Abstract

Abstract BACKGROUND TTFields are electric fields that exert physical forces to disrupt cellular processes critical for cancer cell viability and tumor progression. TTFields therapy is approved for adults with recurrent (r) and newly diagnosed (nd) glioblastoma (GBM), based on the phase 3 EF-11 (TTFields 200 kHz) and EF-14 studies (TTFields therapy 200 kHz + temozolomide), respectively, which showed clinical benefit without increase in systemic adverse events (AEs). Pediatric patients were not included in the EF-11 and EF-14 studies. Here, we present pediatric safety data from an updated global post-marketing surveillance (PMS) analysis of patients with brain tumors treated with TTFields therapy, over an 11-year timeframe. METHODS Unsolicited PMS data from patients with brain tumors who received TTFields therapy from October 2011-March 2022 in North America, Europe, Middle East, Africa, and Japan were included. AEs were categorized using MedDRA version 25.1. RESULTS Overall, 25,898 patients were included. Diagnoses were ndGBM (68%), rGBM (26%), anaplastic astrocytoma/oligodendroglioma (4%) and other (2%). Two-thirds of patients were male. The analysis included 93 (0.4%) pediatric/adolescent patients (<18 years). In pediatric patients, 62% experienced ≥1 AE, with 53% related to TTFields therapy; these values were comparable with the overall population (73% and 56%, respectively). The most common treatment-related AEs in pediatric patients were: skin reaction (39%), heat sensation (14%), and headache (12%); and in the overall population were: skin reaction (43%), electric sensation (14%), and heat sensation (12%). CONCLUSIONS This long-term, global, real-world data analysis, including pediatric patients with brain tumors, demonstrates a tolerable safety profile of TTFields therapy, consistent with pivotal clinical studies. There were no major differences in AEs between pediatric and adult patients and no new safety signals identified in the pediatric population. Consistent with the overall dataset, most AEs in pediatric patients were localized mild–moderate skin events, which are typically easily managed.

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