TY - JOUR
T1 - Patients' Preferences for Adjuvant Osimertinib in Non–Small-Cell Lung Cancer After Complete Surgical Resection
T2 - What Makes It Worth It to Patients?
AU - Awidi, Muhammad
AU - Mier-Hicks, Angel
AU - Perimbeti, Stuthi
AU - Attwood, Kristopher
AU - Chen, Hongbin
AU - Jain, Prantesh
AU - Yau, Edwin
AU - Early, Amy
AU - Dy, Grace K.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Elsevier Inc.
PY - 2024/9
Y1 - 2024/9
N2 - Background: The ADAURA trial confirmed adjuvant Osimertinib's efficacy in EGFR-mutated Non–small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), yet the limited mature overall survival (OS) data at approval poses a challenge. This study explores patient preferences in the absence of complete OS information, hypothesizing that disease-free survival (DFS) benefit alone may influence adjuvant Osimertinib pursuit. Methods: At Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center (Jan-Dec 2021), patients assessed for adjuvant therapy received a survey probing OS and DFS preferences. Scenarios were (a) minimum OS justifying Osimertinib, (b) minimum DFS improvement justifying 3-years of adjuvant Osimertinib, (c) minimum 5-year DFS percent change, and (d) minimum OS justifying copay changes. Results were analyzed. Results: Of 524 NSCLC patients, 51 participated. Scenario 1 saw 56% requiring a 12-month OS benefit for Osimertinib justification. In scenario 2, 72% deemed a 12-month DFS benefit sufficient. Scenario 3 revealed 31% opting out despite a 10% OS increase. Scenario 4 showed varied willingness to pay, with 33% unwilling to any shoulder copayment even with a 10-year OS benefit. Conclusion: This study explores patient preferences without complete OS data, revealing diverse thresholds. Factors include employment, education, and willingness to pay. Findings underscore shared decision-making importance. Limitations include sample size, potential biases, and regional focus; larger cohorts are needed for validation.
AB - Background: The ADAURA trial confirmed adjuvant Osimertinib's efficacy in EGFR-mutated Non–small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), yet the limited mature overall survival (OS) data at approval poses a challenge. This study explores patient preferences in the absence of complete OS information, hypothesizing that disease-free survival (DFS) benefit alone may influence adjuvant Osimertinib pursuit. Methods: At Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center (Jan-Dec 2021), patients assessed for adjuvant therapy received a survey probing OS and DFS preferences. Scenarios were (a) minimum OS justifying Osimertinib, (b) minimum DFS improvement justifying 3-years of adjuvant Osimertinib, (c) minimum 5-year DFS percent change, and (d) minimum OS justifying copay changes. Results were analyzed. Results: Of 524 NSCLC patients, 51 participated. Scenario 1 saw 56% requiring a 12-month OS benefit for Osimertinib justification. In scenario 2, 72% deemed a 12-month DFS benefit sufficient. Scenario 3 revealed 31% opting out despite a 10% OS increase. Scenario 4 showed varied willingness to pay, with 33% unwilling to any shoulder copayment even with a 10-year OS benefit. Conclusion: This study explores patient preferences without complete OS data, revealing diverse thresholds. Factors include employment, education, and willingness to pay. Findings underscore shared decision-making importance. Limitations include sample size, potential biases, and regional focus; larger cohorts are needed for validation.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.cllc.2024.05.003
DO - 10.1016/j.cllc.2024.05.003
M3 - Article
C2 - 38879394
AN - SCOPUS:85196029913
SN - 1525-7304
VL - 25
SP - 509
EP - 518
JO - Clinical Lung Cancer
JF - Clinical Lung Cancer
IS - 6
ER -