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Multifaceted
end points in brain tumor clinical trials: Cognitive deterioration precedes MRI
progression
Meyers
CA, Hess KR
Departments
of Neuro-Oncology (C.A.M.) and Biostatistics (K.R.H.), The University of Texas
M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX 77030, USA
Current
treatments for brain cancer have, for the most part, equivocal survival benefit.
However, clinical trials of new anticancer agents do not adequately assess
potential clinical benefits for patient function other than survival and time to
tumor progression.
We evaluated 56 patients with recurrent brain tumors who were recruited on phase
1 and phase 2 clinical trials and given assessments of cognitive function,
quality of life (QOL), and ability to perform activities of daily living (ADL)
prior to receiving treatment and at intervals coinciding with MRI scans,
generally monthly. Meaningful change on the cognitive and functional assessments
was determined by the reliable change index.
Cognitive or functional deterioration was then used as a time-dependent
covariate in a Cox proportional hazards regression model with tumor progression,
as defined by standard criteria, as the end point.
Cognitive deterioration occurred 6 weeks prior to radiographic failure (median
7.4 weeks vs. 13.4 weeks).
In contrast, median time for QOL to deteriorate was not achieved.
Median time for instrumental ADL to decline was 43 weeks, long after tumor
progression.
For patients with brain cancer, brain function began to worsen before MRI
evidence of tumor progression.
QOL and ADL function were not strongly tied to cognitive decline or to time to
tumor progression, suggesting that these measures may not be sufficiently
sensitive to change in clinical trials of new anticancer agents, although they
are important measures in terms of patient care.
This study also demonstrates the feasibility of performing neurocognitive
testing in this patient population.
New drugs that slow the cognitive decline of brain tumor patients may be of
clinical benefit regardless of the impact on overall survival.
PMID:
12672280 [PubMed - in process]
Source:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=12672280&dopt=Abstract
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