Elsevier

Annals of Oncology

Volume 20, Issue 3, March 2009, Pages 460-464
Annals of Oncology

original articles
breast cancer
Progression-free survival and time to progression as primary end points in advanced breast cancer: often used, sometimes loosely defined

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Abstract

Backgound

The growing availability of active agents makes the development of novel therapies increasingly complex and the choice of end points critical. We assessed the frequency of use of efficacy end points in advanced breast cancer.

Methods

We searched PubMed for randomized trials published between 2000 and 2007 in 10 leading medical journals. We abstracted data on progression-free survival (PFS), time to tumor progression (TTP), response rate (RR) and overall survival.

Results

A total of 58 studies enrolled 23 371 assessable patients in 122 treatment arms. The primary end points most frequently used were RR and TTP (n = 21 each), followed by PFS (n = 14). In five of the trials using TTP as the primary end point, no definition of TTP was reported; in 13 of the other 16 cases, death was counted as an event, making TTP indistinguishable from PFS. Trials having PFS, TTP or time to treatment failure as the primary end point (n = 36) had a higher mean number of patients than those using RR (P = 0.061).

Conclusion

Investigators seem to be frequently using PFS and TTP interchangeably in advanced breast cancer. Such use of terms may lead to confusion when results of different trials are compared, and uniform use of definitions seems in order.

Keywords

breast neoplasms
disease-free survival
drug therapy
prognosis
survival analysis

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