Abstract
To characterize clinical outcomes of women with advanced/recurrent endometrial cancer (AEC) in routine practice using electronic health records from a real-world database.
Adult women diagnosed with AEC (stage III/IV, or early stage with locoregional/distant recurrence) between January 1, 2013 and September 30, 2020, inclusive, were eligible provided they received platinum-based chemotherapy at any time following diagnosis and had ≥2 clinical visits. Follow-up was from initiation of systemic treatment after advanced diagnosis (index) until March 30, 2021, last available follow-up, or death, whichever occurred first. Outcomes, by histological subtype, included Kaplan–Meier estimates of overall survival (OS) and time to first subsequent therapy or death (TFST).
Of the 2202 women with AEC, most were treated in a community setting (82.7%) and presented with stage III/IV disease at initial diagnosis (74.0%). The proportion with endometrioid carcinoma, uterine serous carcinoma (USC), and other AEC subtypes was 59.8%, 25.0%, and 15.2%, respectively. The most common first systemic treatment following advanced/recurrent diagnosis was platinum-based combination chemotherapy (82.0%). Median OS (95% CI) from initiation of first systemic treatment was shorter with USC (31.3 [27.7–34.3] months) and other AECs (29.4 [21.4–43.9] months) versus endometrioid carcinoma (70.8 [60.5–83.2] months). Similar results were observed for TFST. Black/African American women had worse OS and TFST than white women.
Women with AEC had poor survival outcomes, demonstrating the requirement for more effective therapies. To our knowledge, this is the most comprehensive evaluation of contemporary treatment of AEC delivered in a community setting to date.
•This retrospective cohort study characterized real-world outcomes of women with advanced endometrial cancer in the USA.•Most women received platinum-based combination chemotherapy as first systemic treatment for advanced/recurrent disease.•Survival outcomes were poor overall, particularly in women with advanced uterine serous carcinoma.•Black/African American women had worse outcomes than white women despite similar demographics and treatment pathways.