Abstract
Aim: To characterize real-world patients with metastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer (mHSPC) and treating physicians and evaluate treatment trends and baseline concordance versus guidelines internationally. Materials & methods: Retrospective, cross-sectional data from the Ipsos Global Oncology Monitor database 2018–2020 were used for descriptive analysis of mHSPC patients, treating physicians and treatment utilization. Results: Among the 6198 mHSPC patients from five countries, the most common treatment was either androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) monotherapy or first-generation androgen receptor inhibitor + ADT. Second-generation androgen receptor inhibitor use was only initiating but increasing over the study period. Conclusion: Despite contemporaneous guidelines recommending treatment intensification of ADT in combination with novel antihormonals or docetaxel, 76.1% of reported mHSPC patients received non–guideline-concordant care.
Author supplied keywords
- androgen antagonists, therapeutic use
- antineoplastic agents, hormonal, therapeutic use
- antineoplastic combined chemotherapy protocols, therapeutic use
- guideline adherence
- health care surveys, trends
- neoplasm metastasis
- practice guidelines as topic
- practice patterns, physicians’ trends
- prostatic neoplasms, drug therapy
- prostatic neoplasms, pathology
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Goebell, P. J., Raina, R., Chen, S., Rege, S., Shah, R., Grossman, J. P., & Waldeck, A. R. (2024). Real-world treatment of metastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer in the USA, Europe and Asia. Future Oncology, 20(14), 903–918. https://doi.org/10.2217/fon-2023-0814
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