The impact of enzalutamide on the prostate cancer patient experience: a summary review of health-related quality of life across pivotal clinical trials

Bertrand Tombal, Arnulf Stenzl, David Cella, Yohann Loriot, Andrew J. Armstrong, Karim Fizazi, Tomasz Beer, Cora N. Sternberg, Maha Hussain, Cristina Ivanescu, Arijit Ganguli, Krishnan Ramaswamy, Fred Saad

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    2 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    This review examines the impact of treatment with enzalutamide on health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in prostate cancer patients across the disease continuum based on pivotal clinical trials. We assessed the effect of enzalutamide on pain, symptom burden and overall HRQoL from randomized controlled trials. Patient experience was evaluated in men with metastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer (mHSPC), non-metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (nmCRPC) and metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) (pre-chemotherapy and post-chemotherapy). Patients across the disease continuum reported a generally positive status at baseline, with relatively low levels of pain and impairment due to cancer-related symptoms and high HRQoL. For patients with earlier-state prostate cancer, pain and symptom-related burden were low at study entry and remained so, regardless of whether patients received enzalutamide or control treatment. Patients with more advanced disease reported mitigation in pain and symptom burden while receiving treatment with enzalutamide. Enzalutamide was observed to slow deterioration of overall HRQoL most for patients with nmCRPC or mCRPC (statistical significance for between-group difference in median time to deterioration: mHSPC (confirmed) p = 0.2998; nmCRPC (confirmed) p = 0.0044; mCRPC (unconfirmed) p < 0.0001). Across the prostate cancer continuum, enzalutamide is well-tolerated and delays the negative impact that disease progression has on quality of life.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number5872
    JournalCancers
    Volume13
    Issue number23
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2021

    Keywords

    • Anti-neoplastic agents
    • Cancer pain
    • Prostatic neoplasms
    • Quality of life
    • Treatment outcome

    Cite this