2 research outputs found

    Real-world economic burden of metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer before and after first-line therapy initiation

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    To describe healthcare costs of patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) initiating first-line (1L) therapies from a US payer perspective. Patients initiating a Flatiron oncologist-defined 1L mCRPC therapy (index date) on or after mCRPC diagnosis were identified from linked electronic medical records/claims data from the Flatiron Metastatic Prostate Cancer (PC) Core Registry and Komodo’s Healthcare Map. Patients were excluded if they initiated a clinical trial drug in 1L, had Among 459 patients with mCRPC (mean age 70 years, 57% White, 16% Black, 45% commercially-insured, 43% Medicare Advantage-insured, and 12% Medicaid-insured), average baseline all-cause total costs (PPPM) were 4,576(4,576 (4,166 pre-mCRPC progression, 8,278post−mCRPCprogression).AveragebaselinePC−relatedtotalcostswere8,278 post-mCRPC progression). Average baseline PC-related total costs were 2,935 (2,537pre−mCRPCprogression,2,537 pre-mCRPC progression, 6,661 post-mCRPC progression). During an average 1L duration of 8.5 months, mean total costs were 13,746(all−cause)and13,746 (all-cause) and 12,061 (PC-related) PPPM. The cost increase following 1L therapy initiation was driven by higher PC-related outpatient and pharmacy costs. PC-related medical costs PPPM increased from 1,504duringbaselineto1,504 during baseline to 5,585 following 1L mCRPC therapy initiation. All analyses were descriptive; statistical testing was not performed. Incremental costs of progression to mCRPC are significant, with the majority of costs driven by higher PC-related costs. Using contemporary data, this study highlights the importance of utilizing effective therapies that slow progression and reduce healthcare resource demands despite the initial investment in treatment costs.</p

    Design and Rationale of the Metastatic Renal Cell Carcinoma (MaRCC) Registry: A Prospective Academic and Community-Based Study of Patients With Metastatic Renal Cell Cancer

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    <p>The Metastatic Renal Cell Cancer Registry, a large, nationally representative, prospective registry of patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC), aims to understand real-world treatment patterns and outcomes of patients with mRCC in routine clinical practice across the United States. This observational study is designed to enroll 500 patients with previously untreated mRCC from approximately 60 academic and community treatment sites; as of December 7, 2016, 500 patients have enrolled at 54 sites. Key endpoints include real-world data on reasons for treatment initiation and discontinuation; treatment regimens; disease progression; patient-reported outcomes; and healthcare resource utilization in this patient population.</p
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