Pain palliation measurement in cancer clinical trials: The US Food and Drug Administration perspective Journal Article


Authors: Basch, E.; Trentacosti, A. M.; Burke, L. B.; Kwitkowski, V.; Kane, R. C.; Autio, K. A.; Papadopoulos, E.; Stansbury, J. P.; Kluetz, P. G.; Smith, H.; Justice, R.; Pazdur, R.
Article Title: Pain palliation measurement in cancer clinical trials: The US Food and Drug Administration perspective
Abstract: BACKGROUND Pain palliation resulting from antitumor therapy provides direct evidence of treatment benefit when combined with evidence of antitumor activity. The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) previously issued guidance regarding the use of patient-reported outcome (PRO) measures to support labeling claims. The purpose of this article is to identify common challenges and key design strategies when measuring pain palliation in antitumor therapy clinical trials that are consistent with PRO Guidance principles. METHODS Antitumor clinical protocols submitted to the FDA between 1995 and 2012 that included pain palliation as a primary or secondary endpoint were reviewed. Challenges in critical trial design components were identified. Design strategies consistent with PRO Guidance principles are proposed. RESULTS The challenges identified were measurement of pain intensity and analgesic use, enrollment eligibility criteria, data collection methods, responder definitions, missing data, and blinding. Strategies included the use of well-defined, reliable, PRO assessments of pain intensity and analgesics; ensuring that enrollment criteria define patients with clinically significant pain attributable to cancer on an optimal analgesic regimen; defining responders using both pain and analgesic use criteria; incorporating an analysis of tumor response to support evidence of pain response; and minimizing missing data and inadvertent unblinding. CONCLUSIONS Improvement in cancer-related pain resulting from antitumor therapy is an important treatment benefit that can support drug approval and labeling claims when adequately measured if study results demonstrate statistically and clinically significant findings. Sponsors are encouraged to discuss pain palliation assessment methods with the FDA early in and throughout product development. © 2013 American Cancer Society.
Keywords: treatment response; clinical trial; pain; palliative therapy; cancer pain; clinical protocol; food and drug administration; cancer therapy; analgesia; pain assessment; drug use; analgesic agent; clinical trial (topic); analgesic; patient-reported outcome; guidance; fda; cancer; human; priority journal; article; narcotic
Journal Title: Cancer
Volume: 120
Issue: 5
ISSN: 0008-543X
Publisher: Wiley Blackwell  
Date Published: 2014-03-01
Start Page: 761
End Page: 767
Language: English
DOI: 10.1002/cncr.28470
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 24375398
DOI/URL:
Notes: Export Date: 2 April 2014 -- CODEN: CANCA -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Ethan Martin Basch
    180 Basch
  2. Karen Anne Autio
    119 Autio