We conducted a retrospective medical record review of 1,063 patients to examine patient characteristics and treatment patterns among adults with Philadelphia chromosome and/or BCR–ABL-positive chronic-phase chronic myeloid leukemia in the USA, UK, Germany, and Japan. Patients who were included received first-line treatment with imatinib between 1 January 2005 and 31 December 2009 and were not enrolled in a randomized clinical trial between first-line treatment initiation and end of recorded follow-up. The average age was 55 years; 60% were male. On average, patients were initiated on imatinib 2.7 months post-diagnosis and received therapy for 22 months [19 months (USA) to 25 months (Japan)], at a median dose of 400 mg/day. Thirteen percent [8% (Japan) to 16% (UK)] had dose escalation to a median 800 mg/day. Twenty-nine percent discontinued imatinib, primarily due to resistance or disease progression. Among 148 patients receiving second-line dasatinib and 113 receiving nilotinib, a greater proportion in the USA and Germany received nilotinib (54% in each country), while fewer patients in Japan and the UK received nilotinib (47 and 17%, respectively). On average, patients had second-line therapy initiated 25 months post-diagnosis and received treatment for 11 months (dasatinib) or 8 months (nilotinib). Patients initiating dasatinib had more advanced disease than those initiating nilotinib.
Mitra D, Trask PC, Iyer S, Candrilli SD, Kaye JA. Patient characteristics and treatment patterns in chronic myeloid leukemia: evidence from a multi-country retrospective medical record chart review study. Int J Hematol. 2012 Mar 1;95(3):263-73.
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