, provides information on what patients with cancer need to know about COVID-19 at Cancer.net, the society’s website for patients with cancer.

“Unfortunately, this outbreak of COVID-19 is happening rapidly and in real time,” Markham noted. “The entire medical community is learning as we go, rather than having the luxury of years of evidence-based literature to guide us.”

Another expert agrees. “Unfortunately, there are not a lot of data on how COVID-19 affects cancer patients,” Cardinale Smith, MD, PhD, director of Quality for Cancer Services in the Mount Sinai Health System, New York City, said in an interview.

“We need to minimize the risk for patients and minimize our own exposure by treating this situation like we would a really bad flu season,” Smith told Medscape Medical News. “Some patients have had a bad outcome, but the vast majority do not. The best we can do is stay calm and focused.”

At Mount Sinai, for patients with cancer, routine, nonurgent appointments are being rescheduled for May, Smith said. Those in active treatment are screened by telephone 24 to 48 hours before arrival, after which they undergo a full risk assessment in an isolation room. Those with a respiratory infection are given a mask.

“Patients are very anxious and worried about COVID-19,” said Smith, who has young children and an elderly parent at home. “We don’t have all the answers, and this can heighten anxiety.”

To help allay fears, social workers are asking patients with cancer who express anxiety to discuss their concerns and provide information. A one-page handout on both flu and COVID-10 is available in the waiting room.

The Web portal MyChart gives patients access to updated information on COVID-19 precautions and provides links to the hospital website and to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Patients who are not feeling well can speak to someone or get answers if they have additional questions.

When counseling patients, Smith advises them to use “an abundance of caution” and to be creative in efforts to minimize risk. “My suggestion is to use FaceTime and Skype to connect and communicate with your community,” she said.

Some churches are conducting services via teleconferencing to minimize risk, and seniors’ centers that offer yoga and other classes are also beginning to provide services virtually, she pointed out.
 

 

 

Data from China

A report published February 14 in the Lancet Oncology appears to be the first analysis in the literature to focus on COVID-19 in patients with cancer.

“Patients with cancer are more susceptible to infection than individuals without cancer because of their systemic immunosuppressive state caused by the malignancy and anticancer treatments, such as chemotherapy or surgery,” write the authors, led by Wenhua Liang, MD, of Guangzhou Medical University. However, in correspondence published in the Lancet Oncology, other experts in China question some of Liang’s and colleagues’ findings.

The report by Liang and colleagues concerns a prospective cohort of 1590 patients with COVID-19.

There were 2007 laboratory-confirmed cases of COVID-19 among patients admitted to 575 hospitals throughout China as of January 31. Of those cases, 417 were excluded from the analysis because of insufficient information regarding disease history.

The team reports that of 18 patients with cancer and COVID-19, 39% were at significantly higher risk for “severe events.” By comparison, of 1572 patients with COVID-19 who did not have cancer, 8% were at significantly higher risk (P = .0003). These events included rapid clinical deterioration that required admission to intensive care; invasive ventilation; or death.

Patients with cancer experienced a much more rapid deterioration in clinical status than did those without cancer. The median time to severe events was 13 days, vs 43 days (hazard ratio [HR] adjusted for age, 3.56; P < .0001).

The analysis also shows that patients who underwent chemotherapy or surgery in the past month had a 75% risk of experiencing clinically severe events, compared with a 43% risk for those who had not received recent treatment.

After adjusting for other risk factors, including age and smoking history, older age was the only risk factor for severe events (odds ratio [OR], 1.43; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.97 – 2.12; P = .072), the study authors say.

Patients with lung cancer did not have a higher probability of severe events compared with patients with other cancer types (20% vs 62%, respectively; P = .294).

Liang and colleagues conclude that these findings provide “a timely reminder to physicians that more intensive attention should be paid to patients with cancer, in case of rapid deterioration.”

The team also proposes three strategies for managing patients with cancer who are at risk for COVID-19 or any other severe infectious disease. They recommend that intentional postponement of adjuvant chemotherapy or elective surgery be considered for patients with stable cancer who live in areas where disease is endemic. Stronger “personal protection provisions” could also be made for patients with cancer or for cancer survivors. Lastly, for patients with cancer who have COVID-19, especially those who are older or who have comorbidities, more intensive surveillance or treatment should be considered.

However, in comments in the Lancet Oncology, other authors in China say these findings should be interpreted with caution.

One group suggests that the increased susceptibility to COVID-19 in patients with cancer could be the result of higher rates of smoking compared with patients who did not have cancer. “Overall, current evidence remains insufficient to explain a conclusive association between cancer and COVID-19,” say Huahao Shen, PhD, of Zhejiang University School of Medicine, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, and colleagues.

Another group suggests that the significantly higher median age of patients with cancer compared with noncancer patients (63 years vs 49 years) may have contributed to poor prognosis.

These authors, led by Li Zhang, MD, PhD, and Hanping Wang, MD, of Peking Union Medical College and the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Beijing, emphasize that patients with cancer need online medical counseling and that critical cases need to be identified and treated.

“In endemic areas outside Wuhan, decisions on whether or not to postpone cancer treatment need to made on a patient-by-patient basis and according to the risk to the patient and the prevailing situation because delays could lead to tumor progression and ultimately poorer outcomes,” they write.

The study was funded by the China National Science Foundation and the Key Project of Guangzhou Scientific Research Project. Liang and coauthors, Shen and coauthors, Zhang, Wang, and Smith have disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Markham has relationships with Aduro Biotech, Lilly, Tesaro, Novartis, and VBL Therapeutics.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Sharp climb in weight gain after breast cancer diagnosis

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Thu, 12/15/2022 - 17:38

Significant weight gain after a diagnosis of breast cancer may be a bigger problem than previously thought, and clinicians need to do more to help patients manage it, say the authors of a national survey conducted in Australia.

Monkeybusinessimages/Thinkstock

“We found that two-thirds of our respondents were currently overweight or obese,” report Carolyn Ee, MBBS, PhD, of the NICM Health Research Institute, Western Sydney University, Penrith, New South Wales, and colleagues.

“Because weight gain after breast cancer may lead to poorer outcomes, efforts to prevent and manage weight gain must be prioritized and accelerated particularly in the first year after diagnosis,” they comment.

Their article was published online February 20 in BMC Cancer.

The 60-item anonymous online survey was sent to 1835 members of the Breast Cancer Network Australia Review and Survey Group.

Although the response rate for the online survey was only 15%, most women reported a “high” level of concern about weight gain – and with good reason. The results showed that 64% of women gained an average of 9 kg (20 lb), and 17% gained >20 kg (44 lb).

In the 2-year period following a breast cancer diagnosis, the rate of overweight and obesity increased from 48% to 67%. The rate of obesity alone almost doubled, from 17% to 32%.

Overweight and obesity are strongly implicated in the development of breast cancer, the authors note. Weight gain after diagnosis is associated with morbidity and all-cause mortality and may increase the risk for breast cancer recurrence by 30% to 40%.

The survey, which also collected data from 26 women who were participants in online women’s health and breast cancer support groups, did not include information on quality of life and levels of distress. “Additional research in this area appears to be warranted,” the study authors suggest.

In a press statement, Ee noted that 77% of women reported that weight gain had occurred in the 12- to 18-month period after diagnosis. This could provide a “window of opportunity” for intervention, she said.

“Timing may be the key in helping women to manage weight after a diagnosis of breast cancer,” she added. “Cancer services and general practitioners play an important role in having early conversations with women and referring them to a team of qualified healthcare professionals such as dieticians and exercise physiologists with experience in cancer.”

Coauthor John Boyages, MBBS, PhD, a radiation oncologist at the Icon Cancer Center, Sydney Adventist Hospital, Wahroonga, emphasized that all women should be prescribed exercise after being diagnosed with breast cancer. “Prescribing a healthy lifestyle is just as important as prescribing tablets,” he said.

“As doctors, we really need to actively think about weight, nutrition, and exercise and advise about possible interventions. [Among patients with breast cancer,] weight gain adds to self-esteem problems, increases the risk of heart disease and other cancers, and several reports suggest it may affect prognosis and also increases the risk of lymphedema,” he added

“More effort needs to be geared to treating the whole body, as we know obesity is a risk factor for poorer outcomes when dealing with breast cancer,” commented Stephanie Bernik, MD, chief of breast service at Mount Sinai West and associate professor of surgery at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City. She was not involved in the study and was approached for comment.

Berwick also agreed that meeting with a nutritionist or receiving weight loss support is helpful for patients with cancer, but she added that not all cancer centers have the resources to provide these services.
 

 

 

Survey Details

Of 309 women who responded to the survey, complete data for pre- and post-diagnosis body mass index (BMI) were collected from 277 respondents, representing 15% of those surveyed.

Of these women, 254 had been diagnosed with stage I-III breast cancer; 33 had been diagnosed with ductal carcinoma in situ. The mean age of the patients was 59 years.

The results showed that for 20% of women, BMI increased from a healthy weight range at the time of diagnosis (BMI <25) to an unhealthy weight range (BMI >25). In addition, for 4.8% of patients, BMI increased from an overweight range (BMI 25 to <30) to obesity (BMI >30), and 60.7% reported an increase in BMI >1 kg/m2. Conversely, only a small proportion of women lost weight – 6% experienced a decrease of more than one BMI category.

Weight gain occurred within the first 2 years of diagnosis in 87% of women and within the first 12 months in 58%. In women who gained >10 kg (22 lb), 78% said they were highly concerned about it, as did 59% of women who gained >5 kg (11 lb).

Among all age groups (35 to 74 years), 69% experienced excess weight gain that was 0.48 kg higher each year compared with age-matched control persons who had not been diagnosed with breast cancer. Over 5 years, this represented an additional weight gain of 2 kg (5 lb) among women with breast cancer.

When approached for comment, Bernick agreed with the authors that these results should be interpreted with caution.

She pointed to the self-reporting bias and the fact that only 15% of women responded to the survey. “Perhaps it was only women who had gained weight who found it worthwhile reporting their experience with weight gain after a breast cancer diagnosis,” she suggested.

Even so, there are many reasons why weight gain during treatment for breast cancer presents a problem for women in the United States as well as Australia, Bernik told Medscape Medical News.

“Women undergoing chemotherapy may not have the energy to keep up with exercise regimens and may find eating food comforting,” she pointed out. “Because chemotherapy delivery and the after effects may take up a few days out of every 2 to 3 weeks, women have less time and energy to eat correctly or exercise. Furthermore, women sometimes get steroids while receiving chemotherapy, and this is known to drive up one’s appetite.”

The authors have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
 

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Significant weight gain after a diagnosis of breast cancer may be a bigger problem than previously thought, and clinicians need to do more to help patients manage it, say the authors of a national survey conducted in Australia.

Monkeybusinessimages/Thinkstock

“We found that two-thirds of our respondents were currently overweight or obese,” report Carolyn Ee, MBBS, PhD, of the NICM Health Research Institute, Western Sydney University, Penrith, New South Wales, and colleagues.

“Because weight gain after breast cancer may lead to poorer outcomes, efforts to prevent and manage weight gain must be prioritized and accelerated particularly in the first year after diagnosis,” they comment.

Their article was published online February 20 in BMC Cancer.

The 60-item anonymous online survey was sent to 1835 members of the Breast Cancer Network Australia Review and Survey Group.

Although the response rate for the online survey was only 15%, most women reported a “high” level of concern about weight gain – and with good reason. The results showed that 64% of women gained an average of 9 kg (20 lb), and 17% gained >20 kg (44 lb).

In the 2-year period following a breast cancer diagnosis, the rate of overweight and obesity increased from 48% to 67%. The rate of obesity alone almost doubled, from 17% to 32%.

Overweight and obesity are strongly implicated in the development of breast cancer, the authors note. Weight gain after diagnosis is associated with morbidity and all-cause mortality and may increase the risk for breast cancer recurrence by 30% to 40%.

The survey, which also collected data from 26 women who were participants in online women’s health and breast cancer support groups, did not include information on quality of life and levels of distress. “Additional research in this area appears to be warranted,” the study authors suggest.

In a press statement, Ee noted that 77% of women reported that weight gain had occurred in the 12- to 18-month period after diagnosis. This could provide a “window of opportunity” for intervention, she said.

“Timing may be the key in helping women to manage weight after a diagnosis of breast cancer,” she added. “Cancer services and general practitioners play an important role in having early conversations with women and referring them to a team of qualified healthcare professionals such as dieticians and exercise physiologists with experience in cancer.”

Coauthor John Boyages, MBBS, PhD, a radiation oncologist at the Icon Cancer Center, Sydney Adventist Hospital, Wahroonga, emphasized that all women should be prescribed exercise after being diagnosed with breast cancer. “Prescribing a healthy lifestyle is just as important as prescribing tablets,” he said.

“As doctors, we really need to actively think about weight, nutrition, and exercise and advise about possible interventions. [Among patients with breast cancer,] weight gain adds to self-esteem problems, increases the risk of heart disease and other cancers, and several reports suggest it may affect prognosis and also increases the risk of lymphedema,” he added

“More effort needs to be geared to treating the whole body, as we know obesity is a risk factor for poorer outcomes when dealing with breast cancer,” commented Stephanie Bernik, MD, chief of breast service at Mount Sinai West and associate professor of surgery at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City. She was not involved in the study and was approached for comment.

Berwick also agreed that meeting with a nutritionist or receiving weight loss support is helpful for patients with cancer, but she added that not all cancer centers have the resources to provide these services.
 

 

 

Survey Details

Of 309 women who responded to the survey, complete data for pre- and post-diagnosis body mass index (BMI) were collected from 277 respondents, representing 15% of those surveyed.

Of these women, 254 had been diagnosed with stage I-III breast cancer; 33 had been diagnosed with ductal carcinoma in situ. The mean age of the patients was 59 years.

The results showed that for 20% of women, BMI increased from a healthy weight range at the time of diagnosis (BMI <25) to an unhealthy weight range (BMI >25). In addition, for 4.8% of patients, BMI increased from an overweight range (BMI 25 to <30) to obesity (BMI >30), and 60.7% reported an increase in BMI >1 kg/m2. Conversely, only a small proportion of women lost weight – 6% experienced a decrease of more than one BMI category.

Weight gain occurred within the first 2 years of diagnosis in 87% of women and within the first 12 months in 58%. In women who gained >10 kg (22 lb), 78% said they were highly concerned about it, as did 59% of women who gained >5 kg (11 lb).

Among all age groups (35 to 74 years), 69% experienced excess weight gain that was 0.48 kg higher each year compared with age-matched control persons who had not been diagnosed with breast cancer. Over 5 years, this represented an additional weight gain of 2 kg (5 lb) among women with breast cancer.

When approached for comment, Bernick agreed with the authors that these results should be interpreted with caution.

She pointed to the self-reporting bias and the fact that only 15% of women responded to the survey. “Perhaps it was only women who had gained weight who found it worthwhile reporting their experience with weight gain after a breast cancer diagnosis,” she suggested.

Even so, there are many reasons why weight gain during treatment for breast cancer presents a problem for women in the United States as well as Australia, Bernik told Medscape Medical News.

“Women undergoing chemotherapy may not have the energy to keep up with exercise regimens and may find eating food comforting,” she pointed out. “Because chemotherapy delivery and the after effects may take up a few days out of every 2 to 3 weeks, women have less time and energy to eat correctly or exercise. Furthermore, women sometimes get steroids while receiving chemotherapy, and this is known to drive up one’s appetite.”

The authors have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
 

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Significant weight gain after a diagnosis of breast cancer may be a bigger problem than previously thought, and clinicians need to do more to help patients manage it, say the authors of a national survey conducted in Australia.

Monkeybusinessimages/Thinkstock

“We found that two-thirds of our respondents were currently overweight or obese,” report Carolyn Ee, MBBS, PhD, of the NICM Health Research Institute, Western Sydney University, Penrith, New South Wales, and colleagues.

“Because weight gain after breast cancer may lead to poorer outcomes, efforts to prevent and manage weight gain must be prioritized and accelerated particularly in the first year after diagnosis,” they comment.

Their article was published online February 20 in BMC Cancer.

The 60-item anonymous online survey was sent to 1835 members of the Breast Cancer Network Australia Review and Survey Group.

Although the response rate for the online survey was only 15%, most women reported a “high” level of concern about weight gain – and with good reason. The results showed that 64% of women gained an average of 9 kg (20 lb), and 17% gained >20 kg (44 lb).

In the 2-year period following a breast cancer diagnosis, the rate of overweight and obesity increased from 48% to 67%. The rate of obesity alone almost doubled, from 17% to 32%.

Overweight and obesity are strongly implicated in the development of breast cancer, the authors note. Weight gain after diagnosis is associated with morbidity and all-cause mortality and may increase the risk for breast cancer recurrence by 30% to 40%.

The survey, which also collected data from 26 women who were participants in online women’s health and breast cancer support groups, did not include information on quality of life and levels of distress. “Additional research in this area appears to be warranted,” the study authors suggest.

In a press statement, Ee noted that 77% of women reported that weight gain had occurred in the 12- to 18-month period after diagnosis. This could provide a “window of opportunity” for intervention, she said.

“Timing may be the key in helping women to manage weight after a diagnosis of breast cancer,” she added. “Cancer services and general practitioners play an important role in having early conversations with women and referring them to a team of qualified healthcare professionals such as dieticians and exercise physiologists with experience in cancer.”

Coauthor John Boyages, MBBS, PhD, a radiation oncologist at the Icon Cancer Center, Sydney Adventist Hospital, Wahroonga, emphasized that all women should be prescribed exercise after being diagnosed with breast cancer. “Prescribing a healthy lifestyle is just as important as prescribing tablets,” he said.

“As doctors, we really need to actively think about weight, nutrition, and exercise and advise about possible interventions. [Among patients with breast cancer,] weight gain adds to self-esteem problems, increases the risk of heart disease and other cancers, and several reports suggest it may affect prognosis and also increases the risk of lymphedema,” he added

“More effort needs to be geared to treating the whole body, as we know obesity is a risk factor for poorer outcomes when dealing with breast cancer,” commented Stephanie Bernik, MD, chief of breast service at Mount Sinai West and associate professor of surgery at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City. She was not involved in the study and was approached for comment.

Berwick also agreed that meeting with a nutritionist or receiving weight loss support is helpful for patients with cancer, but she added that not all cancer centers have the resources to provide these services.
 

 

 

Survey Details

Of 309 women who responded to the survey, complete data for pre- and post-diagnosis body mass index (BMI) were collected from 277 respondents, representing 15% of those surveyed.

Of these women, 254 had been diagnosed with stage I-III breast cancer; 33 had been diagnosed with ductal carcinoma in situ. The mean age of the patients was 59 years.

The results showed that for 20% of women, BMI increased from a healthy weight range at the time of diagnosis (BMI <25) to an unhealthy weight range (BMI >25). In addition, for 4.8% of patients, BMI increased from an overweight range (BMI 25 to <30) to obesity (BMI >30), and 60.7% reported an increase in BMI >1 kg/m2. Conversely, only a small proportion of women lost weight – 6% experienced a decrease of more than one BMI category.

Weight gain occurred within the first 2 years of diagnosis in 87% of women and within the first 12 months in 58%. In women who gained >10 kg (22 lb), 78% said they were highly concerned about it, as did 59% of women who gained >5 kg (11 lb).

Among all age groups (35 to 74 years), 69% experienced excess weight gain that was 0.48 kg higher each year compared with age-matched control persons who had not been diagnosed with breast cancer. Over 5 years, this represented an additional weight gain of 2 kg (5 lb) among women with breast cancer.

When approached for comment, Bernick agreed with the authors that these results should be interpreted with caution.

She pointed to the self-reporting bias and the fact that only 15% of women responded to the survey. “Perhaps it was only women who had gained weight who found it worthwhile reporting their experience with weight gain after a breast cancer diagnosis,” she suggested.

Even so, there are many reasons why weight gain during treatment for breast cancer presents a problem for women in the United States as well as Australia, Bernik told Medscape Medical News.

“Women undergoing chemotherapy may not have the energy to keep up with exercise regimens and may find eating food comforting,” she pointed out. “Because chemotherapy delivery and the after effects may take up a few days out of every 2 to 3 weeks, women have less time and energy to eat correctly or exercise. Furthermore, women sometimes get steroids while receiving chemotherapy, and this is known to drive up one’s appetite.”

The authors have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
 

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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World Cancer Day survey exposes ‘glaring inequities’

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Mon, 03/22/2021 - 14:08

 

The first international public survey on cancer perceptions and attitudes in a decade shows that, in spite of progress, low socioeconomic status and lack of education continue to jeopardize the health of the world’s most vulnerable populations.

The survey was commissioned by the Union for International Cancer Control (UICC) to mark the 20th anniversary of World Cancer Day on Feb. 4, 2020.

The survey, which was conducted by Ipsos, was taken by more than 15,000 people in 20 countries. It shows that people of lower socioeconomic status are less likely than those in higher-income households to recognize the risk factors for cancer or to make lifestyle changes. With the exception of tobacco use, people with low educational attainment also showed less cancer awareness and were less likely to engage in preventive behaviors than those with a university degree.

It is “unacceptable that millions of people have a greater chance of developing cancer in their lifetime because they are simply not aware of the cancer risks to avoid and the healthy behaviors to adopt – information that many of us take for granted. And this is true around the world,” Cary Adams, MBA, CEO of the UICC, commented in a statement.

The survey was conducted from Oct. 25 to Nov., 2019, and included 15,427 participants from Australia, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, Great Britain, India, Israel, Japan, Kenya, Mexico, the Philippines, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Turkey, and the United States.

The vast majority of those surveyed – 87% – said they were aware of the major risk factors for cancer, while only 6% said they were not.

The cancer risk factors that were most recognized were tobacco use (63%), ultraviolet light exposure (54%), and exposure to secondhand tobacco smoke (50%).

The cancer risks that were least recognized included being overweight (29%), a lack of exercise (28%), and exposure to certain viruses or bacteria (28%).

The difference in awareness across the social spectrum was striking. “Emerging from the survey are the apparent and glaring inequities faced by socioeconomically disadvantaged groups,” the authors said.

“Much more must be done to ensure that everyone has an equal chance to reduce their risk of preventable cancer,” commented Sonali Johnson, PhD, head of knowledge, advocacy, and policy at the UICC in Geneva, Switzerland.

“We’ve seen in the results that those surveyed with a lower education and those on lower incomes appear less aware of the main risk factors associated with cancer and thus are less likely to proactively take the steps needed to reduce their cancer risk as compared to those from a high income household or those with a university education,” Dr. Johnson said in an interview.

Does increased cancer awareness translate into behavioral change for the better? This question can only be answered by more research, the survey authors said. They reported that 7 of 10 survey respondents (69%) said they had made a behavioral change to reduce their cancer risk within the past 12 months. Most said they were eating more healthfully.

Slightly fewer than one-quarter reported that they had not taken any preventive measures in the past year.

When it comes to raising cancer awareness, World Cancer Day is “a powerful tool to remind every person that they can play a crucial role in reducing the impact of cancer,” said Dr. Johnson.
 

 

 

Health care providers are “crucial”

Reacting to the findings of the survey, the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) emphasized the key role that physicians play in cancer prevention.

“Research speaks very clearly for prevention,” said ESMO President Solange Peters, MD, PhD. “With the number of cancer cases expected to rise to 29.5 million by 2040, we must act now. ESMO is committed to educating doctors on all aspects of cancer control, which should begin well before a cancer diagnosis.

“In the face of this emergency, which is rendered even more salient by the results of the report, we must work to enlarge the basis of doctors who are properly educated and trained in key prevention measures,” Dr. Peters added. “General practitioners and organ specialists are in the front line to guide and support patients on their quest for healthy lifestyles and reliable ways to detect cancer early.”

In a comment, Dr. Johnson acknowledged the role physicians play in health promotion and informing patients about noncommunicable disease risks, including those related to cancer. However, she emphasized that nurses, pharmacists, community health workers, midwives, and other health care providers who deliver primary care “are crucial around the world to imparting health information and offering services.”

Frontline health care workers can assess patients’ cancer knowledge and health literacy, determine the barriers to health care, and assess “how best to engage with people across the life course,” Dr. Johnson explained. “Rather than just focusing on physicians, we must work with all those involved in primary care, especially as primary care services are scaled up to achieve universal health coverage.”

Call on governments to do more

The authors noted that, although there is wide awareness of the cancer risks from tobacco use, adults younger than 35 years were less likely than those older than 50 to identify tobacco as a cancer risk factor. They described this finding as “most concerning” and said it “underscores the ongoing need to raise awareness about cancer risk factors in every new generation.”

Almost 60% of survey respondents, regardless of age, education, or income, expressed concern about being diagnosed with cancer in the future or having cancer recur.

In Kenya, where the death toll from cancer rose 30% from 2014 to 2018, people appeared to be the most worried about cancer, with four of five survey respondents (82%) expressing concern.

Survey respondents from Saudi Arabia appeared the least concerned, with one of three people saying they were worried.

Notably, 84% of survey respondents said that governments should be doing more to increase cancer prevention and awareness; 33% demanded that governments improve the affordability of cancer care.

“It is understandable that people turn to their governments for support,” Dr. Johnson commented. “Affordability is a big challenge for low-income settings.”

Data from the World Health Organization show that, for every U.S. $1 invested in low- and middle-income countries, the return is U.S. $3.20, Johnson pointed out. “We really need to convince decision makers ... and see the right investments being made. It is important to ensure that the health system strengthening takes place in tandem with prevention services.”

Governments have begun making commitments to tackle noncommunicable diseases and cancer, Dr. Johnson commented. He highlighted the WHO’s Global Action Plan for Healthy Lives and Well-being for All and the updated cancer resolution adopted at the 2017 World Health Assembly.

“Education, training, and awareness-raising efforts need to be backed by strong and progressive health policies that prioritize prevention and help reduce the consumption of known cancer-causing products such as tobacco, sugary food, and beverages,” she said. “Countries should also invest proactively in national cancer control planning and the establishment of population-based registries to ensure the most effective resource allocation that benefits all groups.”

Up-to-date information on cancer risks and cancer prevention must be delivered to the public in ways that are accessible to those in lower socioeconomic groups, Dr. Johnson added. “Awareness needs to be raised continuously with each new generation,” she noted.

The UICC has relationships with Astellas, Daiichi Sankyo, Diaceutics, MSD Inventing for Life, Bristol-Myers Squibb, CUBEBIO, the Icon Group, Roche, and Sanofi.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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The first international public survey on cancer perceptions and attitudes in a decade shows that, in spite of progress, low socioeconomic status and lack of education continue to jeopardize the health of the world’s most vulnerable populations.

The survey was commissioned by the Union for International Cancer Control (UICC) to mark the 20th anniversary of World Cancer Day on Feb. 4, 2020.

The survey, which was conducted by Ipsos, was taken by more than 15,000 people in 20 countries. It shows that people of lower socioeconomic status are less likely than those in higher-income households to recognize the risk factors for cancer or to make lifestyle changes. With the exception of tobacco use, people with low educational attainment also showed less cancer awareness and were less likely to engage in preventive behaviors than those with a university degree.

It is “unacceptable that millions of people have a greater chance of developing cancer in their lifetime because they are simply not aware of the cancer risks to avoid and the healthy behaviors to adopt – information that many of us take for granted. And this is true around the world,” Cary Adams, MBA, CEO of the UICC, commented in a statement.

The survey was conducted from Oct. 25 to Nov., 2019, and included 15,427 participants from Australia, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, Great Britain, India, Israel, Japan, Kenya, Mexico, the Philippines, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Turkey, and the United States.

The vast majority of those surveyed – 87% – said they were aware of the major risk factors for cancer, while only 6% said they were not.

The cancer risk factors that were most recognized were tobacco use (63%), ultraviolet light exposure (54%), and exposure to secondhand tobacco smoke (50%).

The cancer risks that were least recognized included being overweight (29%), a lack of exercise (28%), and exposure to certain viruses or bacteria (28%).

The difference in awareness across the social spectrum was striking. “Emerging from the survey are the apparent and glaring inequities faced by socioeconomically disadvantaged groups,” the authors said.

“Much more must be done to ensure that everyone has an equal chance to reduce their risk of preventable cancer,” commented Sonali Johnson, PhD, head of knowledge, advocacy, and policy at the UICC in Geneva, Switzerland.

“We’ve seen in the results that those surveyed with a lower education and those on lower incomes appear less aware of the main risk factors associated with cancer and thus are less likely to proactively take the steps needed to reduce their cancer risk as compared to those from a high income household or those with a university education,” Dr. Johnson said in an interview.

Does increased cancer awareness translate into behavioral change for the better? This question can only be answered by more research, the survey authors said. They reported that 7 of 10 survey respondents (69%) said they had made a behavioral change to reduce their cancer risk within the past 12 months. Most said they were eating more healthfully.

Slightly fewer than one-quarter reported that they had not taken any preventive measures in the past year.

When it comes to raising cancer awareness, World Cancer Day is “a powerful tool to remind every person that they can play a crucial role in reducing the impact of cancer,” said Dr. Johnson.
 

 

 

Health care providers are “crucial”

Reacting to the findings of the survey, the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) emphasized the key role that physicians play in cancer prevention.

“Research speaks very clearly for prevention,” said ESMO President Solange Peters, MD, PhD. “With the number of cancer cases expected to rise to 29.5 million by 2040, we must act now. ESMO is committed to educating doctors on all aspects of cancer control, which should begin well before a cancer diagnosis.

“In the face of this emergency, which is rendered even more salient by the results of the report, we must work to enlarge the basis of doctors who are properly educated and trained in key prevention measures,” Dr. Peters added. “General practitioners and organ specialists are in the front line to guide and support patients on their quest for healthy lifestyles and reliable ways to detect cancer early.”

In a comment, Dr. Johnson acknowledged the role physicians play in health promotion and informing patients about noncommunicable disease risks, including those related to cancer. However, she emphasized that nurses, pharmacists, community health workers, midwives, and other health care providers who deliver primary care “are crucial around the world to imparting health information and offering services.”

Frontline health care workers can assess patients’ cancer knowledge and health literacy, determine the barriers to health care, and assess “how best to engage with people across the life course,” Dr. Johnson explained. “Rather than just focusing on physicians, we must work with all those involved in primary care, especially as primary care services are scaled up to achieve universal health coverage.”

Call on governments to do more

The authors noted that, although there is wide awareness of the cancer risks from tobacco use, adults younger than 35 years were less likely than those older than 50 to identify tobacco as a cancer risk factor. They described this finding as “most concerning” and said it “underscores the ongoing need to raise awareness about cancer risk factors in every new generation.”

Almost 60% of survey respondents, regardless of age, education, or income, expressed concern about being diagnosed with cancer in the future or having cancer recur.

In Kenya, where the death toll from cancer rose 30% from 2014 to 2018, people appeared to be the most worried about cancer, with four of five survey respondents (82%) expressing concern.

Survey respondents from Saudi Arabia appeared the least concerned, with one of three people saying they were worried.

Notably, 84% of survey respondents said that governments should be doing more to increase cancer prevention and awareness; 33% demanded that governments improve the affordability of cancer care.

“It is understandable that people turn to their governments for support,” Dr. Johnson commented. “Affordability is a big challenge for low-income settings.”

Data from the World Health Organization show that, for every U.S. $1 invested in low- and middle-income countries, the return is U.S. $3.20, Johnson pointed out. “We really need to convince decision makers ... and see the right investments being made. It is important to ensure that the health system strengthening takes place in tandem with prevention services.”

Governments have begun making commitments to tackle noncommunicable diseases and cancer, Dr. Johnson commented. He highlighted the WHO’s Global Action Plan for Healthy Lives and Well-being for All and the updated cancer resolution adopted at the 2017 World Health Assembly.

“Education, training, and awareness-raising efforts need to be backed by strong and progressive health policies that prioritize prevention and help reduce the consumption of known cancer-causing products such as tobacco, sugary food, and beverages,” she said. “Countries should also invest proactively in national cancer control planning and the establishment of population-based registries to ensure the most effective resource allocation that benefits all groups.”

Up-to-date information on cancer risks and cancer prevention must be delivered to the public in ways that are accessible to those in lower socioeconomic groups, Dr. Johnson added. “Awareness needs to be raised continuously with each new generation,” she noted.

The UICC has relationships with Astellas, Daiichi Sankyo, Diaceutics, MSD Inventing for Life, Bristol-Myers Squibb, CUBEBIO, the Icon Group, Roche, and Sanofi.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

 

The first international public survey on cancer perceptions and attitudes in a decade shows that, in spite of progress, low socioeconomic status and lack of education continue to jeopardize the health of the world’s most vulnerable populations.

The survey was commissioned by the Union for International Cancer Control (UICC) to mark the 20th anniversary of World Cancer Day on Feb. 4, 2020.

The survey, which was conducted by Ipsos, was taken by more than 15,000 people in 20 countries. It shows that people of lower socioeconomic status are less likely than those in higher-income households to recognize the risk factors for cancer or to make lifestyle changes. With the exception of tobacco use, people with low educational attainment also showed less cancer awareness and were less likely to engage in preventive behaviors than those with a university degree.

It is “unacceptable that millions of people have a greater chance of developing cancer in their lifetime because they are simply not aware of the cancer risks to avoid and the healthy behaviors to adopt – information that many of us take for granted. And this is true around the world,” Cary Adams, MBA, CEO of the UICC, commented in a statement.

The survey was conducted from Oct. 25 to Nov., 2019, and included 15,427 participants from Australia, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, Great Britain, India, Israel, Japan, Kenya, Mexico, the Philippines, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Turkey, and the United States.

The vast majority of those surveyed – 87% – said they were aware of the major risk factors for cancer, while only 6% said they were not.

The cancer risk factors that were most recognized were tobacco use (63%), ultraviolet light exposure (54%), and exposure to secondhand tobacco smoke (50%).

The cancer risks that were least recognized included being overweight (29%), a lack of exercise (28%), and exposure to certain viruses or bacteria (28%).

The difference in awareness across the social spectrum was striking. “Emerging from the survey are the apparent and glaring inequities faced by socioeconomically disadvantaged groups,” the authors said.

“Much more must be done to ensure that everyone has an equal chance to reduce their risk of preventable cancer,” commented Sonali Johnson, PhD, head of knowledge, advocacy, and policy at the UICC in Geneva, Switzerland.

“We’ve seen in the results that those surveyed with a lower education and those on lower incomes appear less aware of the main risk factors associated with cancer and thus are less likely to proactively take the steps needed to reduce their cancer risk as compared to those from a high income household or those with a university education,” Dr. Johnson said in an interview.

Does increased cancer awareness translate into behavioral change for the better? This question can only be answered by more research, the survey authors said. They reported that 7 of 10 survey respondents (69%) said they had made a behavioral change to reduce their cancer risk within the past 12 months. Most said they were eating more healthfully.

Slightly fewer than one-quarter reported that they had not taken any preventive measures in the past year.

When it comes to raising cancer awareness, World Cancer Day is “a powerful tool to remind every person that they can play a crucial role in reducing the impact of cancer,” said Dr. Johnson.
 

 

 

Health care providers are “crucial”

Reacting to the findings of the survey, the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) emphasized the key role that physicians play in cancer prevention.

“Research speaks very clearly for prevention,” said ESMO President Solange Peters, MD, PhD. “With the number of cancer cases expected to rise to 29.5 million by 2040, we must act now. ESMO is committed to educating doctors on all aspects of cancer control, which should begin well before a cancer diagnosis.

“In the face of this emergency, which is rendered even more salient by the results of the report, we must work to enlarge the basis of doctors who are properly educated and trained in key prevention measures,” Dr. Peters added. “General practitioners and organ specialists are in the front line to guide and support patients on their quest for healthy lifestyles and reliable ways to detect cancer early.”

In a comment, Dr. Johnson acknowledged the role physicians play in health promotion and informing patients about noncommunicable disease risks, including those related to cancer. However, she emphasized that nurses, pharmacists, community health workers, midwives, and other health care providers who deliver primary care “are crucial around the world to imparting health information and offering services.”

Frontline health care workers can assess patients’ cancer knowledge and health literacy, determine the barriers to health care, and assess “how best to engage with people across the life course,” Dr. Johnson explained. “Rather than just focusing on physicians, we must work with all those involved in primary care, especially as primary care services are scaled up to achieve universal health coverage.”

Call on governments to do more

The authors noted that, although there is wide awareness of the cancer risks from tobacco use, adults younger than 35 years were less likely than those older than 50 to identify tobacco as a cancer risk factor. They described this finding as “most concerning” and said it “underscores the ongoing need to raise awareness about cancer risk factors in every new generation.”

Almost 60% of survey respondents, regardless of age, education, or income, expressed concern about being diagnosed with cancer in the future or having cancer recur.

In Kenya, where the death toll from cancer rose 30% from 2014 to 2018, people appeared to be the most worried about cancer, with four of five survey respondents (82%) expressing concern.

Survey respondents from Saudi Arabia appeared the least concerned, with one of three people saying they were worried.

Notably, 84% of survey respondents said that governments should be doing more to increase cancer prevention and awareness; 33% demanded that governments improve the affordability of cancer care.

“It is understandable that people turn to their governments for support,” Dr. Johnson commented. “Affordability is a big challenge for low-income settings.”

Data from the World Health Organization show that, for every U.S. $1 invested in low- and middle-income countries, the return is U.S. $3.20, Johnson pointed out. “We really need to convince decision makers ... and see the right investments being made. It is important to ensure that the health system strengthening takes place in tandem with prevention services.”

Governments have begun making commitments to tackle noncommunicable diseases and cancer, Dr. Johnson commented. He highlighted the WHO’s Global Action Plan for Healthy Lives and Well-being for All and the updated cancer resolution adopted at the 2017 World Health Assembly.

“Education, training, and awareness-raising efforts need to be backed by strong and progressive health policies that prioritize prevention and help reduce the consumption of known cancer-causing products such as tobacco, sugary food, and beverages,” she said. “Countries should also invest proactively in national cancer control planning and the establishment of population-based registries to ensure the most effective resource allocation that benefits all groups.”

Up-to-date information on cancer risks and cancer prevention must be delivered to the public in ways that are accessible to those in lower socioeconomic groups, Dr. Johnson added. “Awareness needs to be raised continuously with each new generation,” she noted.

The UICC has relationships with Astellas, Daiichi Sankyo, Diaceutics, MSD Inventing for Life, Bristol-Myers Squibb, CUBEBIO, the Icon Group, Roche, and Sanofi.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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