A Pharmacometric Analysis of Patient-Reported Outcomes in Breast Cancer Patients Through Item Response Theory

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Abstract

Purpose: An item response theory (IRT) pharmacometric framework is presented to characterize Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Breast (FACT-B) data in locally-advanced or metastatic breast cancer patients treated with ado-trastuzumab emtansine (T-DM1) or capecitabine-plus-lapatinib. Methods: In the IRT model, four latent well-being variables, based on FACT-B general subscales, were used to describe the physical, social/family, emotional and functional well-being. Each breast cancer subscale item was reassigned to one of the other subscales. Longitudinal changes in FACT-B responses and covariate effects were investigated. Results: The IRT model could describe both item-level and subscale-level FACT-B data. Non-Asian patients showed better baseline social/family and functional well-being than Asian patients. Moreover, patients with Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status of 0 had better baseline physical and functional well-being. Well-being was described as initially increasing or decreasing before reaching a steady-state, which varied substantially between patients and subscales. T-DM1 exposure was not related to any of the latent variables. Physical well-being worsening was identified in capecitabine-plus-lapatinib-treated patients, whereas T-DM1-treated patients typically stayed stable. Conclusion: The developed framework provides a thorough description of FACT-B longitudinal data. It acknowledges the multi-dimensional nature of the questionnaire and allows covariate and exposure effects to be evaluated on responses.

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Schindler, E., Friberg, L. E., Lum, B. L., Wang, B., Quartino, A., Li, C., … Karlsson, M. O. (2018). A Pharmacometric Analysis of Patient-Reported Outcomes in Breast Cancer Patients Through Item Response Theory. Pharmaceutical Research, 35(6). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11095-018-2403-8

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