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UnknownNCT02783885

Clinical Utilization of Newly Approved Oncology Medications

Clinical Utilization of Newly Approved Oncology Medications in Middle Eastern Population

Status
Unknown
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
100 (estimated)
Sponsor
National Guard Health Affairs · Other Government
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 80 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The efficacy and safety of different medications vary from one individual to another and from one ethnic group to another. Therefore, strong interest in the study of pharmacogenomic and pharmacoepidemiology has evolved recently. There are multiple examples of oncology drugs being more effective in certain ethnic population compared to other. For example, irinotecan combined with cisplatin was very effective drug in the management of small cell lung cancer in the Japanese patients while an identical study done in the US revealed no major benefit to this combination in American population

Detailed description

Another example is having more benefit drawn from tyrosine kinase inhibitors (Erlotinib or Gefitinib) in Asian patients. Immunotherapy is a new class of cancer treatment that works to harness the innate powers of the immune system to fight cancer. Because of the immune system's unique properties, these therapies may hold greater potential than current treatment approaches to fight cancer more powerfully, to offer longer-term protection against the disease, to come with fewer side effects, and to benefit more patients with more cancer types Immunotherapy includes treatments that work in different ways. Some boost the body's immune system in a very general way. Others help train the immune system to attack cancer cells specifically. Immunotherapy has become an important part of treating some types of cancer. Newer types of immune treatments are now being studied, and they'll impact how we treat cancer in the future. Recently, multiple immunotherapy treatment been approved with a couple of EGFR resistant medications. Many new oncology drugs are being used in Middle Eastern countries including Saudi Arabia for different indications without being studied in the Middle Eastern population. These medications' efficacy and safety profiles may differ from those patients studied for drug development and approval due to difference in population's characteristics. The goal of this study is to observe, summarize and report the patterns of the use of these drugs and describe their efficacy and safety profile in the early phases of their use. The investigators aim is to build on the existing experience and knowledge by utilization of classic methodology and approaches on a larger scale and more effective way to paint picture of the performance of a certain therapy in the real life world. The use of prospective design will help evaluate the efficacy and safety of therapies already used in practice, generate new hypothesis, and/or determine the outcome of certain diseases.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGimmunotherapy

Timeline

Start date
2016-05-01
Primary completion
2020-09-01
Completion
2020-09-01
First posted
2016-05-26
Last updated
2016-05-26

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: Saudi Arabia

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02783885. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.