scholarly journals PBI36 REVIEW AND COMPARISON OF OVERALL SURVIVAL EXTRAPOLATION IN HEALTH TECHNOLOGY ASSESSMENTS FOR CHIMERIC ANTIGEN RECEPTOR T-CELL THERAPIES (CAR-TS)

2020 ◽  
Vol 23 ◽  
pp. S20
Author(s):  
A. Kasle ◽  
T. Qu ◽  
Y. Meng
Author(s):  
Niamh Carey ◽  
Conor Hickey ◽  
Laura Mc Cullagh ◽  
Michael Barry

IntroductionIn 2018, the National Centre for Pharmacoeconomics (NCPE) was commissioned to conduct a health technology assessment (HTA) of one of the first commercially available chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapies, tisagenlecleucel. CAR T-cells are a major advance in personalized cancer treatment, demonstrating promising outcomes in relapsed/refractory pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia (pALL). However, the results are based on short-term follow up, limiting their value in predicting long-term survival and leading to uncertainty about the most appropriate survival modeling method to employ. This study aimed to address these limitations by means of expert elicitation.MethodsAn expert elicitation method, the histogram technique, was employed. A predefined discrete numerical scale was presented in Microsoft Excel® and the expert was asked to place twenty crosses on a frequency chart. These crosses represented the expert's beliefs about the distribution of particular quantities. Each cross represented five percent of the probabilistic distribution. Individual distributions were then aggregated across experts using linear pooling.ResultsA total of seventeen experts were invited to take part; eight agreed to participate and five completed the exercise. Three experts did not consider tisagenlecleucel to be a “curative” therapy because patients had a higher risk of death, compared with the age- and sex-matched general population. The aggregated distributions indicated the five-year overall survival rate to be thirty-three percent (95% CI 8.65–56.88) in patients who do not receive a subsequent stem cell transplant and twenty percent (95% CI 2.38 -52.04) in those who do.ConclusionsThe results of this study will be used to calibrate CD19 CAR T-cell therapy survival estimates presented in HTA submissions to the NCPE to ensure more robust assessments. They will also be used to inform the construction of a de novo cost-utility model for examining the cost effectiveness of CD19 CAR T-cell therapies for relapsed/refractory pALL in the Irish healthcare setting.


2017 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 31-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer N. Brudno ◽  
James N. Kochenderfer

eJHaem ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Salyka M. Sengsayadeth ◽  
Bhagirathbhai R. Dholaria ◽  
Bipin N. Savani ◽  
Olalekan O. Oluwole

HemaSphere ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. e524
Author(s):  
Renaud Heine ◽  
Frederick W. Thielen ◽  
Marc Koopmanschap ◽  
Marie José Kersten ◽  
Hermann Einsele ◽  
...  

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