Complementary Medicine Use Amongst Patients with Metastatic Cancer Enrolled in Phase III Clinical Trials

J Connor Wells, Aven Sidhu, Keyue Ding, Martin Smoragiewicz, Daniel Y C Heng, Frances A Shepherd, Peter M Ellis, Penelope A Bradbury, Derek J Jonker, Lillian L Siu, Karen A Gelmon, Christos Karapetis, Jeremy Shapiro, Louise Nott, Christopher J O’Callaghan, Wendy R Parulekar, Lesley Seymour, Jose G Monzon

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Citations (Scopus)
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Abstract

Background: Complementary medicines (CM) are frequently used by patients with cancer. Controversy exists over the effectiveness and risk that CM may add to conventional cancer therapy. The incidence of CM use among patients enrolled in phase III clinical trials is unknown. 

Methods: Medication lists from 6 international phase III clinical trials were retrospectively reviewed to identify patients using CM. Patients had metastatic breast, colorectal, or lung cancers. Quality of life, adverse events, overall survival, and progression-free survival were compared between CM users and non-users. Baseline differences between groups were adjusted with propensity score matching groups. 

Results: Seven hundred and six of 3446 patients (20.5%) used at least one CM. CM use was highest among patients with breast cancer (35.6%). CM users had more favorable baseline prognostic factors (ECOG 0-1, non-smoking status, younger age, and fewer metastases). CM use was associated with lower rates of adverse events (50% vs. 62%, P = .002) and quality of life was similar between both groups. After adjustment with propensity score matching, CM use was also associated with longer overall survival in patients with lung cancer (adjusted hazard ratio 0.80, 95%CI, 0.68-0.94, P =.0054). However, several key control variables like EGFR status were not available. 

Conclusion: One in 5 patients in phase III clinical trials report using CM. CM was not associated with worse cancer-specific outcomes. However, CM users had more favorable baseline prognostic factors, and likely other confounders that may have contributed to improved outcomes observed in the lung cohort. Physicians should monitor for CM use and potential interactions with clinical trial drugs.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)e286-e293
Number of pages8
JournalOncologist
Volume27
Issue number3
Early online date19 Feb 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2022

Keywords

  • cancer
  • clinical trial
  • complementary medicine

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