Disease Burden and Treatment Pattern of Advanced or Recurrent Endometrial Cancer in Korea: A Nationwide Database (DIRECTION) Study.
Advanced/recurrent endometrial cancer (EC) patients has a poor prognosis, with higher recurrence and mortality than early-stage. However, as the real-world disease burden in these patients remains unclear, we aimed to investigate systemic anticancer therapy (SACT) patterns, healthcare resource utilization (HCRU), and costs in advanced/recurrent EC patients.
This nationwide population-based study used Korean claims data from 2008 to 2022. Adult patients with advanced/recurrent EC who received first-line SACT were included. For advanced EC, first-line SACT was defined as the initial therapy following EC diagnosis, while for recurrent EC it was defined as the initial therapy after recurrence following completion of primary therapy. We analyzed SACT patterns, prognosis, all cause- and EC-related HCRU, and costs.
A total of 2,704 EC patients were included. The most commonly used SACT was platinum-based regimen. From the first to third line, median values of SACT-free interval (18.40, 5.03, and 3.22 months) and time to next treatment (TTNT, 25.43, 9.27 and 6.44 months) showed decreasing trends. All-cause/EC-related HCRU and costs were increased with SACT progression; all-cause inpatient visits and total costs increased from 0.58 to 1.04 times per-patient-per-month (PPPM) and from $1,197.96 to $2,354.37 USD PPPM.
This study demonstrated significant variability in SACT regimen sequence, highlighting the lack of consensus on standard treatment after disease relapse. Shorter TTNT and SACT-free intervals and higher HCRU and costs in later lines indicate worsening prognosis and increasing disease burden. These findings suggest the urgent need for more effective treatments, including new therapeutic agents, to address the unmet clinical needs of advanced/recurrent EC patients.
This nationwide population-based study used Korean claims data from 2008 to 2022. Adult patients with advanced/recurrent EC who received first-line SACT were included. For advanced EC, first-line SACT was defined as the initial therapy following EC diagnosis, while for recurrent EC it was defined as the initial therapy after recurrence following completion of primary therapy. We analyzed SACT patterns, prognosis, all cause- and EC-related HCRU, and costs.
A total of 2,704 EC patients were included. The most commonly used SACT was platinum-based regimen. From the first to third line, median values of SACT-free interval (18.40, 5.03, and 3.22 months) and time to next treatment (TTNT, 25.43, 9.27 and 6.44 months) showed decreasing trends. All-cause/EC-related HCRU and costs were increased with SACT progression; all-cause inpatient visits and total costs increased from 0.58 to 1.04 times per-patient-per-month (PPPM) and from $1,197.96 to $2,354.37 USD PPPM.
This study demonstrated significant variability in SACT regimen sequence, highlighting the lack of consensus on standard treatment after disease relapse. Shorter TTNT and SACT-free intervals and higher HCRU and costs in later lines indicate worsening prognosis and increasing disease burden. These findings suggest the urgent need for more effective treatments, including new therapeutic agents, to address the unmet clinical needs of advanced/recurrent EC patients.