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Evaluating an Endocrine Therapy Dose-frequency Escalation Strategy and Its Effects on Tolerability and Compliance

Phase 4
Active, not recruiting
Conditions
Breast Cancer
Interventions
Drug: Standard of care administration of Endocrine therapy
Drug: Dose-frequency escalation administration of Endocrine therapy
Registration Number
NCT05754528
Lead Sponsor
Ottawa Hospital Research Institute
Brief Summary

The goal of this randomized, pragmatic clinical trial is to evaluate an endocrine therapy dose-frequency escalation strategy and its effects on tolerability and compliance. Participants will be randomized to standard daily dosing of endocrine therapy or endocrine therapy dose-frequency escalation defined as, taking endocrine therapy every other day for 1 month and then daily.

Detailed Description

Breast cancer remains the most common cancer diagnosis and second leading cause of cancer death among Canadian women. Close to 70% of breast cancers are hormone-dependent and endocrine therapy is the mainstay treatment (such as tamoxifen, aromatase inhibitors and lutenizing hormone-releasing hormone analogs). Globally, endocrine therapy has led to the greatest benefit for breast cancer patients resulting in compelling reductions in breast cancer recurrence and mortality rates. Tamoxifen and aromatase inhibitors (e.g. letrozole, anastrozole and exemestane) can cause a variable degree of toxicity linked to estrogen deprivation such as: vasomotor symptoms (hot flashes and night sweats), arthralgia/joint stiffness, genitourinary symptoms (vaginal dryness, dysuria, urinary incontinence, recurrent urinary tract infections and pain during sexual intercourse), insomnia, weight gain, mood changes, cognitive dysfunction, fatigue and skin dryness. It is well acknowledged that endocrine therapy side effects can influence treatment adherence, compliance, and persistence. A systematic review of adjuvant endocrine treatment found that 41 to 72% of patients did not take the correct dosage at the prescribed frequency and 31 to 73% discontinued endocrine therapy. Treatment adherence and persistence are key issues in breast cancer, as early cessation or reduced compliance/adherence to hormonal therapy leads to reduced disease-free survival and increased mortality. Despite a plethora of studies aimed at reducing the side effects of endocrine therapy there is no clear evidence that any of them have resulted in improved adherence/compliance/persistence. In practice, it is common to see a clinician reducing dose-intensity or frequency when patients develop intolerable side effects from endocrine therapy, i.e. either using 10 mg instead of 20 mg of Tamoxifen daily, or an every other day schedule for aromatase inhibitors. However, this commonly used practice has not been evaluated in a prospective trial. The researchers propose to conduct the world's first prospective randomized clinical trial to evaluate a dose-frequency escalation strategy of endocrine therapy (meaning taking the dose every other day for 1 month and then daily) and its effects on adherence and tolerability.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
240
Inclusion Criteria
  • Patients with an early stage or locally advanced hormonal receptor positive breast cancer
  • Plan to receive endocrine therapy
  • Able to provide oral consent
  • Willing and able to complete questionnaires as per study protocol
Exclusion Criteria
  • Metastatic cancer
  • Adjuvant abemaciclib

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Standard daily dosing of endocrine therapyStandard of care administration of Endocrine therapyStandard daily dosing of endocrine therapy
Endocrine therapy dose-frequency escalationDose-frequency escalation administration of Endocrine therapyEndocrine therapy dose-frequency escalation defined as, taking endocrine therapy every other day for 1 month and then daily.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
1-year adherence with prescribed endocrine therapy1 year after start of endocrine therapy

1-year adherence with prescribed endocrine therapy measured by the validated Five-item Medication Adherence Report Scale (MARS-5 score). The MARS-5 score can range from 5 to 25 indicating greater level of adherence. A participant will be considered adherent if they have a MARS-5 score of 23 and more (specificity and sensitivity maximized at this value). The adherence rate at 1-year will be calculated as the number of patients who are initially enrolled in the study. Participants who do not complete the 1-year MARS-5 questionnaire will be considered as non-adherent for the primary analysis of adherence rate.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Endocrine toxicity and tolerabilityThrough study completion, 5 years

Endocrine toxicity and tolerability measured by the change in total score and individual items of the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy - Endocrine Symptoms (FACT-ES) score, a validated subscale of the FACIT measurement system from baseline to 6 months, 1 year and 5 years following the beginning of endocrine therapy. The FACT-ES is a 46 item, 5 point Likert-type scale questionnaire that asks questions relating to physical well-being, social/family well-being, emotional well-being, functional well-being and the endocrine symptom subscale.

Endocrine therapy interruptionsThrough study completion, 5 years

Endocrine therapy interruption periods will be collected throughout study. An interruption is being defined as a pause in treatment for more than 7 days in a row.

Adherence rates with prescribed endocrine therapyThrough study completion, 5 years

adherence with prescribed endocrine therapy measured by the validated Five-item Medication Adherence Report Scale (MARS-5 score). The MARS-5 score can range from 5 to 25 indicating greater level of adherence. A participant will be considered adherent if they have a MARS-5 score of 23 and more (specificity and sensitivity maximized at this value).

Persistence with prescribed endocrine therapyThrough study completion, 5 years

Rates of persistence with prescribed endocrine therapy measured by a non-validated endocrine therapy adherence questionnaire.

Patient health-related quality of lifeThrough study completion, 5 years

Patient Health-Related Quality of Life (HR-QoL) measured by the change in the total score and individual subscales of the validated Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy for patients with a Breast cancer (FACT-B) questionnaire from baseline to 6 months, 1 year and 5 years following the beginning of endocrine therapy. The FACT-B is a 37 item, 5 point Likert-type scale questionnaire that asks questions relating to physical well-being, social/family well-being, emotional well-being, functional well-being and the breast cancer subscale.

Endocrine therapy discontinuationsThrough study completion, 5 years

Endocrine therapy discontinuation rates will be collected throughout study. Discontinuation means stopping of endocrine therapy and not continuing, even on a different type.

Endocrine therapy changesThrough study completion, 5 years

Alterations made to endocrine therapy for toxicity. Meaning was there a change with the type of endocrine therapy used.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

The Ottawa Hospital Cancer Centre

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Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

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