The Impact of Outpatient versus Inpatient Administration of CAR-T Therapies on Clinical, Economic, and Humanistic Outcomes in Patients with Hematological Cancer: A Systematic Literature Review

Author:

Hansen Doris K.1ORCID,Liu Yi-Hsuan2,Ranjan Sandip3,Bhandari Hitesh3,Potluri Ravi4,McFarland Lindsay5,De Braganca Kevin C.6,Huo Stephen2

Affiliation:

1. H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center & Research Institute, Tampa, FL 33612, USA

2. Janssen Scientific Affairs, Horsham, PA 19044, USA

3. Putnam Associates, Gurgaon 122002, India

4. Putnam Associates, New York, NY 10282, USA

5. Legend Biotech USA, Inc., Piscataway, NJ 08854, USA

6. Janssen Biotech, Horsham, PA 19044, USA

Abstract

Although chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cell therapies are typically administered in the inpatient setting, outpatient administration is rapidly expanding. However, there is limited summarized evidence comparing outcomes between outpatient and inpatient administration. This systematic literature review aims to compare the safety, efficacy, quality of life (QoL), costs, and healthcare resource utilization (HCRU) outcomes in patients with hematological cancer who are administered CAR-T therapy in an outpatient versus an inpatient setting. Publications (2016 or later) that reported the outcomes of interest in patients treated with a CAR-T therapy in both outpatient and inpatient settings, or only the outpatient setting, were reviewed. In total, 38 publications based on 21 studies were included. Safety findings suggested the comparable frequency of adverse events in the two settings. Eleven studies that reported data in both settings showed comparable response rates (80–82% in outpatient and 72–80% in inpatient). Improvements in the QoL were observed in both settings while costs associated with CAR-T therapy were lower in the outpatient setting. Although unplanned hospitalizations were higher in the outpatient cohort, overall HCRU was lower. Outpatient administration of CAR-T therapy appears to have comparable outcomes in safety, efficacy, and QoL to inpatient administration while reducing the economic burden.

Funder

Janssen Scientific Affairs, LLC

Legend Biotech USA, Inc.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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