Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences in endocrinology
Endocrine Abstracts (2022) 89 C3 | DOI: 10.1530/endoabs.89.C3

NANETS2022 15th Annual Multidisciplinary NET Medical Symposium NANETS 2022 Clinical – Chemo/SSA/Biologics (13 abstracts)

Real World Analysis of Long-Acting Somatostatin Analog (LA-SSA) Treatment and Dose Escalation Among Patients with Neuroendocrine Tumors (NET)

Callisia N. Clarke, MD, MS1, Paul Cockrum, BSci, PharmD, RPh2, Thomas J.R. Beveridge, MSc, PhD2, Michelle Jerry, MS3, Donna McMorrow, BS3, Anh Thu Tran, PharmD3 & Alexandria T. Phan, MD4


1Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI; 2Ipsen Biopharmaceuticals, Basking Ridge, NJ; 3Merative, Cambridge, MA; 4Phan & Associates, Houston, TX.


Background: LA-SSA therapy, including octreotide long-acting release (LAR) and lanreotide depot (LAN), is recommended as first-line therapy for treatment of unresectable or metastatic NETs. Understanding treatment sequencing and dosing patterns of LA-SSAs is essential for clinical decision-making to provide value-based management of NET for both the patients and healthcare system. This study describes treatment patterns of LA-SSA therapy among privately insured patients with NET in the US.

Methods: Claims data for patients with NET who were newly treated with LA-SSAs for ≥3 months were extracted from MarketScan Commercial and Medicare databases between 1/1/2015-10/31/2021 (earliest LA-SSA treatment = index date). Treatment patterns were reported during index LA-SSA treatment, including treatment duration, dose, up to 2 dose escalations, use of rescue therapy with short-acting octreotide at any time during treatment, and transition to other LA-SSA. Doses were reported as 28-day doses based on days’ supply/drug quantity (for outpatient pharmacy claims) or units of service (for outpatient medical claims). Dose escalation was defined as an increase in quantity administered or frequency of injections (28-day to 21-day cycles). Chi-square tests, two sample t-tests, and log-rank test were used for binary variables, continuous variables, and treatment duration estimated using the Kaplan-Meier approach, respectively.

Results: A total of 762 patients with NET treated with LA-SSAs were identified (241 started on LAN and 521 started on octreotide LAR). Treatment duration was longer for LAN than octreotide LAR (median 3.4 vs. 2.2 years, P-value=0.004). Compared to octreotide LAR, fewer LAN patients experienced a first and second dose escalation (first dose escalation: 6% vs. 27%; second dose escalation: 1% vs. 5%; all P-values <0.05). Additionally, fewer LAN patients used rescue treatment (8% vs. 14%, P-value=0.011). Doses based on days’ supply/drug quantity or units of service were reported for most patients, and 2% of LAN patients received an above label 28-day dose (>120 mg) compared to 14% of octreotide LAR patients (>30 mg; P-value <0.05). Amongst patients whose initial treatment ended during follow-up (90 LAN and 274 octreotide LAR patients), fewer LAN patients transitioned to the other LA-SSA compared to octreotide LAR (19% (n=17) vs. 34% (n=92), P-value=0.008).

Conclusions: Compared with octreotide LAR patients, LAN patients were more likely to remain on their initial LA-SSA treatment longer as well as on their starting dose without dose escalation, and less likely to use rescue treatment.

Abstract ID 21424

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