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MEASUREMENT OF ADHERENCE, HEALTH-RELATED QUALITY OF LIFE, AND HEALTH-CARE RESOURCE UTILIZATION DURING ANTICOAGULATION THERAPY IN CANCER-RELATED VENOUS THROMBOEMBOLISM
Cristhiam M. Rojas-Hernandez, MD
Assistant Professor of Medicine
Section of Benign Hematology
CONTENT
§ Brief background review
§ Study problem and objectives
§ Study design and activities
§ Timeline and updates
BACKGROUND/CONTEXT
§ Cancer-related venous thromboembolism (VTE) is a prevalent problem that occurs in 20-25% of patients with malignancy
§ For cancer related-VTE, consensus guidelines (ASCO, ACCP, NCCN) recommend treatment with parenteral low molecular weight heparin (LMWH) for the initial and long term therapy (at least 6 months)
§ Recommendations in VTE guidelines are based on efficacy and safety data, but scant (to none) information on quality of life, patient’s preference and adherence to therapy outside clinical trials
§ Although LMWH are effective agents for the treatment of cancer-related VTE, they are often difficult to tolerate and might be inconvenient for long-term use by cancer patients
Yu YB, Gau JP, Liu CY, et al. A nation-wide analysis of venous thromboembolism in 497,180 cancer patients with the development and validation of a risk-stratification scoring system. Thrombosis and haemostasis 2012;108:225-35. Lyman GH, Khorana AA, Kuderer NM, et al. Venous thromboembolism prophylaxis and treatment in patients with cancer: American Society of Clinical Oncology clinical practice guideline update. J Clin Oncol 2013;31:2189-204.
PATIENT’S PREFERENCE FOR CANCER-VTE TREATMENT
Noble, S., Matzdorff, A., Maraveyas, A., Holm, M.V. and Pisa, G., 2015. Assessing patients’ anticoagulation preferences for the treatment of cancer-associated thrombosis using conjoint methodology. haematologica, 100(11), pp.1486-1492.
75.3 14.7
-90
61.4 9.3
-70.7
-39 39
128.4 52.7
-34.6 -146.4
2.3 -4.3
1.9
6.7 0.3
-7
Monitoring through blood tests Once a week Only once after 3 weeks of treatment initiation No monitoring Frequency of administration Change from 2x daily to 1x daily after 3 weeks Twice daily Once daily Interference with cancer treatment Interference in 15 out of 100 patients Interference in 8 out of 100 patients Interference in 4 out of 100 patients No interference Administration form Tablet Injection under the skin Risk of major bleeding 7 out of 100 patients 4 out of 100 patients 2 out of 100 patients Efficacy New clot in 17 out of 100 patients New clot in 17 out of 100 patients New clot in 17 out of 100 patients
Coefficient for low/high scenario choice probability
U.S. PRESCRIPTION PATTERNS FOR CANCER-VTE
Khorana, et al (2016). Thrombosis research 145:51-53.
n = 105,399
U.S. PRESCRIPTION PATTERNS FOR CANCER-VTE
Khorana, et al (2016). Thrombosis research 145:51-53.
U.S. PRESCRIPTION PATTERNS FOR CANCER-VTE
Khorana, et al (2016). Thrombosis research 145:51-53.
BACKGROUND/CONTEXT
§ Some reports based on expert experience have described that reasons for non-adherence to guidelines might be:
Ø Reluctance to impose daily injections on fragile patients
Ø The complexity of the medical care organization and pathway (cost related issues, patient’s preference, level of awareness, etc.)
Ø Strength of habit
Ø Lack of knowledge or confidence in treatment guidelines
Ø Concerns about bleeding, dose adjustments in specific circumstances (i.e.: thrombocytopenia, concurrent coagulopathy, drug interactions)
Mahe I, Chidiac J, Helfer H, Noble S (2016) Factors influencing adherence to clinical guidelines in the management of cancer-associated thrombosis. Journal of thrombosis and haemostasis : JTH 14 (11):2107-2113.
PROBLEM
§ There is a need for further investigation of the treatment adherence, health related quality of life (QoL) and health care resources utilization during long term anticoagulation for cancer-related VTE
§ Knowledge gap in the impact of QoL and treatment adherence in cancer-thrombosis related outcomes:
Ø Recurrent venous thromboembolism
Ø Clinical relevant bleeding
PROBLEM: TARGET POPULATION § Adult (≥ 18 years) female or male subjects
§ Confirmed symptomatic proximal or distal lower extremity deep venous thrombosis with or without pulmonary embolism or other venous thromboses
§ Active cancer or diagnosed within 2 years prior to VTE
§ Intention for long-term treatment (at least 3 months) with anticoagulation
§ Setting: Hospital/outpatient clinic/anticoagulation clinic
STUDY OBJECTIVES § PRIMARY
Ø To assess self-reported adherence to long term anticoagulation treatment for cancer related-venous thromboembolism
§ SECONDARY
Ø To assess anticoagulation self-reported adherence changes over time, by the anticoagulant type used (parenteral versus oral)
Ø To assess if other patient, tumor and anticoagulation-related outcomes are associated with self-reported adherence to anticoagulation treatment
Ø To assess the QoL variables in patients for cancer-related VTE treated with anticoagulation
Ø To measure the number of outpatient visits, emergency center visits and hospitalization episodes related to the management of anticoagulation complications during the study period
STUDY DESIGN Assessments Completed by Time 1 Follow-up at 30
dayFollow-up at 3
months
Follow-up at 6 months
Follow-up at 12 months
Consent Patient X Screening Questionnaire
Research coordinator X
QoL variables Patient X X X X XAdherence report Patient X X X XDocumentation of visits for anticoagulation complications
Research coordinator X X X X
§ Prospective observational (non-interventional) study § Multiple centers will be participating § 260 patients § Potential participants in the study will be identified through a list of daily
diagnostic doppler ultrasonography and computerized tomography studies.
STUDY OUTCOMES MEASUREMENT
§ The Morisky scale is a validated, self-reported measure that can be integrated in a medical visit.
§ It is composed of four dichotomized item/questions with good predictive validity for medication adherence (alpha reliability=0.6)
§ This adherence scale has been previously used in patients on oral long term anticoagulation and shown to provide correlation with anticoagulation control
Do you ever forget to take your medicine? Yes/No
Are you careless at times about taking your medicine? Yes/No
When you feel better, do you sometimes stop taking your medicine? Yes/No
Sometimes if you feel worse when you take the medicine, do you stop taking it? Yes/No
Castellucci LA, Shaw J, van der Salm K, et al. Self-reported adherence to anticoagulation and its determinants using the Morisky medication adherence scale. Thrombosis research 2015;136:727-31. Morisky DE, Green LW, Levine DM. Concurrent and predictive validity of a self-reported measure of medication adherence. Medical care 1986;24:67-74.
§ SELF –REPORTED ANTICOAGULATION ADHERENCE
STUDY OUTCOMES MEASUREMENT § HEALTH CARE RELATED QoL: DVTQOL TOOL
§ A questionnaire that includes a total of 29 questions.
§ For each question, responses are arranged on a seven-point Likert scale: Ø Severity of the degree of distress
not at all, minor, mild, moderate, moderate severe, severe, extremely severe Ø Frequency of the problem
never, hardly ever, occasionally, sometimes, frequently, most of the time, all of the time
§ The item-questions are grouped in six domains: Emotional distress, symptoms, limitations in physical activity, hassle with monitoring, sleep disturbance, and dietary problems.
§ The DVTQOL has a good internal consistency reliability (alpha, 0.79 to 0.93) and it correlates well with other well validated tools for the evaluation of health related QoL, such as SF-36 and EQ-5D
Hedner E, Carlsson J, Kulich KR, Stigendal L, Ingelgard A, Wiklund I. An instrument for measuring health-related quality of life in patients with Deep Venous Thrombosis (DVT): development and validation of Deep Venous Thrombosis Quality of Life (DVTQOL) questionnaire. Health and quality of life outcomes 2004;2:30.
TIMELINE & UPDATES
§ Protocol approved at MD Anderson Cancer Center (USA) in October 2017
§ Applied for local Survivorship Program funding
§ Screening and enrollment of participants started in November 2017
§ At May 31, 2018:
Ø A total of 339 patients screened for eligibility
Ø 12 subjects are currently participating
Ø 6 subjects have completed surveys for 30-day follow-up visits
Ø 2 subjects have withdrawn from the study
TIMELINE & UPDATES Characteristics N % Female 6 50 Age [min., max] [43, 78] Type of malignancy Solid Hematologic
10 2
83 17
Active cancer therapy 9 75 Anticoagulation of choice LMWH DOAC
9 3
75 25
Location of index DVT Proximal lower extremity Distal lower extremity Concurrent pulmonary embolism
7 5 7
58 42 58
TIMELINE & UPDATES
§ At 30-day follow up: 100% self-reported adherence to treatment (6 subjects)
§ Health related QoL features:
Ø Frequent moderate to moderate-severe distress in the domains of physical symptoms and limitation to physical activity
Ø Frequent moderate emotional distress related to anxiety about own health
TIMELINE & UPDATES
§ Sites initiating IRB approval and activation (2018):
Ø Mitchell Cancer Institute (Alabama, USA): Dr. Butler
Ø Hospital Clinic (Barcelona, Spain): Dr. Font
Ø Virgen del Rocio Hospital (Seville, Spain): Dr. Jara-Palomares
Ø Valle del Lili Clinic (Cali, Colombia): Dr. Chavarro-Dominguez
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS § Michael H. Kroll
Chief of the Section of Benign Hematology, MDACC
§ Carmen P. Escalante
Department Chair of General Internal Medicine, MDACC
§ Loretta A. Williams
Assistant Professor, Department of Symptom Research, MDACC
§ Carol C. Wu
Associate Professor, Department of Diagnostic Radiology, MDACC
§ Roland L. Bassett Jr
Principal Statistical Analyst, Department of Biostatistics, MDACC
§ Carme Font
Hospital Clinic (Barcelona, Spain)
§ Thomas W. Butler
Associate Professor of Clinical Oncology, Mitchell Cancer Institute (AL, USA)
THANKS FOR YOUR ATTENTION