Comparison of hydration events in patients (pts) receiving highly (HEC) or moderately (MEC) emetogenic chemotherapy treated with granisetron extended-release subcutaneous (GERSC) or palonosetron (PALO).

Authors

null

Jeffrey Vacirca

New York Cancer & Blood Specialists, East Setauket, NY

Jeffrey Vacirca, Dennis Caruana, George Calcanes, Michael Mosier, Ralph V. Boccia, Ali McBride

Organizations

New York Cancer & Blood Specialists, East Setauket, NY, EMB Statistical Solutions, LLC., Overland Park, KS, Center for Cancer and Blood Disorders, Bethesda, MD, University of Arizona Cancer Center, Tucson, AZ

Research Funding

Other

Background: Breakthrough CT-induced nausea and vomiting (CINV) may increase resource needs, eg, hydration. GERSC (SUSTOL) + other antiemetics prevent CINV associated with MEC or anthracycline + cyclophosphamide–based therapy. This retrospective analysis evaluated CINV-related hydration in pts treated with PALO or GERSC antiemetic therapy. Methods: Pts at a multisite community practice had MEC or HEC and a 3-drug antiemetic regimen: NK-1 receptor antagonist (RA), dexamethasone, and 5-HT3 RA (PALO only, GERSC only, or PALO then GERSC). CT emetogenicity (HEC, MEC), number of cycles, and CINV-related hydration were extracted from medical records. Hydration rate (events per cycle) was analyzed for pts who had PALO vs GERSC (group 1; nonparametric 2-sided Wilcoxon rank sum test) and pts who had PALO then GERSC (group 2; paired t-test). Results: There were 93 PALO, 91 GERSC, and 48 PALO-then-GERSC pts. Group 1 had mean (SD) CT cycles of 5.4 (2.8) on PALO vs 4.1 (2.2) on GERSC. The whole group (P<.0001) and HEC subgroup (P<.0001) had significantly higher hydration rates with PALO vs GERSC (Table). Overall, 22% (PALO) vs 58% (GERSC) of pts had no hydration. In HEC/MEC subgroups, respectively, 19%/33% (PALO) vs 60%/56% (GERSC) of pts had no hydration. Group 2 switched pts had mean (SD) 3.5 (3.2) cycles on PALO vs 3.1 (2.2) on GERSC. All pts and MEC subgroup had no differences in hydration rate with PALO vs GERSC. HEC subgroup hydration rates were significantly higher for PALO vs GERSC (P=.028; Table). Conclusions: In a multisite practice, CINV-related hydration was ~3 times less per CT cycle for pts receiving GERSC vs PALO as part of a 3-drug antiemetic regimen. Pts on HEC and treated with PALO then GERSC had significantly reduced hydration needs with GERSC. Reduced hydration needs may improve quality of life and simplify pt management.

Hydration rate, mean (SD)
Group 1
Group 2 Switched
PALO onlyGERSC onlyPALOGERSC
All ptsn=93n=91n=48n=48
0.9 (1.1)0.3 (0.6)*0.6 (1.1)0.5 (1.1)
HECn=78n=55n=32n=32
1.0 (1.2)0.3 (0.6)*0.7 (1.2)0.5 (1.0)
MECn=15n=36n=16n=16
0.5 (0.5)0.3 (0.5)0.5 (0.9)0.6 (1.3)

*P<.0001 vs PALO P=.028 vs PALO

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Abstract Details

Meeting

2017 Palliative and Supportive Care in Oncology Symposium

Session Type

Poster Session

Session Title

Poster Session A

Track

Integration and Delivery of Palliative and Supportive Care,Communication and Shared Decision Making,Symptom Biology, Assessment, and Management,Models of Care

Sub Track

Integration and Delivery of Palliative and Supportive Care

Citation

J Clin Oncol 35, 2017 (suppl 31S; abstract 108)

DOI

10.1200/JCO.2017.35.31_suppl.108

Abstract #

108

Poster Bd #

C6

Abstract Disclosures