Drilling down into the data
While organizations like the American Society of Clinical Oncology, American Cancer Society, Friends of Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute, and U.S. Food and Drug Administration have been working to modernize what the FDA has termed “overly restrictive” eligibility criteria, Unger said very little research has actually been done on patient decision-making as it pertains to comorbidities and trial participation.
So he and colleagues surveyed a cohort of 5,500 cancer patients — the majority female, white, and under 65 — on their demographics, cancer staging, comorbidities, and treatment decision-making process with regard to trials. Most participants had either breast or prostate cancer, and 66 percent had one or more comorbidities, the most common being hypertension.
Unger and his team found that 39 percent of the patients surveyed had discussed clinical trials with their physician, 18 percent had been offered a trial and 9 percent actually participated. But the presence of one or more common comorbidities among these patients reduced the likelihood of discussions about trials by 15 percent, trial offers by 23 percent, and trial participation by 24 percent.
The researchers then used statistical modeling to see how many additional patients might participate in trials if eligibility criteria were more patient-friendly and people with comorbidities weren’t immediately disqualified.
By loosening the requirements around liver disease, kidney disease, cardiovascular disease, and prior cancer (as recently recommended by ASCO), more than 6,300 additional patients would be eligible to participate in a trial, Unger said.
If patients with comorbidities of any type (including conditions like diabetes and lung conditions) could participate, up to nearly twice that number — 11,990 additional patients — would be eligible for cancer trials.
Unger stressed that patient safety would not be jeopardized by loosening these restrictions.
“The loosening of eligibility criteria is intended to strike the right balance between safety and inclusiveness,” he said.