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Preferences for Immunotherapy in Melanoma: A Systematic Review

Version 2 2024-06-06, 05:21
Version 1 2023-04-28, 06:35
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-06, 05:21 authored by Ann LivingstoneAnn Livingstone, A Agarwal, MR Stockler, AM Menzies, K Howard, RL Morton
Background: Immunotherapy improves overall survival for patients with metatstatic melanoma and improves recurrence–free survival in the adjuvant setting, but is costly and has adverse effects. Little is known about the preferences of patients and clinicians regarding immunotherapy. This study aimed to identify factors important to patients and clinicians when deciding about immunotherapy for stages 2–4 melanoma. Methods: This study searched the Medline, EMBASE, ECONLIT, PsychINFO, and COCHRANE Systematic Reviews databases from inception to June 2018 for immunotherapy choice and preference studies. Findings were tabulated and summarized, and study reporting was assessed against recommended checklists. Results: This investigation identified eight studies assessing preferences for melanoma treatment; four studies regarding nivolumab, pembrolizumab, or ipilimumab; and four studies regarding interferon conducted in the United States, Germany, and Australia. The following 10 factors were important to decision-making: overall survival, recurrence-free survival, treatment side effects, dosing regimen, patient or payer cost, patient age, clinician or family/friend treatment recommendation, quality of life, and psychosocial effects. Overall survival was the most important factor for all respondents. The patients judged severe toxicities to be tolerable for small survival gains. The description of information about treatment harms and benefits was limited in most studies. Conclusions: Overall survival was of primary importance to patients and clinicians considering immunotherapy. Impaired quality of life due to adverse effects appeared to be a second-order consideration. Future research is required to determine preferences for contemporary combination therapies, extended treatment durations, and avoidance of chronic side effects. Systematic review registration: PROSPERO registration number CRD42018095899.

History

Journal

Annals of Surgical Oncology

Volume

27

Pagination

571-584

Location

Berlin, Germany

ISSN

1068-9265

eISSN

1534-4681

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

2

Publisher

Springer

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