# Association between medication burden and acute care use in older metastatic prostate cancer patients on androgen receptor signaling inhibitors

**Authors:** Michael A. Liu, Rohit Raghunathan, Karie Runcie, Margaux Wooster, Shikun Wang, Jason D. Wright, Alexander Z. Wei, Mark Stein, Dawn L. Hershman

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/cncr.70163 · Cancer · 2025-11-02

## TL;DR

Older patients with metastatic prostate cancer taking ARSI medications face higher acute care use due to polypharmacy and nonadherence.

## Contribution

The study identifies polypharmacy and ARSI nonadherence as independent risk factors for acute care use in older prostate cancer patients.

## Key findings

- Polypharmacy was present in 50.6% of patients before ARSI initiation.
- Nonadherence to ARSIs occurred in 34.0% of patients within 6 months.
- Both polypharmacy and nonadherence independently increased acute care use.

## Abstract

Management of metastatic prostate cancer often requires combining androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) with novel androgen receptor signaling inhibitors (ARSIs). Although these agents improve survival, older patients may face acute care utilization from medication burden, reflected in polypharmacy and nonadherence.

Using SEER‐Medicare data, the authors identified patients ≥66 years old with de novo metastatic prostate cancer prescribed abiraterone, enzalutamide, or apalutamide (2010–2017). Polypharmacy was defined by the Youden index (≥8 medications). ARSI adherence was measured by medication possession ratio (≥0.8) from initiation to discontinuation, assessed over 6 months. Acute care use was defined as any inpatient hospitalization or emergency visit within 6 months. Demographic characteristics were compared by t‐tests/χ2. Negative binomial regression estimated incidence rate ratios (IRRs) for acute care use.

Among 2697 patients (mean age, 75 years), most were White (80.3%), married (63.1%), and received prior ADT (85.3%). Polypharmacy was present in 50.6% of patients before ARSI initiation, whereas ARSI nonadherence in the 6 months post‐initiation was 34.0%. Polypharmacy and adherence were not significantly associated. In adjusted analyses controlling for demographic, clinical, and treatment factors, both polypharmacy (IRR, 1.59; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.28–1.98) and ARSI nonadherence (IRR 2.50; 95% CI, 2.00–3.03) independently prognosticated higher acute care use.

Medication burden, as characterized by suboptimal adherence and polypharmacy, is an independent risk factor for acute care use among older adults initiating ARSI treatment for metastatic prostate cancer. These findings highlight an opportunity for potential interventions to reduce downstream acute care use.

In this Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results‐Medicare based study of older adults with metastatic prostate cancer, both polypharmacy and nonadherence to androgen receptor signaling inhibitors were common and independently associated with increased acute care use. These results highlight the importance of addressing medication burden to improve outcomes in this high‐risk population.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** abiraterone (PubChem CID 132971), enzalutamide (PubChem CID 15951529), apalutamide (PubChem CID 24872560)
- **Diseases:** prostate cancer (MONDO:0005159)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** prostate cancer (MESH:D011471)
- **Chemicals:** apalutamide (MESH:C572045), abiraterone (MESH:C089740), enzalutamide (MESH:C540278), androgen receptor signaling inhibitors (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

22 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12579771/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12579771