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Patient-Reported Outcomes in Pediatric Cancer Registration Trials: A US Food and Drug Administration Perspective

Meena N. Murugappan, Bellinda L. King‐Kallimanis, Gregory H. Reaman, Vishal Bhatnagar, Erica Horodniceanu, Najat Bouchkouj, Paul G. Kluetz

2021JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Pediatric patient-reported outcome (PRO) data can help inform the US Food and Drug Administration's (FDA's) benefit-risk assessment of cancer therapeutics by quantifying symptom and functional outcomes from the patient's perspective. This study assessed use of PROs in commercial pediatric oncology trials submitted to the FDA for regulatory review. FDA databases were searched to identify pediatric oncology product applications approved between 1997 and 2020. Sponsor-submitted documents were reviewed to determine whether PRO data were collected, which instruments were used, and the quality of collected data (ie, sample size, completion rates, and use of fit-for-purpose instruments). The role of PROs in each trial (endpoint hierarchy) was also recorded in addition to whether any PRO endpoints were included in product labeling. We reviewed 17 pediatric oncology applications, 4 of which included PRO data: denosumab, tisagenlecleucel, larotrectinib, and selumetinib. In these 4 instances, PROs served as exploratory endpoints and were not incorporated in product labeling. Trials that collected PRO data were phase II or phase I/II single-arm studies with sample sizes of 28 to 88 patients. Symptomatic adverse events (AEs) were characterized using clinician-reported Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) without additional patient self-report. PROs were infrequently used in pediatric cancer registration trials. When PROs were used, PRO data were limited by lack of a clear research objective and corresponding prospective statistical analysis plan. Contemporary PRO symptom libraries, such as the National Cancer Institute's Pediatric PRO-CTCAE, may provide an opportunity to better evaluate the occurrence and impact of symptomatic AEs, from the patient's perspective, in pediatric oncology trials.

Topics & Concepts

Food and drug administrationPerspective (graphical)MedicineAdministration (probate law)Clinical trialPediatric cancerDrug administrationDrugCancer drugsCancerIntensive care medicineFamily medicinePharmacologyInternal medicinePolitical scienceArtificial intelligenceComputer scienceLawChildhood Cancer Survivors' Quality of LifePharmaceutical studies and practicesAcute Lymphoblastic Leukemia research
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