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Patient willingness to undergo pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic tests in early phase oncology trials

โœ Scribed by Raoul Tibes; Barbara F. Piper; Jessica A. Smith; Raysenia L. James; Martin A. Benjamin; Jay H. Yim; Ramesh K. Ramanathan; Daniel D. Von Hoff; R. Curtis Bay; Mitesh J. Borad


Book ID
102108831
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Weight
145 KB
Volume
117
Category
Article
ISSN
0008-543X

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โœฆ Synopsis


Abstract

BACKGROUND:

Increasingly, early phase clinical trials involve pharmacodynamic (PD) and pharmacokinetic (PK) assays as well as frequent imaging studies. The authors conducted a prospective study examining patients' willingness to undergo such tests and the number of tests the patients would tolerate.

METHODS:

A prospective, correlative study was conducted using a selfโ€reported questionnaire to measure patients' willingness on a scale from 1 (not willing) to 10 (very willing) to undergo various procedures (eg, tumor and skin biopsies, blood tests) and imaging studies (eg, magnetic resonance imaging, echocardiogram). In addition, correlations were assessed between the number and type of tests and demographics, previous test experience, inconvenience, and insurance coverage. Sixtyโ€one patients (22 women and 39 men) with advanced malignancies were enrolled. Descriptive, nonparametric, and parametric inferential statistics were used.

RESULTS:

Overall willingness to undergo studyโ€required tests was very high. Patients were most willing to undergo urine, blood, ultrasound, xโ€rays, echocardiogram, and computed tomography studies and were least willing to undergo tumor and skin biopsies and magnetic resonance imaging (all P โ‰ค .01). Significant inverse relations were observed between the frequency of a particular test and patient's willingness to undergo such tests. Inconvenience and prior negative experiences for more invasive tests (eg, skin biopsies) modestly affected willingness to undergo these tests again. College education, insurance coverage, and the requirement of tests for enrollment were correlated positively with willingness to undergo tests.

CONCLUSIONS:

The current findings provide the first prospectively collected data on patients' willingness to undergo PK/PD tests and imaging studies associated with early stage oncology drug trials and can serve as basis for further exploration toward the design of patientโ€friendly, biomarkerโ€driven clinical studies in oncology. Cancer 2011. ยฉ 2011 American Cancer Society.


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