Efficacy, quality of life, and safety of cabazitaxel in Canadian metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer patients treated or not with prior abiraterone

Authors

  • Fred Saad
  • Eric Winquist
  • Stacey Hubay
  • Scott Berry
  • Hazem Assi
  • Eric Levesque
  • Nathalie Aucoin
  • Piotr Czaykowski
  • Jean-Baptiste Lattouf
  • Karine Alloul
  • John Stewart
  • Srikala S. Sridhar

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5489/cuaj.3470

Abstract

Introduction: In the TROPIC study, cabazitaxel improved overall survival in abiraterone-naïve metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) patients post-docetaxel. To evaluate cabazitaxel in routine clinical practice, an international, single-arm trial was conducted. Efficacy, safety, and quality of life (QoL) data were collected from Canadian patients enrolled. Overall survival and progression-free survival were not collected as part of this study. Importantly, prior abiraterone use was obtained and its impact on clinical parameters was examined.

Methods: Sixty-one patients from nine Canadian centres were enrolled, with prior abiraterone use known for 60 patients. Prostatespecific antigen (PSA) response rate, safety, and impact on QoL life were analyzed as a function of prior abiraterone use.

Results: Overall, 92% of patients were ECOG 0/1, 88% had bone metastases, and 25% visceral metastases. Patients treated without prior abiraterone (NoPriorAbi) (n=35, 58%) and with prior abiraterone (PriorAbi) (n=25, 42%) had similar baseline characteristics, except for age and prior cumulative docetaxel dose. Median number of cabazitaxel cycles received was similar between groups (NoPriorAbi=6, PriorAbi=7), as was PSA response rate (NoPriorAbi=36.4%, PriorAbi=45.0%, p=0.54). Almost one-third (31%) of patients received prophylactic granulocyte colony-stimulating factors. Most frequent Grade 3/4 toxicities were neutropenia (14.8%); anemia, febrile neutropenia, fatigue (each at 9.8%); and diarrhea (8.2%). No treatment-related adverse event leading to death was observed. QoL and pain were improved with no difference seen between groups. Treatment discontinuation was mainly due to disease progression (45.9%) and adverse events (32.8%).

Conclusions: In routine clinical practice, cabazitaxel’s risk-benefit ratio in mCRPC patients previously treated with docetaxel seems to be maintained independent of prior abiraterone use.

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Published

2016-04-18

How to Cite

Saad, F., Winquist, E., Hubay, S., Berry, S., Assi, H., Levesque, E., Aucoin, N., Czaykowski, P., Lattouf, J.-B., Alloul, K., Stewart, J., & Sridhar, S. S. (2016). Efficacy, quality of life, and safety of cabazitaxel in Canadian metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer patients treated or not with prior abiraterone. Canadian Urological Association Journal, 10(3-4), 102–9. https://doi.org/10.5489/cuaj.3470

Issue

Section

Original Research