Effectiveness research in oncology with electronic health record data: A retrospective cohort study emulating the PALOMA-2 trial Journal Article


Authors: Merola, D.; Young, J.; Schrag, D.; Lin, K. J.; Alwardt, S.; Schneeweiss, S.
Article Title: Effectiveness research in oncology with electronic health record data: A retrospective cohort study emulating the PALOMA-2 trial
Abstract: Purpose: Oncology electronic health record (EHR) databases have increased in quality and availability over the past decade, yet it remains unclear whether these clinical practice data can be used to conduct reliable comparative effectiveness studies. We sought to emulate a clinical trial with EHR data in the advanced breast cancer population and compare our results against the trial. Methods: This cohort study used EHR data from US oncology practices. All elements of the study were defined to mimic the PALOMA-2 trial as closely as possible. Patients with hormone-positive, HER-2 negative metastatic breast cancer with no prior treatment for metastatic disease were included. Patients initiating palbociclib and letrozole on the same day following the earliest record of metastasis were compared to those initiating letrozole only. The primary associational measure was the conditional hazard ratio for time-to-next treatment (TTNT). TTNT is well-measured in our data source and amenable for calibration against the randomized study results of the PALOMA-2 trial. We used multiple imputation for several patient characteristics with missing values. Results: There were 3836 study-eligible women with advanced breast cancer. The hazard ratio for TTNT in the observational study (HR: 0.62; 95% CI: 0.56–0.68) was closely aligned with that of the randomized trial (HR: 0.64; 95% CI: 0.52–0.78). Conclusions: Under our assumptions on missing data and comparability of the two study populations, results from our non-randomized study closely matched that of the randomized trial. Further studies are needed to determine whether EHR data can yield reliable conclusions on treatment effects in oncology. © 2022 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Keywords: retrospective studies; antineoplastic agent; cohort studies; antineoplastic combined chemotherapy protocols; epidermal growth factor receptor 2; cohort analysis; pathology; breast neoplasms; oncology; retrospective study; breast tumor; receptor, erbb-2; letrozole; metastatic breast cancer; comparative effectiveness; electronic health records; humans; human; female; electronic health record; real-world evidence; healthcare databases
Journal Title: Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety
Volume: 32
Issue: 4
ISSN: 1053-8569
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons  
Date Published: 2023-04-01
Start Page: 426
End Page: 434
Language: English
DOI: 10.1002/pds.5565
PUBMED: 36345809
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC10038825
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Deborah Schrag
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