Association between treatment and improvements in overall survival of patients with advanced/metastatic non–small cell lung cancer since 2011: A study in the United States, Canada, and Germany using retrospective real‐world databases

Author:

Griesinger Frank1,Ramagopalan Sreeram2,Cheung Winson Y.34,Wilke Thomas5ORCID,Mueller Sabrina6,Gupta Alind7,O’Sullivan Dylan E.34,Arora Paul78,Brenner Darren R.34,Froelich Carolin9,Inskip Jessica10,Maywald Ulf11,Subbiah Vivek12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medical Oncology Pius‐Hospital Oldenburg Oldenburg Germany

2. Global Access F. Hoffmann‐La Roche Basel Switzerland

3. Department of Oncology University of Calgary Calgary Alberta Canada

4. Oncology Outcomes Research Initiative University of Calgary Calgary Alberta Canada

5. Institut für Pharmakoökonomie und Arzneimittellogistik e.V. University of Wismar Wismar Germany

6. Cytel Wismar Germany

7. Cytel Toronto Ontario Canada

8. Division of Epidemiology Dalla Lana School of Public Health University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

9. Roche Pharma AG Grenzach‐Wyhlen Germany

10. Hoffmann‐La Roche Limited Mississauga Ontario Canada

11. AOK PLUS Dresden Germany

12. The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston Texas USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThis study aimed to describe treatment patterns and overall survival (OS) in patients with advanced non–small cell lung cancer (aNSCLC) in three countries between 2011 and 2020.MethodsThree databases (US, Canada, Germany) were used to identify incident aNSCLC patients. OS was assessed from the date of incident aNSCLC diagnosis and, for patients who received at least a first line of therapy (1LOT), from the date of 1LOT initiation. In multivariable analyses, we analyzed the influence of index year and type of prescribed treatment on OS.FindingsWe included 51,318 patients with an incident aNSCLC diagnosis. The percentage of patients treated with a 1LOT differed substantially between countries, whereas the number of patients receiving immunotherapies/targeted treatments increased over time in all three countries. Median OS from the date of incident diagnosis was 9.9 months in the United States vs. 4.1 months in Canada. When measured from the start of 1LOT, patients had a median OS of 10.7 months in the United States, 10.9 months in Canada, and 10.9 months in Germany. OS from the start of 1LOT improved in all three countries from 2011 to 2020 by approximately 3 to 4 months.ConclusionsObserved continuous improvement in OS among patients receiving at least a 1LOT from 2011 to 2020 was likely driven by improved care and changes in the treatment landscape. The difference in the proportion of patients receiving a 1LOT in the observed countries requires further investigation.

Funder

F. Hoffmann-La Roche

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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