Heliyon (Jun 2024)

Real-world drug treatment models of novel targeted drugs in Chinese patients with gynecological cancer from 2017 to 2021: A cross-sectional analysis

  • Changyan Li,
  • Jing Jin,
  • Jing Tang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 11
p. e31371

Abstract

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Objective: The significance of novel anti-tumor pharmaceuticals in the treatment of gynecological tumors is growing, but there is no consensus regarding the optimal drug delivery strategy for gynecological tumors. This study seeks to investigate the treatment models of novel anti-tumor drugs in patients with gynecological cancer in China over the past five years, with a particular emphasis on the trend and rationality of their use. Method: We conducted a cross-sectional analysis of data from a China Medical Association-supervised hospital prescription analysis cooperation initiative. The data was derived from prescriptions written for patients diagnosed with cancer between January 2017 and December 2021. The required information for patients was extracted. Our study included 2308 patients that were diagnosed as gynecological tumors which were treated with novel antineoplastic targeted drugs. Patients were categorized by age and region. Then, the selection, application, and indications of the most essential treatment pharmaceuticals were investigated. We evaluated anti-tumor prescription information based on the recommended drug labeling protocol and the most recent domestic and international guidelines.Excel 2013 and SPSS (version 25; SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, United States) were utilized to conduct statistical analysis.In addition,we also used Sankey diagram to evalute the relation between novel antineoplastic targeted drugs and corresponding diagnoses. Result: The top three cities for the 2308 patients included in this study were Guangzhou (28.51%), Hangzhou (21.79%), and Beijing (20.06%). In the past five years, the average age of medication patients was 55.61-year-old, with 37.86% of women aged of 51–60. Each patient's primary treatment regimens were statistically analyzed, yielding a total of 16 single-drug and combination-drug primary treatment regimens. Bevacizumab, Olaparib, Trastuzumab, Apatinib, and Arotinib were the top five treatment strategies. The maximum proportion, up to 0.74%, was attributed to the combination of human epidermal growth factor receptor-2 inhibitor (HER2i), including Trastuzumab and Parostuzumab. Vascular endothelial growth factor receptor inhibitor (VEGFRi), including Bevacizumab and Apatinib was the most frequently prescribed medication for outpatients in major cities across the country. According to the 5-year change in time, poly adenosine diphosphate ribose polymerase inhibitor (PARPi) rated first in terms of usage, with Olaparib ranking first with the highest concentration of 33.44% and Niraparib ranking second overall with the fastest growth in 2021. The quantity of VEGFRi variants utilized was the greatest, and their proportion of total usage increased annually. The top five drugs by total drug costs were Bevacizumab, Carelizumab, Olaparib, Trastuzumab, and Apatinib. However, the top five drugs by per capita drug cost were Olaparib + Bevacizumab, Bevacizumab + Sidilimab, Arrotinib + Olaparib, Olaparib, and Patuzumab + Trastuzumab. Conclusion: The incidence rate of gynecological tumor patients rises with age, and the cost of drug treatment has risen annually over the past five years, which is also related to the rising incidence rate of tumors in recent years. Bevacizumab rates first in the drug treatment scheme for the application of novel anti-tumor targeted drugs, which may be related to the widespread use of VEGFRi drugs in gynecological and reproductive tumors. Breast cancer and adenocarcinoma are at the top of the female cancer incidence spectrum, which may explain why HER2i multi-drug combination regimen rates highest among multi-drug combination regimens. Future research may concentrate on how novel anti-tumor targeted drugs can minimize the economic burden and maximize the benefits of patient treatment for patients with gynecological cancer.

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