Clinical therapeutics
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Clinical therapeutics · Jan 2015
Real-world analysis of tyrosine kinase inhibitor treatment patterns among patients with chronic myeloid leukemia in the United States.
The treatment of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) has improved considerably since the introduction of the tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) imatinib in 2001 and the approval of second-generation TKIs (dasatinib and nilotinib) beginning in 2006.The objective of this study was to explore treatment patterns of TKI therapy (adherence, duration, and switching) among patients with CML in the United States, following the availability of second-generation TKIs. ⋯ For the US patients studied, we found that imatinib was used more frequently than other TKIs in the first-line setting, but there was an increased use of second-generation TKIs in the first-line setting over time (9% in 2008 vs 43% in 2011 were nilotinib or dasatinib users). Only about one fifth of patients switched to a second-line TKI during the period of data collection.