Use of smartphone app improves pain outcomes

Article Type
Changed
Thu, 03/28/2019 - 14:32

 

– A smartphone app that included artificial intelligence elements was associated with improved pain outcomes and reduced hospital admissions in patients with advanced cancers.

Pain severity significantly decreased among patients randomized to use the app versus control patients who received only palliative care, researchers reported at the Palliative and Supportive Care in Oncology Symposium.

The risk of pain-related hospital admissions was significantly lower for those who used the pain tracking app, called ePAL, though anxiety scores were higher in the app users, the investigators said, and no difference between arms was noted in quality of life or global symptom scores.

The ePAL app prompts patients three times per week to track their pain levels and, depending on the severity of pain, will use an algorithm to guide patients through their symptoms, or, in patients with persistent or worsening pain, connect them directly with the palliative care service for additional assessment.

The app also includes pain management tips, among other educational content, provides the ability to request pain prescription refills, and creates a summary of the patient’s pain condition for the provider, said Mihir M. Kamdar, MD, associate director of palliative care at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston.

“The provider can actually start the visit with that information, instead of having to spend several minutes trying to recap what might or might not have happened since the last clinic visit,” Dr. Kamdar said.

The study included 112 English-speaking adult patients with stage IV solid cancers and moderate to severe pain who were being followed in a palliative care clinic. They were randomly assigned to receive the ePAL app plus standard of care or standard of care alone; 39 patients in the app group and 40 in the control arm completed the 8-week evaluation.

Pain severity, the primary study endpoint, decreased over time in the intervention group, from a composite Brief Pain Inventory score of 3.74 at enrollment to 2.99 at 8 weeks, while in the control group, the scores were 4.02 at enrollment and 4.05 at 8 weeks (P = .017 for intervention versus control), Dr. Kamdar reported.

Risk of pain-related hospital admissions was significantly lower in the intervention group, according to Dr. Kamdar. The per-patient risk of an inpatient admission was 0.071 and 0.232 for the intervention and controls groups, respectively, with a risk ratio of 0.31 (95% CI, 0.11-0.89; P = .018).

Anxiety was increased in the app users, as measured by the Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7-item scale, with a significant difference between the app and control groups at 8 weeks (P = .015). However, the change was in a range considered mild and was not seen in patients who used the app more than two times per week.

Negative attitudes toward cancer pain treatment decreased significantly in the app group, as shown by a lower score on the Barriers Questionnaire II at 8 weeks (P = .042), Dr. Kamdar reported.

The app and study were supported by the McKesson Foundation’s Mobilizing for Health Initiative. Dr. Kamdar reported stock/ownership and consulting/advisory role disclosures related to Amorsa Therapeutics.

SOURCE: Kamdar MM et al. PallOnc 2018, Abstract 76.

Meeting/Event
Publications
Topics
Sections
Meeting/Event
Meeting/Event

 

– A smartphone app that included artificial intelligence elements was associated with improved pain outcomes and reduced hospital admissions in patients with advanced cancers.

Pain severity significantly decreased among patients randomized to use the app versus control patients who received only palliative care, researchers reported at the Palliative and Supportive Care in Oncology Symposium.

The risk of pain-related hospital admissions was significantly lower for those who used the pain tracking app, called ePAL, though anxiety scores were higher in the app users, the investigators said, and no difference between arms was noted in quality of life or global symptom scores.

The ePAL app prompts patients three times per week to track their pain levels and, depending on the severity of pain, will use an algorithm to guide patients through their symptoms, or, in patients with persistent or worsening pain, connect them directly with the palliative care service for additional assessment.

The app also includes pain management tips, among other educational content, provides the ability to request pain prescription refills, and creates a summary of the patient’s pain condition for the provider, said Mihir M. Kamdar, MD, associate director of palliative care at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston.

“The provider can actually start the visit with that information, instead of having to spend several minutes trying to recap what might or might not have happened since the last clinic visit,” Dr. Kamdar said.

The study included 112 English-speaking adult patients with stage IV solid cancers and moderate to severe pain who were being followed in a palliative care clinic. They were randomly assigned to receive the ePAL app plus standard of care or standard of care alone; 39 patients in the app group and 40 in the control arm completed the 8-week evaluation.

Pain severity, the primary study endpoint, decreased over time in the intervention group, from a composite Brief Pain Inventory score of 3.74 at enrollment to 2.99 at 8 weeks, while in the control group, the scores were 4.02 at enrollment and 4.05 at 8 weeks (P = .017 for intervention versus control), Dr. Kamdar reported.

Risk of pain-related hospital admissions was significantly lower in the intervention group, according to Dr. Kamdar. The per-patient risk of an inpatient admission was 0.071 and 0.232 for the intervention and controls groups, respectively, with a risk ratio of 0.31 (95% CI, 0.11-0.89; P = .018).

Anxiety was increased in the app users, as measured by the Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7-item scale, with a significant difference between the app and control groups at 8 weeks (P = .015). However, the change was in a range considered mild and was not seen in patients who used the app more than two times per week.

Negative attitudes toward cancer pain treatment decreased significantly in the app group, as shown by a lower score on the Barriers Questionnaire II at 8 weeks (P = .042), Dr. Kamdar reported.

The app and study were supported by the McKesson Foundation’s Mobilizing for Health Initiative. Dr. Kamdar reported stock/ownership and consulting/advisory role disclosures related to Amorsa Therapeutics.

SOURCE: Kamdar MM et al. PallOnc 2018, Abstract 76.

 

– A smartphone app that included artificial intelligence elements was associated with improved pain outcomes and reduced hospital admissions in patients with advanced cancers.

Pain severity significantly decreased among patients randomized to use the app versus control patients who received only palliative care, researchers reported at the Palliative and Supportive Care in Oncology Symposium.

The risk of pain-related hospital admissions was significantly lower for those who used the pain tracking app, called ePAL, though anxiety scores were higher in the app users, the investigators said, and no difference between arms was noted in quality of life or global symptom scores.

The ePAL app prompts patients three times per week to track their pain levels and, depending on the severity of pain, will use an algorithm to guide patients through their symptoms, or, in patients with persistent or worsening pain, connect them directly with the palliative care service for additional assessment.

The app also includes pain management tips, among other educational content, provides the ability to request pain prescription refills, and creates a summary of the patient’s pain condition for the provider, said Mihir M. Kamdar, MD, associate director of palliative care at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston.

“The provider can actually start the visit with that information, instead of having to spend several minutes trying to recap what might or might not have happened since the last clinic visit,” Dr. Kamdar said.

The study included 112 English-speaking adult patients with stage IV solid cancers and moderate to severe pain who were being followed in a palliative care clinic. They were randomly assigned to receive the ePAL app plus standard of care or standard of care alone; 39 patients in the app group and 40 in the control arm completed the 8-week evaluation.

Pain severity, the primary study endpoint, decreased over time in the intervention group, from a composite Brief Pain Inventory score of 3.74 at enrollment to 2.99 at 8 weeks, while in the control group, the scores were 4.02 at enrollment and 4.05 at 8 weeks (P = .017 for intervention versus control), Dr. Kamdar reported.

Risk of pain-related hospital admissions was significantly lower in the intervention group, according to Dr. Kamdar. The per-patient risk of an inpatient admission was 0.071 and 0.232 for the intervention and controls groups, respectively, with a risk ratio of 0.31 (95% CI, 0.11-0.89; P = .018).

Anxiety was increased in the app users, as measured by the Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7-item scale, with a significant difference between the app and control groups at 8 weeks (P = .015). However, the change was in a range considered mild and was not seen in patients who used the app more than two times per week.

Negative attitudes toward cancer pain treatment decreased significantly in the app group, as shown by a lower score on the Barriers Questionnaire II at 8 weeks (P = .042), Dr. Kamdar reported.

The app and study were supported by the McKesson Foundation’s Mobilizing for Health Initiative. Dr. Kamdar reported stock/ownership and consulting/advisory role disclosures related to Amorsa Therapeutics.

SOURCE: Kamdar MM et al. PallOnc 2018, Abstract 76.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Article Source

REPORTING FROM PALLONC 2018

Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Vitals

 

Key clinical point: Use of a smartphone app with artificial intelligence elements improved pain outcomes and reduced hospital admissions in patients with advanced cancers.

Major finding: Pain severity decreased over time from a composite Brief Pain Inventory score of 3.74 at enrollment to 2.99 at 8 weeks, compared with baseline and 8-week values of 4.02 and 4.05 in the control group (P = .017).

Study details: A randomized study including 112 English-speaking adult patients with stage IV solid cancers and moderate to severe pain who were followed in a palliative care clinic.

Disclosures: The research was supported by the McKesson Foundation. The presenting author reported stock/ownership and consulting/advisory role disclosures related to Amorsa Therapeutic.

Source: Kamdar MM et al. PallOnc 2018, Abstract 76.

Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica

Minority cancer patient scan discussions 3 minutes shorter

Article Type
Changed
Thu, 03/28/2019 - 14:32

 

– Oncologists spent on average 3 minutes less with minority patients than with nonminority patients at a critical transition visit to talk about a scan result related to advanced cancer, a study investigator reported.

The gap was most pronounced for visits where a negative scan result was communicated, said investigator Cardinale B. Smith, MD, PhD, director of Quality for Cancer Services, Mount Sinai Health System, New York.

Future work is needed to look at the content of these conversations to determine to what extent physician- or patient-specific factors may have contributed to this difference, according to Dr. Smith.

“This will be critically important to ensure that we provide high-quality care to our minority patients,” Dr. Smith said at the 2018 Palliative and Supportive Care in Oncology Symposium.

The study included 22 oncologists from four hospitals randomized to either a usual-care group or an intervention group that included several interventions designed to improve communication techniques related to goals-of-care conversations

Sixty-nine percent of the physicians were white, while 23% were Asian, 8% were Hispanic, and 5% were black, Dr. Smith said.

Postimaging encounters were audio recorded for 142 patients, more than half of whom were minorities; 32% were black and 26% were Hispanic, according to the investigator, while 38% were white and 4% were Asian.

Overall, time spent with minorities at the scan results visit was 11.5 minutes versus 16.5 minutes for nonminorities (P = .0007), Dr. Smith reported.

When the scan was positive, there was actually no significant difference in time spent on minority versus nonminority visits, (16 versus 18 minutes; P = .59), a finding that Dr. Smith said was “encouraging” in an interview. However, there was a marked difference in length of time spent on minority versus nonminority visits when the scans showed no progression (10 versus 15 minutes; P = .0003).

“There’s something about regular, routine visits, which are still just as important as [positive] scan visits, in which there is a difference in the time spent,” Dr. Smith said in an interview. “We’re really interested in doing a more in-depth analysis of those conversations to see what’s contributing to those differences.”

After adjusting for patient insurance, education, income progression, status, and hospital, investigators found that oncologists spent 13.5 minutes (interquartile range, 12-16) with minority patients versus 16.5 minutes (IQR, 16-19) for nonminority patients (P less than .0001).

In terms of the communications intervention, investigators found no difference in time spent with minorities versus nonminorities among the intervention or control physicians. However, the intervention was aimed at improving the rate of goals of care conversations rather than improving communication based on race or ethnicity, Dr. Smith said.

By contrast, the finding of decreased time spent in communication encounters with minority patients merits further study to see how much of the disparity is mediated by differences in patients versus oncologists, she added.

In literature on communication disparities in other care settings outside of oncology, care conversations with minorities tend to be more closed ended, as opposed to open ended – so instead of asking if a patient is doing well, a physician might start out with a declarative statement that the patient’s findings are positive, she said.

On the other hand, some literature suggests that minority patients may not question the physician as much as nonminorities, or may not spend as much time asking directed questions during the visit. “That may also contribute to decreased time spent during those encounters,” Dr. Smith added.

The research was supported by the Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute. Dr. Smith reported honoraria and a consulting or advisory role with Teva.

SOURCE: Smith CB et al. PallOnc 2018, Abstract 19.

Meeting/Event
Publications
Topics
Sections
Meeting/Event
Meeting/Event

 

– Oncologists spent on average 3 minutes less with minority patients than with nonminority patients at a critical transition visit to talk about a scan result related to advanced cancer, a study investigator reported.

The gap was most pronounced for visits where a negative scan result was communicated, said investigator Cardinale B. Smith, MD, PhD, director of Quality for Cancer Services, Mount Sinai Health System, New York.

Future work is needed to look at the content of these conversations to determine to what extent physician- or patient-specific factors may have contributed to this difference, according to Dr. Smith.

“This will be critically important to ensure that we provide high-quality care to our minority patients,” Dr. Smith said at the 2018 Palliative and Supportive Care in Oncology Symposium.

The study included 22 oncologists from four hospitals randomized to either a usual-care group or an intervention group that included several interventions designed to improve communication techniques related to goals-of-care conversations

Sixty-nine percent of the physicians were white, while 23% were Asian, 8% were Hispanic, and 5% were black, Dr. Smith said.

Postimaging encounters were audio recorded for 142 patients, more than half of whom were minorities; 32% were black and 26% were Hispanic, according to the investigator, while 38% were white and 4% were Asian.

Overall, time spent with minorities at the scan results visit was 11.5 minutes versus 16.5 minutes for nonminorities (P = .0007), Dr. Smith reported.

When the scan was positive, there was actually no significant difference in time spent on minority versus nonminority visits, (16 versus 18 minutes; P = .59), a finding that Dr. Smith said was “encouraging” in an interview. However, there was a marked difference in length of time spent on minority versus nonminority visits when the scans showed no progression (10 versus 15 minutes; P = .0003).

“There’s something about regular, routine visits, which are still just as important as [positive] scan visits, in which there is a difference in the time spent,” Dr. Smith said in an interview. “We’re really interested in doing a more in-depth analysis of those conversations to see what’s contributing to those differences.”

After adjusting for patient insurance, education, income progression, status, and hospital, investigators found that oncologists spent 13.5 minutes (interquartile range, 12-16) with minority patients versus 16.5 minutes (IQR, 16-19) for nonminority patients (P less than .0001).

In terms of the communications intervention, investigators found no difference in time spent with minorities versus nonminorities among the intervention or control physicians. However, the intervention was aimed at improving the rate of goals of care conversations rather than improving communication based on race or ethnicity, Dr. Smith said.

By contrast, the finding of decreased time spent in communication encounters with minority patients merits further study to see how much of the disparity is mediated by differences in patients versus oncologists, she added.

In literature on communication disparities in other care settings outside of oncology, care conversations with minorities tend to be more closed ended, as opposed to open ended – so instead of asking if a patient is doing well, a physician might start out with a declarative statement that the patient’s findings are positive, she said.

On the other hand, some literature suggests that minority patients may not question the physician as much as nonminorities, or may not spend as much time asking directed questions during the visit. “That may also contribute to decreased time spent during those encounters,” Dr. Smith added.

The research was supported by the Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute. Dr. Smith reported honoraria and a consulting or advisory role with Teva.

SOURCE: Smith CB et al. PallOnc 2018, Abstract 19.

 

– Oncologists spent on average 3 minutes less with minority patients than with nonminority patients at a critical transition visit to talk about a scan result related to advanced cancer, a study investigator reported.

The gap was most pronounced for visits where a negative scan result was communicated, said investigator Cardinale B. Smith, MD, PhD, director of Quality for Cancer Services, Mount Sinai Health System, New York.

Future work is needed to look at the content of these conversations to determine to what extent physician- or patient-specific factors may have contributed to this difference, according to Dr. Smith.

“This will be critically important to ensure that we provide high-quality care to our minority patients,” Dr. Smith said at the 2018 Palliative and Supportive Care in Oncology Symposium.

The study included 22 oncologists from four hospitals randomized to either a usual-care group or an intervention group that included several interventions designed to improve communication techniques related to goals-of-care conversations

Sixty-nine percent of the physicians were white, while 23% were Asian, 8% were Hispanic, and 5% were black, Dr. Smith said.

Postimaging encounters were audio recorded for 142 patients, more than half of whom were minorities; 32% were black and 26% were Hispanic, according to the investigator, while 38% were white and 4% were Asian.

Overall, time spent with minorities at the scan results visit was 11.5 minutes versus 16.5 minutes for nonminorities (P = .0007), Dr. Smith reported.

When the scan was positive, there was actually no significant difference in time spent on minority versus nonminority visits, (16 versus 18 minutes; P = .59), a finding that Dr. Smith said was “encouraging” in an interview. However, there was a marked difference in length of time spent on minority versus nonminority visits when the scans showed no progression (10 versus 15 minutes; P = .0003).

“There’s something about regular, routine visits, which are still just as important as [positive] scan visits, in which there is a difference in the time spent,” Dr. Smith said in an interview. “We’re really interested in doing a more in-depth analysis of those conversations to see what’s contributing to those differences.”

After adjusting for patient insurance, education, income progression, status, and hospital, investigators found that oncologists spent 13.5 minutes (interquartile range, 12-16) with minority patients versus 16.5 minutes (IQR, 16-19) for nonminority patients (P less than .0001).

In terms of the communications intervention, investigators found no difference in time spent with minorities versus nonminorities among the intervention or control physicians. However, the intervention was aimed at improving the rate of goals of care conversations rather than improving communication based on race or ethnicity, Dr. Smith said.

By contrast, the finding of decreased time spent in communication encounters with minority patients merits further study to see how much of the disparity is mediated by differences in patients versus oncologists, she added.

In literature on communication disparities in other care settings outside of oncology, care conversations with minorities tend to be more closed ended, as opposed to open ended – so instead of asking if a patient is doing well, a physician might start out with a declarative statement that the patient’s findings are positive, she said.

On the other hand, some literature suggests that minority patients may not question the physician as much as nonminorities, or may not spend as much time asking directed questions during the visit. “That may also contribute to decreased time spent during those encounters,” Dr. Smith added.

The research was supported by the Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute. Dr. Smith reported honoraria and a consulting or advisory role with Teva.

SOURCE: Smith CB et al. PallOnc 2018, Abstract 19.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Article Source

REPORTING FROM PALLONC 2018

Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Vitals

 

Key clinical point: Oncologists spent on average 3 minutes less with minority patients than with nonminority patients discussing a scan result related to an advanced cancer.

Major finding: Adjusted discussion time was 13.5 minutes for minority patients versus 16.5 minutes for nonminority patients.

Study details: Analysis of audio recordings of discussions between 142 patients and 22 oncologists at four hospitals.

Disclosures: The research was supported by the Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute. The presenting author reported honoraria and a consulting or advisory role with Teva.

Source: Smith CB et al. PallOnc 2018, Abstract 19.

Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica

Immunotherapy-related toxicities may be more common than reported in trials

Article Type
Changed
Fri, 01/04/2019 - 14:26

– Certain immune-related adverse events related to PD1/PD-L1 treatment of patients with non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) may be more common than reported in clinical trials, a recent analysis of administrative claims data suggests.

Pneumonitis was seen in 10.9% of patients up to 60 days after the last dose of immunotherapy, according to the analysis of data from a large, U.S. commercial insurance database, presented at the Palliative and Supportive Care in Oncology Symposium.

By comparison, pneumonitis was reported in just 5.8% of NSCLC patients during treatment with the PD-1 (programmed cell death-1) inhibitor pembrolizumab in KEYNOTE-024, a pivotal randomized phase 3 clinical trial, said Elizabeth Jane Cathcart-Rake, MD, senior study author and an oncology fellow at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn.

Rates of immune-related adverse events in this study were generally higher than in clinical trials, both for common side effects and more rare conditions such as hypophysitis, according to Dr. Cathcart-Rake.

These new claims-based data might be considered complementary to clinical trial data, the researcher said.

“Together, they may give us a better sense of the broader implications of these adverse events,” she said in an interview.

Joe Rotella, MD, a board member of the American Academy for Hospice and Palliative Care Medicine, said results of this insurance database study provide a perspective on the real-world incidence of adverse events associated with immune checkpoint inhibitors.

“We’ve only been using these therapies for a few years, so this new analysis gives us more information on the prevalence of these side effects in patients as the therapies gain wider use,” Dr. Rotella said in a news release.

In the study, Dr. Cathcart-Rake and coinvestigators queried the OptumLabs Data Warehouse to identify 3,164 patients with NSCLC who received PD-1 or PD-L1 (programmed death-ligand 1) inhibitors between 2015 and 2017. They looked at incidence of adverse events both at the time of the last immunotherapy dose and at 60 days after the last dose.

The incidence of pneumonitis, just 4.9% on the last date of immunotherapy, increased to 10.9% at 60 days after the last dose, Dr. Cathcart-Rake reported.

Beyond pneumonitis, the most common immunotherapy-related toxicities at 60 days were hypothyroidism in 7.0%, arrhythmia in 6.1%, and nephritis or acute kidney injury in 5.4%, according to the investigators.

Dr. Cathcart-Rake also highlighted the incidence of some less common immunotherapy-related toxicities such as hypophysitis or hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis toxicity, seen in 2.8% of patients by 60 days.

“That’s a small number, but hypophysitis can be really profound, and frequently leads to hospitalization,” she said. “I think this just gives us enough of a signal that providers really need to be on top of looking for these adverse events and to counsel patients beforehand.”

These data could also be helpful for advising hospitalists, emergency room physicians, and other providers who may not be attuned to the potential risks of cancer immunotherapy as compared with traditional cytotoxic chemotherapy, Dr. Cathcart-Rake said at the meeting cosponsored by AAHPM, ASCO, ASTRO, and MASCC.

“A patient with cancer may be on immunotherapy and their risk for infection is quite low, but they may be at a huge risk for pneumonitis, which is treated completely differently,” she said. “So I think this should just raise alarms that close clinical monitoring for these conditions is really important.”

Dr. Cathcart-Rake disclosed that her institution receives research funding from Novartis. One study coinvestigator reported consulting or advisory roles with Trovagene, Genentech, Bristol-Myers Squibb, and Abbvie.

SOURCE: Cathcart-Rake EJ et al. 2018 Palliative and Supportive Care in Oncology Symposium. Abstract 184.

 

Meeting/Event
Publications
Topics
Sections
Meeting/Event
Meeting/Event

– Certain immune-related adverse events related to PD1/PD-L1 treatment of patients with non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) may be more common than reported in clinical trials, a recent analysis of administrative claims data suggests.

Pneumonitis was seen in 10.9% of patients up to 60 days after the last dose of immunotherapy, according to the analysis of data from a large, U.S. commercial insurance database, presented at the Palliative and Supportive Care in Oncology Symposium.

By comparison, pneumonitis was reported in just 5.8% of NSCLC patients during treatment with the PD-1 (programmed cell death-1) inhibitor pembrolizumab in KEYNOTE-024, a pivotal randomized phase 3 clinical trial, said Elizabeth Jane Cathcart-Rake, MD, senior study author and an oncology fellow at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn.

Rates of immune-related adverse events in this study were generally higher than in clinical trials, both for common side effects and more rare conditions such as hypophysitis, according to Dr. Cathcart-Rake.

These new claims-based data might be considered complementary to clinical trial data, the researcher said.

“Together, they may give us a better sense of the broader implications of these adverse events,” she said in an interview.

Joe Rotella, MD, a board member of the American Academy for Hospice and Palliative Care Medicine, said results of this insurance database study provide a perspective on the real-world incidence of adverse events associated with immune checkpoint inhibitors.

“We’ve only been using these therapies for a few years, so this new analysis gives us more information on the prevalence of these side effects in patients as the therapies gain wider use,” Dr. Rotella said in a news release.

In the study, Dr. Cathcart-Rake and coinvestigators queried the OptumLabs Data Warehouse to identify 3,164 patients with NSCLC who received PD-1 or PD-L1 (programmed death-ligand 1) inhibitors between 2015 and 2017. They looked at incidence of adverse events both at the time of the last immunotherapy dose and at 60 days after the last dose.

The incidence of pneumonitis, just 4.9% on the last date of immunotherapy, increased to 10.9% at 60 days after the last dose, Dr. Cathcart-Rake reported.

Beyond pneumonitis, the most common immunotherapy-related toxicities at 60 days were hypothyroidism in 7.0%, arrhythmia in 6.1%, and nephritis or acute kidney injury in 5.4%, according to the investigators.

Dr. Cathcart-Rake also highlighted the incidence of some less common immunotherapy-related toxicities such as hypophysitis or hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis toxicity, seen in 2.8% of patients by 60 days.

“That’s a small number, but hypophysitis can be really profound, and frequently leads to hospitalization,” she said. “I think this just gives us enough of a signal that providers really need to be on top of looking for these adverse events and to counsel patients beforehand.”

These data could also be helpful for advising hospitalists, emergency room physicians, and other providers who may not be attuned to the potential risks of cancer immunotherapy as compared with traditional cytotoxic chemotherapy, Dr. Cathcart-Rake said at the meeting cosponsored by AAHPM, ASCO, ASTRO, and MASCC.

“A patient with cancer may be on immunotherapy and their risk for infection is quite low, but they may be at a huge risk for pneumonitis, which is treated completely differently,” she said. “So I think this should just raise alarms that close clinical monitoring for these conditions is really important.”

Dr. Cathcart-Rake disclosed that her institution receives research funding from Novartis. One study coinvestigator reported consulting or advisory roles with Trovagene, Genentech, Bristol-Myers Squibb, and Abbvie.

SOURCE: Cathcart-Rake EJ et al. 2018 Palliative and Supportive Care in Oncology Symposium. Abstract 184.

 

– Certain immune-related adverse events related to PD1/PD-L1 treatment of patients with non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) may be more common than reported in clinical trials, a recent analysis of administrative claims data suggests.

Pneumonitis was seen in 10.9% of patients up to 60 days after the last dose of immunotherapy, according to the analysis of data from a large, U.S. commercial insurance database, presented at the Palliative and Supportive Care in Oncology Symposium.

By comparison, pneumonitis was reported in just 5.8% of NSCLC patients during treatment with the PD-1 (programmed cell death-1) inhibitor pembrolizumab in KEYNOTE-024, a pivotal randomized phase 3 clinical trial, said Elizabeth Jane Cathcart-Rake, MD, senior study author and an oncology fellow at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn.

Rates of immune-related adverse events in this study were generally higher than in clinical trials, both for common side effects and more rare conditions such as hypophysitis, according to Dr. Cathcart-Rake.

These new claims-based data might be considered complementary to clinical trial data, the researcher said.

“Together, they may give us a better sense of the broader implications of these adverse events,” she said in an interview.

Joe Rotella, MD, a board member of the American Academy for Hospice and Palliative Care Medicine, said results of this insurance database study provide a perspective on the real-world incidence of adverse events associated with immune checkpoint inhibitors.

“We’ve only been using these therapies for a few years, so this new analysis gives us more information on the prevalence of these side effects in patients as the therapies gain wider use,” Dr. Rotella said in a news release.

In the study, Dr. Cathcart-Rake and coinvestigators queried the OptumLabs Data Warehouse to identify 3,164 patients with NSCLC who received PD-1 or PD-L1 (programmed death-ligand 1) inhibitors between 2015 and 2017. They looked at incidence of adverse events both at the time of the last immunotherapy dose and at 60 days after the last dose.

The incidence of pneumonitis, just 4.9% on the last date of immunotherapy, increased to 10.9% at 60 days after the last dose, Dr. Cathcart-Rake reported.

Beyond pneumonitis, the most common immunotherapy-related toxicities at 60 days were hypothyroidism in 7.0%, arrhythmia in 6.1%, and nephritis or acute kidney injury in 5.4%, according to the investigators.

Dr. Cathcart-Rake also highlighted the incidence of some less common immunotherapy-related toxicities such as hypophysitis or hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis toxicity, seen in 2.8% of patients by 60 days.

“That’s a small number, but hypophysitis can be really profound, and frequently leads to hospitalization,” she said. “I think this just gives us enough of a signal that providers really need to be on top of looking for these adverse events and to counsel patients beforehand.”

These data could also be helpful for advising hospitalists, emergency room physicians, and other providers who may not be attuned to the potential risks of cancer immunotherapy as compared with traditional cytotoxic chemotherapy, Dr. Cathcart-Rake said at the meeting cosponsored by AAHPM, ASCO, ASTRO, and MASCC.

“A patient with cancer may be on immunotherapy and their risk for infection is quite low, but they may be at a huge risk for pneumonitis, which is treated completely differently,” she said. “So I think this should just raise alarms that close clinical monitoring for these conditions is really important.”

Dr. Cathcart-Rake disclosed that her institution receives research funding from Novartis. One study coinvestigator reported consulting or advisory roles with Trovagene, Genentech, Bristol-Myers Squibb, and Abbvie.

SOURCE: Cathcart-Rake EJ et al. 2018 Palliative and Supportive Care in Oncology Symposium. Abstract 184.

 

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Article Source

REPORTING FROM PALLONC 2018

Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Vitals

 

Key clinical point: In non–small cell lung cancer patients treated with PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors, immune-related adverse events may occur more frequently than has been suggested by clinical trial data.

Major finding: Pneumonitis was seen in nearly 11% of patients up to 60 days after the last immunotherapy dose, which investigators said was higher than reported in a pivotal phase 3 study.

Study details: Analysis of administrative claims data for 3,164 NSCLC patients treated between 2015 and 2017.

Disclosures: Researchers reported institutional research funding from Novartis. One researcher reported consulting or advisory roles with Trovagene, Genentech, Bristol-Myers Squibb, and Abbvie.

Source: Cathcart-Rake EJ et al. Palliative and Supportive Care in Oncology Symposium. Abstract 184.

Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica

Palliative-rehab combo may improve QoL in newly diagnosed cancer patients

Article Type
Changed
Fri, 01/04/2019 - 10:39

 

In patients with a new diagnosis of advanced cancer, an intervention that combined palliative care with rehabilitation helped improve quality of life, results of a randomized, single-center study suggest.

Patients had a significant improvement in their most pressing quality-of-life issues after participating in the intervention, which included individualized palliative care consultations and a patient/caregiver “school” of lectures, discussion, and physical exercise, investigators said.

These findings suggest that every patient facing an advanced cancer diagnosis should at least have an initial exploratory consultation with a specialized palliative care team, and should be offered not only the usual components of palliative care, but also cancer rehabilitation, said Lise Nottelmann, MD, of the department of oncology at Vejle Hospital in Denmark.

“We should be active as a health care system in approaching these patients and offering them this intervention, or at least a consultation exploring these aspects of quality of life,” Dr. Nottelmann said in an interview at the 2018 Palliative and Supportive Care in Oncology Symposium.

The study by Dr. Nottelmann and her colleagues, presented at the symposium, comprised 301 patients with nonresectable solid tumors, including lung, gastrointestinal, prostate, and others. Those patients were randomly allocated to the palliative rehabilitation intervention or to standard care only.

Every patient participated in two consultations with a specialized palliative care team, and then had the opportunity for individualized contact with the team in a 12-week open contact period. They were also invited to participate in the school sessions, each of which included a 20-minute lecture on topics such as physical activity and good nutrition plus a 40-minute discussion period, followed by an exercise session.

Of the patients randomized to the palliative rehabilitation intervention, 26 participated only in the initial consultations, while 59 participated in the group program, and 47 had individual consultations, Dr. Nottelmann reported.

To measure quality of life, the investigators asked patients to identify a “primary problem” that corresponded to one of 12 scales in the EORTC QLQ-C30 questionnaire related to physical and role functioning, emotional and cognitive functioning, or symptoms.

The primary endpoint of the analysis was improvement in QLQ-C30 scores at 12 weeks. The analysis was done on specific scales in the patients who identified a primary problem, combined with global QLQ-C30 scores for the remaining one-quarter of the patients who did not, Dr. Nottelmann said.

After 12 weeks, the patients in the intervention arm had a significant improvement versus the no-intervention arm as measured by a version of the EORTC QLQ-C30 questionnaire. The absolute between-group difference in scores was 3.0 (95% confidence interval, 0.0-6.0; P less than .047), according to researchers.

Starting palliative care earlier in the course of cancer, as done in this intervention, is an increasingly accepted practice, supported by large studies and recent clinical practice guidelines that recommend early integration of palliative care into the seriously ill patient’s care plan.

What was different about this intervention was the integration of rehabilitation aspects into palliative care, Dr. Nottelmann said in the interview. While not traditionally thought of as a component of palliative care, the concept of palliative rehabilitation is gaining ground, she said.

The goal of rehabilitative palliative care is to help individuals with life-limiting or terminal conditions actively self-manage their conditions so they can “live fully” and enjoy the best quality of life possible, according to Hospice UK, a national charity for hospice care in the United Kingdom.

The symposium was cosponsored by AAHPM, ASCO, ASTRO, and MASCC. Dr. Nottelmann and her colleagues reported research funding from the Danish Cancer Society. Dr. Nottelmann had no disclosures related to the presentation. One coauthor provided disclosures related to Roche, Amgen, Bayer, and Merck Sharp & Dohme.

SOURCE: Nottelmann L et al. PallOnc 2018, Abstract 75.

Meeting/Event
Publications
Topics
Sections
Meeting/Event
Meeting/Event

 

In patients with a new diagnosis of advanced cancer, an intervention that combined palliative care with rehabilitation helped improve quality of life, results of a randomized, single-center study suggest.

Patients had a significant improvement in their most pressing quality-of-life issues after participating in the intervention, which included individualized palliative care consultations and a patient/caregiver “school” of lectures, discussion, and physical exercise, investigators said.

These findings suggest that every patient facing an advanced cancer diagnosis should at least have an initial exploratory consultation with a specialized palliative care team, and should be offered not only the usual components of palliative care, but also cancer rehabilitation, said Lise Nottelmann, MD, of the department of oncology at Vejle Hospital in Denmark.

“We should be active as a health care system in approaching these patients and offering them this intervention, or at least a consultation exploring these aspects of quality of life,” Dr. Nottelmann said in an interview at the 2018 Palliative and Supportive Care in Oncology Symposium.

The study by Dr. Nottelmann and her colleagues, presented at the symposium, comprised 301 patients with nonresectable solid tumors, including lung, gastrointestinal, prostate, and others. Those patients were randomly allocated to the palliative rehabilitation intervention or to standard care only.

Every patient participated in two consultations with a specialized palliative care team, and then had the opportunity for individualized contact with the team in a 12-week open contact period. They were also invited to participate in the school sessions, each of which included a 20-minute lecture on topics such as physical activity and good nutrition plus a 40-minute discussion period, followed by an exercise session.

Of the patients randomized to the palliative rehabilitation intervention, 26 participated only in the initial consultations, while 59 participated in the group program, and 47 had individual consultations, Dr. Nottelmann reported.

To measure quality of life, the investigators asked patients to identify a “primary problem” that corresponded to one of 12 scales in the EORTC QLQ-C30 questionnaire related to physical and role functioning, emotional and cognitive functioning, or symptoms.

The primary endpoint of the analysis was improvement in QLQ-C30 scores at 12 weeks. The analysis was done on specific scales in the patients who identified a primary problem, combined with global QLQ-C30 scores for the remaining one-quarter of the patients who did not, Dr. Nottelmann said.

After 12 weeks, the patients in the intervention arm had a significant improvement versus the no-intervention arm as measured by a version of the EORTC QLQ-C30 questionnaire. The absolute between-group difference in scores was 3.0 (95% confidence interval, 0.0-6.0; P less than .047), according to researchers.

Starting palliative care earlier in the course of cancer, as done in this intervention, is an increasingly accepted practice, supported by large studies and recent clinical practice guidelines that recommend early integration of palliative care into the seriously ill patient’s care plan.

What was different about this intervention was the integration of rehabilitation aspects into palliative care, Dr. Nottelmann said in the interview. While not traditionally thought of as a component of palliative care, the concept of palliative rehabilitation is gaining ground, she said.

The goal of rehabilitative palliative care is to help individuals with life-limiting or terminal conditions actively self-manage their conditions so they can “live fully” and enjoy the best quality of life possible, according to Hospice UK, a national charity for hospice care in the United Kingdom.

The symposium was cosponsored by AAHPM, ASCO, ASTRO, and MASCC. Dr. Nottelmann and her colleagues reported research funding from the Danish Cancer Society. Dr. Nottelmann had no disclosures related to the presentation. One coauthor provided disclosures related to Roche, Amgen, Bayer, and Merck Sharp & Dohme.

SOURCE: Nottelmann L et al. PallOnc 2018, Abstract 75.

 

In patients with a new diagnosis of advanced cancer, an intervention that combined palliative care with rehabilitation helped improve quality of life, results of a randomized, single-center study suggest.

Patients had a significant improvement in their most pressing quality-of-life issues after participating in the intervention, which included individualized palliative care consultations and a patient/caregiver “school” of lectures, discussion, and physical exercise, investigators said.

These findings suggest that every patient facing an advanced cancer diagnosis should at least have an initial exploratory consultation with a specialized palliative care team, and should be offered not only the usual components of palliative care, but also cancer rehabilitation, said Lise Nottelmann, MD, of the department of oncology at Vejle Hospital in Denmark.

“We should be active as a health care system in approaching these patients and offering them this intervention, or at least a consultation exploring these aspects of quality of life,” Dr. Nottelmann said in an interview at the 2018 Palliative and Supportive Care in Oncology Symposium.

The study by Dr. Nottelmann and her colleagues, presented at the symposium, comprised 301 patients with nonresectable solid tumors, including lung, gastrointestinal, prostate, and others. Those patients were randomly allocated to the palliative rehabilitation intervention or to standard care only.

Every patient participated in two consultations with a specialized palliative care team, and then had the opportunity for individualized contact with the team in a 12-week open contact period. They were also invited to participate in the school sessions, each of which included a 20-minute lecture on topics such as physical activity and good nutrition plus a 40-minute discussion period, followed by an exercise session.

Of the patients randomized to the palliative rehabilitation intervention, 26 participated only in the initial consultations, while 59 participated in the group program, and 47 had individual consultations, Dr. Nottelmann reported.

To measure quality of life, the investigators asked patients to identify a “primary problem” that corresponded to one of 12 scales in the EORTC QLQ-C30 questionnaire related to physical and role functioning, emotional and cognitive functioning, or symptoms.

The primary endpoint of the analysis was improvement in QLQ-C30 scores at 12 weeks. The analysis was done on specific scales in the patients who identified a primary problem, combined with global QLQ-C30 scores for the remaining one-quarter of the patients who did not, Dr. Nottelmann said.

After 12 weeks, the patients in the intervention arm had a significant improvement versus the no-intervention arm as measured by a version of the EORTC QLQ-C30 questionnaire. The absolute between-group difference in scores was 3.0 (95% confidence interval, 0.0-6.0; P less than .047), according to researchers.

Starting palliative care earlier in the course of cancer, as done in this intervention, is an increasingly accepted practice, supported by large studies and recent clinical practice guidelines that recommend early integration of palliative care into the seriously ill patient’s care plan.

What was different about this intervention was the integration of rehabilitation aspects into palliative care, Dr. Nottelmann said in the interview. While not traditionally thought of as a component of palliative care, the concept of palliative rehabilitation is gaining ground, she said.

The goal of rehabilitative palliative care is to help individuals with life-limiting or terminal conditions actively self-manage their conditions so they can “live fully” and enjoy the best quality of life possible, according to Hospice UK, a national charity for hospice care in the United Kingdom.

The symposium was cosponsored by AAHPM, ASCO, ASTRO, and MASCC. Dr. Nottelmann and her colleagues reported research funding from the Danish Cancer Society. Dr. Nottelmann had no disclosures related to the presentation. One coauthor provided disclosures related to Roche, Amgen, Bayer, and Merck Sharp & Dohme.

SOURCE: Nottelmann L et al. PallOnc 2018, Abstract 75.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Article Source

FROM PALLONC 2018

Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Vitals

 

Key clinical point: An intervention combining palliative care and rehabilitation aspects improved quality of life in patients with newly diagnosed, advanced cancers.

Major finding: Patients in the rehabilitative palliative care program had a significant improvement, compared with no intervention (absolute between-group difference in EORTC QLQ-30 scores, 3.0; 95% CI, 0.0-6.0; P less than .047).

Study details: A single-center randomized study of 301 patients with a newly diagnosed advanced solid tumor cancers.

Disclosures: Research funding came from the Danish Cancer Society. One study coauthor had disclosures related to Roche, Amgen, Bayer, and Merck Sharp & Dohme.

Source: Nottelmann L et al. 2018 Palliative and Supportive Care in Oncology Symposium Abstract 75.

Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica