Age and severe comorbidities were among the differences found when real-world data on Medicare patients receiving CAR T-cell therapy was compared to clinical trial outcomes, said Karl Kilgore, PhD, senior research analyst at Avalere Health.
Age and severe comorbidities were among the differences found when real-world data on Medicare patients receiving CAR T-cell therapy was compared to clinical trial outcomes, said Karl Kilgore, PhD, senior research analyst at Avalere Health.
Transcript:
What do we know about real-world use of CAR T-cell therapies and how the outcomes differ from those seen in clinical trials?
We have not compared outcomes in our study. We've not compared the outcomes directly to the trials. A good reason for that, one of our focuses in this study was on healthcare utilization as an outcome, pre versus post. In clinical trials, an awful lot of the utilization is prescribed by the protocol. That's a reason to do real-world analyses with these, so we can see what the decisions the clinicians are making when they're less constrained by the requirements of the protocol. We did, however, see one difference not in the care, but in the type of patients, the characteristics, of the patients that we're seeing. Average age of patients in the pivotal trials was 56 to 58 years of age. In our study, average age was 70, median was 71. Half of the patients in our trials were over 71. Another characteristic was presence of severe comorbidities. Over 50% of our patients had chronic heart disease, kidney disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and other serious conditions common in the elderly, common in this population. But the kinds of conditions that, in many cases, not in all, we have claims data. We don't always know the severity of these conditions, but they were present. So at least for some of the patients that we saw, again, over 50% of our patients had one of these conditions. These are conditions that, at least for some of the patients, would have led to them being excluded from the clinical trial. And we saw pretty positive outcomes coming from this.
HS Treatment Goals: Better Quality of Life, Not Just Control
January 3rd 2025For part 3 of our discussion with Chris Sayed, MD, we tackle several important topics in the hidradenitis suppurative (HS) and inflammatory disease space: patient quality of life, medication and treatment goals, and the possibility of a cure.
Read More
Managed Care Cast Presents: BTK Inhibitors in Treatment-Naive Patients With CLL and MCL
December 26th 2024A trio of experts discuss the treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) and mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) with Bruton tyrosine kinase (BTK) inhibitors, including cost considerations.
Listen
Dr Yehuda Handelsman: DCRM Guidelines Are Shaping Integrated, Global CRM Care
January 3rd 2025In part 2 of our interview, Yehuda Handelsman, MD, discusses how cardiorenalmetabolic (CRM) disease management is advancing with the 2022 Diabetes, Cardiorenal, and Metabolic (DCRM) multispecialty practice recommendations and the updated DCRM 2.0 guidelines.
Read More