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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Active, not recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT01757535
Other study ID # CC-486-AML-001
Secondary ID 2012-003457-28
Status Active, not recruiting
Phase Phase 3
First received
Last updated
Start date April 24, 2013
Est. completion date December 31, 2024

Study information

Verified date January 2024
Source Celgene
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

This study enrolled 472 participants, aged 55 or older, with a diagnosis of de novo acute myeloid leukemia (AML) or AML secondary to prior myelodysplastic disease or chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML), and who have achieved first complete remission (CR)/ complete remission with incomplete blood count recovery (CRi) following induction with or without consolidation chemotherapy. The study is amended to include an extension phase (EP). The EP allows participants who are currently receiving oral azacitidine and who are demonstrating clinical benefit as assessed by the investigator, to continue receiving oral azacitidine after unblinding by sponsor until the participant meets the criteria for study discontinuation or until oral azacitidine becomes commercially available and reimbursed. In addition, all participants in the placebo arm and participants who had been discontinued from the treatment phase (irrespective of randomization arm) and continuing in the follow-up phase will be followed for survival in the EP.


Description:

This is an international, multicenter, placebo-controlled, Phase 3 study with a double-blind, randomized, parallel-group design in subjects with de novo AML or AML secondary to prior diagnosis of myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) or chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML) aged ≥ 55 years, who are in first CR/CRi following induction therapy with or without consolidation chemotherapy. The study consists of 3 phases; the pre-randomization phase (screening phase), the treatment phase, and the follow-up phase. The study is amended to include an extension phase (EP). The EP allows participants who are currently receiving oral azacitidine and who are demonstrating clinical benefit as assessed by the Investigator, to continue receiving oral azacitidine after unblinding by sponsor until they meet the criteria for study discontinuation or until oral azacitidine becomes commercially available and reimbursed. In addition, all participants in the placebo arm and participants who had been discontinued from the treatment phase (irrespective of randomization arm) and continuing in the follow-up phase will be followed for survival in the EP.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Active, not recruiting
Enrollment 472
Est. completion date December 31, 2024
Est. primary completion date July 15, 2019
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 55 Years and older
Eligibility Key Inclusion Criteria: 1. Male or female participants = 55 years of age 2. Newly diagnosed, histologically confirmed de novo acute myeloid leukemia (AML) or AML secondary to prior myelodysplastic disease or CMML (Chronic myelomonocytic leukemia) 3. First complete remission (CR)/ complete remission with incomplete blood count recovery (CRi) with induction therapy with intensive chemotherapy with or without consolidation therapy within 4 months (+/- 7 days of achieving CR or CRi) 4. Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status - 0, 1, 2, 3 Key Inclusion Criteria in the Extended Phase of the study: At the Investigator's discretion and with approval of the sponsor, participants meeting all of the following eligibility criteria are eligible to enter the extension phase: 1. All participants randomized into the oral azacitidine or placebo arm and are continuing in either the treatment phase or follow-up phase of the CC-486-AML-001 study; - Participants randomized to oral azacitidine treatment arm and continuing in the treatment phase demonstrating clinical benefit as assessed by the investigator are eligible to receive oral azacitidine in the extension phase (EP); - Participants randomized into placebo arm of the study will not receive oral azacitidine in the EP, but will be followed for survival in the EP; - Participants currently in the follow-up phase will continue to be followed for survival in the EP; 2. Participants who have signed the informed consent for the EP of the study; 3. Participants who do not meet any of the criteria for study discontinuation Key Exclusion Criteria: 1. AML with inversion (inv)(16), translocation = t(8;21), t(16;16), t(15;17), or t(9;22) or molecular evidence of such translocations 2. Prior bone marrow or stem cell transplantation 3. Have achieved CR/CRi following therapy with hypomethylating agents 4. Diagnosis of malignant disease within the previous 12 months 5. Proven central nervous system (CNS) leukemia

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Drug:
Oral Azacitidine
300 mg oral azacitidine on days 1 to 14 of each 28-day treatment cycle.
Placebo
Identically matching placebo tablets on days 1 to 14 of each 28-day treatment cycle.

Locations

Country Name City State
Australia Local Institution - 508 Adelaide South Australia
Australia Local Institution - 511 Bedford Park South Australia
Australia Local Institution - 503 Heidelberg
Australia Local Institution - 502 Hobart
Australia Local Institution - 507 Liverpool
Australia Local Institution - 500 Melbourne
Australia Local Institution - 505 Perth
Australia Local Institution - 512 Perth
Australia Local Institution - 509 South Brisbane Queensland
Australia Local Institution - 506 St Leonards
Australia Local Institution - 510 Wollongong New South Wales
Australia Local Institution - 504 Woodville South South Australia
Australia Local Institution - 501 Woolloongabba
Austria Local Institution - 271 Graz
Austria Local Institution - 270 Salzburg
Austria Local Institution - 273 Vienna
Austria Local Institution - 274 Vienna
Austria Local Institution - 272 Wien
Belgium Local Institution - 300 Brugge
Belgium Local Institution - 301 Charleroi
Belgium Local Institution - 302 Mons
Brazil Local Institution - 233 Curitiba Paraná
Brazil Local Institution - 231 Porto Alegre Rio Grande Do Sul
Brazil Local Institution - 232 Rio de Janeiro
Brazil Local Institution - 230 Sao Paulo
Brazil Local Institution - 234 São Paulo
Canada Local Institution - 605 Edmonton Alberta
Canada Local Institution - 604 Halifax Nova Scotia
Canada Local Institution - 602 Montreal Quebec
Canada Local Institution - 608 Montreal Quebec
Canada Local Institution - 601 Saint John New Brunswick
Canada Local Institution - 603 St John's Newfoundland and Labrador
Canada Local Institution - 607 Toronto Ontario
Canada Local Institution - 600 Winnipeg Manitoba
Czechia Local Institution - 320 Brno Jihomoravský Kraj
Czechia Local Institution - 321 Praha
Czechia Local Institution - 322 Praha
Finland Local Institution - 361 Helsinki
Finland Local Institution - 362 Tampere
Finland Local Institution - 360 Turku
France Local Institution - 456 Amiens
France Local Institution - 465 Argenteuil
France Local Institution - 457 Bobigny Cedex
France Local Institution - 462 Boulognes Sur Mer
France Local Institution - 460 Clamart Cedex
France Local Institution - 452 Creteil
France Local Institution - 458 Le Chesnay Cedex
France Local Institution - 453 Lille
France Local Institution - 461 Limoges Cedex
France Local Institution - 450 Lyon cedex
France Local Institution - 454 Paris
France Local Institution - 463 Paris
France Local Institution - 800 Paris Cedex 10
France Local Institution - 464 Pontoise
France Local Institution - 455 Rouen
France Local Institution - 459 Saint-Cloud
France Local Institution - 451 Villejuif CEDEX
Germany Local Institution - 413 Berlin
Germany Local Institution - 410 Bonn
Germany Local Institution - 400 Dresden Saxony
Germany Local Institution - 406 Düsseldorf
Germany Local Institution - 415 Erlangen
Germany Local Institution - 404 Frankfurt am Main
Germany Local Institution - 412 Goch
Germany Local Institution - 405 Hannover
Germany Local Institution - 408 Heilbronn
Germany Local Institution - 414 Jena
Germany Local Institution - 403 Keil
Germany Local Institution - 402 Mannheim
Germany Local Institution - 409 Muenchen
Germany Local Institution - 411 München
Germany Local Institution - 407 Oldenburg
Germany Local Institution - 416 Schweiler
Germany Local Institution - 401 Ulm
Ireland Local Institution - 950 Dublin
Ireland Local Institution - 951 Galway
Israel Local Institution - 381 Beer Sheva
Israel Local Institution - 380 Haifa
Israel Local Institution - 383 Jerusalem
Israel Local Institution - 382 Petach Tikva
Italy Local Institution - 701 Alessandria
Italy Local Institution - 721 Bari
Italy Local Institution - 720 Bologna
Italy Local Institution - 710 Cagliari
Italy Local Institution - 702 Cremona
Italy Local Institution - 708 Firenze
Italy Local Institution - 712 Genova
Italy Local Institution - 716 Lecce
Italy Local Institution - 706 Milan
Italy Local Institution - 726 Milano
Italy Local Institution - 704 Monza
Italy Local Institution - 717 Naples
Italy Local Institution - 725 Naples
Italy Local Institution - 705 Orbassano (TO)
Italy Local Institution - 703 Palermo
Italy Local Institution - 719 Palermo
Italy Local Institution - 724 Pesaro
Italy Local Institution - 700 Reggio Calabria
Italy Local Institution - 709 Roma
Italy Local Institution - 714 Roma
Italy Local Institution - 723 Roma
Italy Local Institution - 722 Rome
Italy Local Institution - 715 Torino
Italy Local Institution - 718 Torino
Italy Local Institution - 711 Udine
Italy Local Institution - 707 Varese
Korea, Republic of Local Institution - 535 Busan
Korea, Republic of Local Institution - 533 Daegu
Korea, Republic of Local Institution - 530 Seoul
Korea, Republic of Local Institution - 531 Seoul
Korea, Republic of Local Institution - 532 Seoul
Korea, Republic of Local Institution - 536 Seoul
Lithuania Local Institution - 750 Klaipeda
Mexico Local Institution - 252 Huixquilucan de Degollado
Mexico Local Institution - 251 Mexico
Mexico Local Institution - 250 Monterrey
Poland Local Institution - 824 Bydgoszcz
Poland Local Institution - 820 Gdansk
Poland Local Institution - 822 Lodz
Poland Local Institution - 821 Warsaw
Poland Local Institution - 823 Wroclaw
Portugal Local Institution - 841 Coimbra
Portugal Local Institution - 840 Lisboa
Portugal Local Institution - 843 Lisboa
Portugal Local Institution - 842 Porto
Portugal Local Institution - 844 Porto
Russian Federation Local Institution - 971 Moscow
Russian Federation Local Institution - 970 Nizhniy Novgorod
Russian Federation Local Institution - 972 Saint Petersburg
Russian Federation Local Institution - 973 St Petersburg
Spain Local Institution - 869 Badalona (Barcelona)
Spain Local Institution - 870 Barcelona
Spain Local Institution - 871 Barcelona
Spain Local Institution - 873 Caceres
Spain Local Institution - 863 Cordoba
Spain Local Institution - 867 La Coruna
Spain Local Institution - 865 Madrid
Spain Local Institution - 866 Madrid
Spain Local Institution - 868 Madrid
Spain Local Institution - 864 Oviedo
Spain Local Institution - 872 Palma de Mallorca Baleares
Spain Local Institution - 861 Salamanca
Spain Local Institution - 862 Sevilla
Spain Local Institution - 860 Valencia
Taiwan Local Institution - 599 Beitou District, Taipei City
Taiwan Local Institution - 595 Niaosong District Kaohsiung City
Taiwan Local Institution - 596 Taichung, Northern Dist.
Taiwan Local Institution - 597 Tainan, Taiana
Taiwan Local Institution - 598 Taipei, Zhongzheng Dist.
Turkey Local Institution - 650 Ankara
Turkey Local Institution - 653 Ankara
Turkey Local Institution - 651 Istanbul
Turkey Local Institution - 652 Samsun
United Kingdom Local Institution - 907 Boston
United Kingdom Local Institution - 903 Brighton East Sussex
United Kingdom Local Institution - 902 Canterbury Kent
United Kingdom Local Institution - 901 London
United Kingdom Local Institution - 905 London
United Kingdom Local Institution - 908 London
United Kingdom Local Institution - 909 Maidstone
United Kingdom Local Institution - 900 Manchester
United Kingdom Local Institution - 904 Nottingham Nottinghamshire
United Kingdom Local Institution - 906 Romford, Essex
United States Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center Boston Massachusetts
United States Massachusetts General Hospital Boston Massachusetts
United States Providence St Joseph Medical Center Cancer Center Burbank California
United States Northwestern University Medical Center Chicago Illinois
United States Local Institution - 016 Cleveland Ohio
United States University Of Texas Southwestern Medical Center Dallas Texas
United States Rocky Mountain Cancer Center Denver Colorado
United States City Of Hope Duarte California
United States Duke University Medical Center Durham North Carolina
United States Brooke-Army Medical Center Fort Sam Houston Texas
United States University of California San Francisco Fresno Campus Fresno California
United States University Of Florida Gainesville Florida
United States Greenville Hospital System Greenville South Carolina
United States John Theurer Cancer Center at Hackensack University Medical Center Hackensack New Jersey
United States MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston Texas
United States Franciscan St. Francis Health Indianapolis Indiana
United States Indiana University Cancer Center Indianapolis Indiana
United States Kansas City VA Medical Center University of Kansas Medical Center Kansas City Missouri
United States Lancaster General Hospital Lancaster Pennsylvania
United States Ucla Los Angeles California
United States University of Southern California Norris Cancer Center Los Angeles California
United States Norton Cancer Institute Louisville Oncology Louisville Kentucky
United States University Of Louisville Louisville Kentucky
United States Loyola University Chicago Maywood Illinois
United States Mount Sinai Comprehensive Cancer Center Miami Beach Florida
United States Froedtert Hospital BMT Medical College of Wisconsin Milwaukee Wisconsin
United States Winthrop University Hospital Mineola New York
United States Sarah Cannon Research Inst Nashville Tennessee
United States Vanderbilt University Medical Center Nashville Tennessee
United States Cancer Institute of New Jersey New Brunswick New Jersey
United States Ochsner Medical Center - Jefferson Highway New Orleans Louisiana
United States Tulane University Medical Center New Orleans Louisiana
United States Columbia University Irving Medical Center New York New York
United States Local Institution - 002 New York New York
United States Mt. Sinai Medical Center New York New York
United States Cancer Care and Hematology Specialists of Chicagoland, P.C. - Niles, IL Niles Illinois
United States University of Oklahoma Peggy and Charles Stephenson Cancer Center Oklahoma City Oklahoma
United States University Of Nebraska Medical Center Omaha Nebraska
United States Local Institution - 050 Orange California
United States University of Florida Health Cancer Center at Orlando Health Orlando Florida
United States Arizona Oncology Associates, P.C. Phoenix Arizona
United States UPMC Cancer Pavillion Pittsburgh Pennsylvania
United States Kaiser Permanente Northwest Oncology Hematology Portland Oregon
United States VA Commonwealth University - Massey Cancer Center Richmond Virginia
United States Local Institution - 037 Rochester Minnesota
United States University of Rochester Medical Center Rochester New York
United States Washington University School Of Medicine Saint Louis Missouri
United States Cancer Care Centers of South Texas - Loop San Antonio Texas
United States Methodist Hospital San Antonio Texas
United States Sharp Memorial Hospital San Diego California
United States Swedish Cancer Inst Seattle Washington
United States The Hospital of Central Connecticut Southington Connecticut
United States Stanford Cancer Center Stanford California
United States Local Institution - 014 Valhalla New York
United States George Washington University Cancer Center Washington District of Columbia
United States Kansas University Medical Center Westwood Kansas
United States Innovative Clinical Research Institute Whittier California
United States Local Institution - 025 Winston-Salem North Carolina
United States University of Massachusetts Worcester Massachusetts
United States Yakima Valley Memorial Hospital/ North Star Lodge Yakima Washington

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Celgene

Countries where clinical trial is conducted

United States,  Australia,  Austria,  Belgium,  Brazil,  Canada,  Czechia,  Finland,  France,  Germany,  Ireland,  Israel,  Italy,  Korea, Republic of,  Lithuania,  Mexico,  Poland,  Portugal,  Russian Federation,  Spain,  Taiwan,  Turkey,  United Kingdom, 

References & Publications (1)

Roboz GJ, Montesinos P, Selleslag D, Wei A, Jang JH, Falantes J, Voso MT, Sayar H, Porkka K, Marlton P, Almeida A, Mohan S, Ravandi F, Garcia-Manero G, Skikne B, Kantarjian H. Design of the randomized, Phase III, QUAZAR AML Maintenance trial of CC-486 (oral azacitidine) maintenance therapy in acute myeloid leukemia. Future Oncol. 2016 Feb;12(3):293-302. doi: 10.2217/fon.15.326. Epub 2016 Jan 19. — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Kaplan-Meier (K-M) Estimate for Overall Survival (OS) Overall survival was defined as time from randomization to death from any cause; participants surviving at the end of the follow-up period, or who withdraw consent, or who were lost to follow up were censored at the date last known alive. Day 1 (randomization) up to data cut off date of 15 July 2019; median follow-up for OS estimated by the reverse K-M method was 41.2 months for all participants.
Secondary Kaplan-Meier Estimate of Relapse Free Survival (RFS) RFS was defined as the time from the date of randomization to the date of documented relapse or death from any cause, whichever occurred first. Participants who were still alive without documented relapse, or who were lost to follow-up or withdrew consent without documented relapse, were censored at the date of their last bone marrow assessment, prior to receiving any other therapy for AML.
Documented relapse was defined as the earliest date of the following:
= 5% bone marrow blasts (myeloblasts) from Central Pathology report, or
appearance of > 0% blasts in the peripheral blood with a later bone marrow confirmation (bone marrow blast [myeloblasts] = 5%) within 100 days, or
at least 2 peripheral blasts = 5% within 30 days.
From day 1 (randomization) up to data cut off date of 15 July 2019; approximately 74 months
Secondary Kaplan-Meier Estimate of Time to Relapse Time to relapse was defined as the interval (in months) from the date of randomization to the date of documented relapse. Estimates of relapse rate were based on the cumulative incidence function from a competing risk analysis with death as a competing risk for relapse from complete remission (CR)/ complete remission with incomplete blood count recovery (CRi).
Documented relapse was defined as, the earliest date of the following:
= 5% bone marrow blasts (myeloblasts) from Central Pathology report, or
appearance of > 0% blasts in the peripheral blood with a later bone marrow confirmation (bone marrow blast [myeloblasts] = 5%) within 100 days, or
at least 2 peripheral blasts = 5% within 30 days.
Day 1 (randomization) to the date of the data cut off date of 15 July 2019; approximately 74 months
Secondary Kaplan-Meier Estimates of Time to Discontinuation From Treatment Time to discontinuation from treatment was assessed and defined as the interval from the date of randomization to the date of discontinuation from study drug. Participants who were receiving treatment at the time of study closure were censored at the date of last visit. Estimates of relapse rate were based on the cumulative incidence function from a competing risk analysis with death as a competing risk for relapse from CR/ CRi. From day 1 (randomization) up to data cut off date of 15 July 2019; approximately 74 months
Secondary Number of Participants With Treatment Emergent Adverse Events (TEAEs) TEAEs include AEs that started between first dose date and 28 days after the last dose of study drug.
A serious adverse event (SAE) is:
Death
Life-threatening event
Inpatient hospitalization or prolongation of existing hospitalization
Persistent or significant disability or incapacity
Congenital anomaly or birth defect
Other important medical event The severity of AEs were assessed by the investigator according to the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) Version 4.0: Grade 1 (Mild): asymptomatic/mild symptoms; clinical or diagnostic observations only; intervention not indicated. Grade 2 (Moderate): minimal, local or noninvasive intervention indicated; limiting age-appropriate activities of daily living. Grade 3: Severe or medically significant but not immediately life-threatening; hospitalization or prolongation of hospitalization indicated; disabling; limiting self care Grade 4: Life-threatening; urgent intervention indicated. Grade 5: Death due to AE.
Day 1 (randomization) to the data cut off date of 15 July 2019; the median treatment duration was 11.6 months (range: 0.5 to 74.3 months) for the oral aza arm and 5.7 months (range: 0.7 to 68.5 months) for the placebo arm.
Secondary Mean Change in the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy (FACIT-Fatigue Scale V 4.0) Score From Baseline The functional assessment of chronic illness therapy (FACIT-Fatigue Scale V 4.0) is a subscale of the FACIT-F and has been validated in the oncology setting. The FACIT-Fatigue Scale is a short, 13-item, self-administered tool that measures the level of fatigue in an individual during usually daily activities over the past week. The level of fatigue is measured on a 5-point Likert scale (0 = not at all; 4 = very much. The scores range from 0 to 52, with higher scores indicating less fatigue. If there were missing items, but the participant answered at least 50% of the items, then subscores were prorated. Baseline to Cycle 2, Day 1 (C2D1), C3D1, C4D1, C5D1, C6D1, C7D1, C8D1, C9D1C3, C10D1, C11D1, C12D1, C13D1, C14D1, C15D1, C15D1, C16D1, C17D1, C18D1, C19D1, C20D1, C21D1, C22D1, C23D1, C24D1, C25D1 and continued on day 1 at each cycle through C33D1
Secondary Mean Change in the European Quality of Life-Five Dimensions-Three Levels (EQ-5D-3L) Score From Baseline The EQ-5D-3L is a self-administered questionnaire consisting of 5 questions, pertaining to specific health dimensions (ie, mobility, self-care, pain, usual activities, and anxiety/depression) and a health status scale. Each question has 3 levels of severity, corresponding to no problems, moderate problems and severe problems. Canadian population sample weights were used to derive health utility scores. A higher utility score represents a better health state. A clinically meaningful improvement or worsening was defined as at least 0.08 points of improvement or 0.10 points of worsening from baseline, respectively, for the EQ-5D-3L Health Utility Index. The instrument is scored using the United Kingdom (UK) index ranges from -0.594 to 1, where 0 equates to death and 1 equates to full health; -0.594 is considered 'worse than death'. Baseline to Cycle 2, Day 1 (C2D1), C3D1, C4D1, C5D1, C6D1, C7D1, C8D1, C9D1C3, C10D1, C11D1, C12D1, C13D1, C14D1, C15D1, C15D1, C16D1, C17D1, C18D1, C19D1, C20D1, C21D1, C22D1, C23D1, C24D1, C25D1 and continued on day 1 at each cycle through C33D1
Secondary Percentage of Participants Experiencing a Clinically Meaningful Change (Improvement, No Change and Deterioration) in the FACIT-Fatigue Scale From Baseline A clinically meaningful improvement or worsening was defined as at least 3 points of improvement or worsening from baseline, respectively, for FACIT-Fatigue. The functional assessment of chronic illness therapy (FACIT-Fatigue Scale V 4.0) is a subscale of the FACIT-F and has been validated in the oncology setting. The FACIT-Fatigue Scale is a short, 13-item, self-administered tool that measures the level of fatigue in an individual during usually daily activities over the past week. The level of fatigue is measured on a 5-point Likert scale (0 = not at all; 4 = very much. The scores range from 0 to 52, with higher scores indicating less fatigue. If there were missing items, but the participant answered at least 50% of the items, then subscores were prorated. Baseline to Cycle 2, Day 1 (C2D1), C3D1, C4D1, C5D1, C6D1, C7D1, C8D1, C9D1C3, C10D1, C11D1, C12D1, C13D1, C14D1, C15D1, C15D1, C16D1, C17D1, C18D1, C19D1, C20D1, C21D1, C22D1, C23D1, C24D1, C25D1 and continued on day 1 at each cycle through C33D1
Secondary Percentage of Participants Experiencing a Clinically Meaningful Change (Improvement, No Change and Deterioration) in the EQ-5D-3L Scale From Baseline The EQ-5D-3L is a self-administered questionnaire consisting of 5 questions, pertaining to specific health dimensions (ie, mobility, self-care, pain, usual activities, and anxiety/depression) and a health status scale. Each question has 3 levels of severity, corresponding to no problems, moderate problems and severe problems. Canadian population sample weights were used to derive health utility scores. A higher utility score represents a better health state. A clinically meaningful improvement or worsening was defined as at least 0.08 points of improvement or 0.10 points of worsening from baseline, respectively, for the EQ-5D-3L Health Utility Index. The instrument is scored using the United Kingdom (UK) index ranges from -0.594 to 1, where 0 equates to death and 1 equates to full health; -0.594 is considered 'worse than death'. Baseline to Cycle 2, Day 1 (C2D1), C3D1, C4D1, C5D1, C6D1, C7D1, C8D1, C9D1C3, C10D1, C11D1, C12D1, C13D1, C14D1, C15D1, C15D1, C16D1, C17D1, C18D1, C19D1, C20D1, C21D1, C22D1, C23D1, C24D1, C25D1 and continued on day 1 at each cycle through C33D1
Secondary Time to Definitive Clinically Meaningful Deterioration for = 2 Consecutive Visits as Measured Using the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy (FACIT-Fatigue Scale V 4.0) Clinically meaningful deterioration was defined as at least 3 points of deterioration from baseline for at least 2 consecutive visits for the FACIT--Fatigue. The FACIT-Fatigue Scale V 4.0) is a subscale of the FACIT-F and has been validated in the oncology setting. The FACIT-Fatigue Scale is a short, 13-item, self-administered tool that measures the level of fatigue in an individual during usually daily activities over the past week. The level of fatigue is measured on a 5-point Likert scale (0 = not at all to 4 = very much. The scores that range from 0 to 52, with higher scores indicating less fatigue. If there were missing items, but the participant answered at least 50% of the items, subscores were prorated. From day 1 (randomization) up to data cut off date of 15 July 2019; approximately 74 months
Secondary Time to Definitive Clinically Meaningful Deterioration for = 2 Consecutive Visits as Measured Using the EQ-5D HRQoL Scale Clinically meaningful deterioration was defined at least 0.10 point of deterioration from baseline for at least 2 consecutive visits for the EQ-5D Health Utility Index. The EQ-5D-3L is a self-administered questionnaire consisting of 5 questions, pertaining to specific health dimensions (ie, mobility, self-care, pain, usual activities, and anxiety/depression) and a health status scale. Each question has 3 levels of severity, corresponding to no problems, moderate problems and severe problems. Canadian population sample weights were used to derive health utility scores. A higher utility score represents a better health state. A clinically meaningful improvement or worsening was defined as at least 0.08 points of improvement or 0.10 points of worsening from baseline, respectively, for the EQ-5D-3L Health Utility Index. The EQ-5D-3L is scored using the UK index ranges from -0.594 to 1, where 0 equates to death and 1 equates to full health; -0.594 is considered 'worse than death'. From day 1 (randomization) up to data cut off date of 15 July 2019; approximately 74 months
Secondary Healthcare Resource Utilization (HRU): Rate of Hospital Events Per Person Year HRU is defined as any consumption of healthcare resources directly or indirectly related to the treatment of the patient. HRU is a key component to understand treatment costs and budget impact of new treatments from a provider perspective. Day 1 (randomization) to the date of the data cut off date of 15 July 2019; approximately 74 months
Secondary Healthcare Resource Utilization (HRU): Number of Days Hospitalized Per Person-Year HRU is defined as any consumption of healthcare resources directly or indirectly related to the treatment of the patient. HRU is a key component to understand treatment costs and budget impact of new treatments from a provider perspective. Day 1 (randomization) to the date of the data cut off date of 15 July 2019; approximately 74 months
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