Assessing the impact of anti-PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors on cancer care health and budget in Ireland.

2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e13593-e13593
Author(s):  
Iseult Browne ◽  
Catherine Weadick ◽  
Austin G Duffy ◽  
Harriet Doig ◽  
Eoin Bradley ◽  
...  

e13593 Background: In Ireland, the incidence of cancer was estimated to be 30,272 in 2018 with approximately 9,621 deaths. Over the next five years, the incidence of all cancers is expected to increase by 39% in males and 27% in females. Despite chemotherapy being considered the SOC in many malignancies, it is associated with high levels of toxicity. The introduction of immunotherapy in oncology has revolutionized cancer care, offering improved health outcomes in a range of tumor types. Many treatment options with the potential for use in several cancer types has led to concerns around the long-term affordability of these products. The objective of the study is to estimate and inform current discussion around the potential public health and economic impact of PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors in Ireland. Methods: The Health Impact Projection (HIP) model estimates the key clinical health and economic outcomes of PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors in eight high incidence cancers, over a five-year period (2020–2024) compared to the SOC treatments. SOC includes chemotherapy, immuno-oncology treatments not part of the anti PD-1/PD-L1 class (e.g. ipilimumab) and radiotherapy. It includes an assessment of the relative health benefits such as life-years gained, and utility-adjusted life years gained while drawing on budget impact analysis for its structure and methods. The HIP compares the economic and health outcomes in two scenarios; a world without anti PD-1/PD-L1 treatments, to those obtained in a world where patients are treated with a mix of SOC and anti PD-1/PD-L1 treatments. Results: The model shows that over five years, the clinical benefits offered by the introduction of anti PD-1/PD-L1s include an additional 3,194 life-years, 2,411 progression-free life years, 2,638 quality-adjusted life years and the avoidance of 92 adverse events. PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors produce an average annual budget impact that is equivalent to 0.32% of total healthcare expenditure. Amongst this figure is a reduced burden of indirect costs and end of life costs – both of which fall with anti PD-1/PD-L1s on the market. Conclusions: Ireland faces uncertainty in cancer care with pressure to reduce costs – the HIP helps demonstrate the value of anti PD-1/PD-L1s. Problems stem from a healthcare system that is fragmented and orientated towards dealing with acute conditions. Anti PD-1/PD-L1s are predicted to improve outcomes in Ireland with PFS gains being the largest. In 2020, the budget impact of this class in Ireland is expected to represent a somewhat significant portion of total expenditure on cancer medicines but a small portion of total healthcare expenditure. By projecting budget impact over a five year period, this model should help inform multi-annual budget planning for innovative oncology medicines. This model informs planning by helping quantify the impact of immuno-oncology treatments on health and budget in different scenarios.

2019 ◽  
Vol 35 (S1) ◽  
pp. 44-45
Author(s):  
Alexander Roediger ◽  
Julie van Bavel ◽  
James Pellissier ◽  
Stefano Lucherini ◽  
Neil Davies ◽  
...  

IntroductionThe rapid expansion of immuno-oncology treatment options has led to concerns around their long-term affordability. Evidence on the potential budget and health impact of these new treatment options is required to inform public health policy and ensure adequate allocation of budget for the future.MethodsThe Health Impact Projection model was developed to compare the economic impact and health outcomes observed with and without PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors using traditional budget impact analysis. Seven types of high-incidence cancers were included: melanoma, first- and second-level non-small cell lung, bladder, head and neck, renal cell carcinoma, and triple negative breast. Inputs were based on publicly available data and literature, and over 10 key experts (oncologists, health economists) were involved in the model development. The model draws on five-year budget impact analysis.ResultsUsing the experience of Belgium, Slovenia, Switzerland, and Italy, the model estimates budget and health impact of the PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitor class. It shows that for 2018-2022, the class will provide additional life years and avoid high-grade adverse events (AEs) with a manageable budget impact per year compared to the standard of care. The model also enables policy-makers to assess the adequacy of their budget for the near future and explore the implications of different policy decisions. Results for Belgium show that over the five-year period the PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors will save 10,635 additional life years, avoid 7,597 AEs and have a budget impact of approximately EUR 260 million. Results for Slovenia show 1,468 additional life years gained and 869 AEs avoided with a budget impact of approximately EUR 116 million; for Switzerland, 6,775 life years gained, 6,953 AEs avoided, and EUR 106 million budget impact; and for Italy, 5,019 life years gained, 2,040 AEs avoided, and EUR 627 million budget impact.ConclusionsAlthough limitations exist, the model informs planning by helping quantify the potential impact of immune-oncology treatments on health and budget in different scenarios.


2020 ◽  
Vol 36 (S1) ◽  
pp. 32-33
Author(s):  
Chengaxin Duan ◽  
Binyan Sui ◽  
Kun Zhao ◽  
Dandan Ai ◽  
Qian Xu

IntroductionAnkylosing spondylitis (AS) is a common disease that causes pain and affects productivity. Tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) like adalimumab can bring better clinical efficacy and improve quality of life. Adalimumab is likely to be covered by health insurance. It is necessary to assess the impact of adalimumab for patients with AS on the medical insurance budget in China. Our research aims to give support evidence for policy-making.MethodsFrom the perspective of medical insurance payers, a budget impact model was established to evaluate the impact of adalimumab for the treatment of adults with severe active AS that has responded inadequately to conventional therapy. The time horizon was 5 years (2020–2024). The cost of measurement included drug and treatment costs for adverse events. Scenario analysis was conducted to evaluate the results under different drug price reimbursement ratios and treatment ratios.ResultsBased on the current price of adalimumab (CNY 3,160 [USD 446]/unit), under the reimbursement ratio of 70 percent, adalimumab will increase medical insurance expenditure by CNY 162 [USD 22] million, CNY 152 [USD 21] million, CNY 114 [USD 16] million, CNY 100 [USD 14] million and CNY 88.11 [USD 12] million in the next 1–5 years, respectively. The increased medical insurance expenditure accounts for 0.091, 0.085, 0.064, 0.056, and 0.049 percent of the annual medical insurance expenditure in the next 1–5 years, respectively, which is assumed to be equivalent to the expenditure in 2018 of CNY 1782.2 [USD 251] billion.ConclusionsThe budget impact of adalimumab for AS on medical insurance expenditure is limited, and including adalimumab in the medical insurance catalogue can reduce the burden on individuals, enrich treatment options, and satisfy clinical needs better.


2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e18820-e18820
Author(s):  
Elizabeth James ◽  
Holly Trautman ◽  
Ali McBride ◽  
Azhar Choudhry ◽  
Stephen Thompson

e18820 Background: Rituximab-abbs is an anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody and an important immuno-oncology agent for the treatment of B-cell malignancies NHL (diffuse large B-cell lymphoma [DLBCL] and follicular lymphoma [FL]) and CLL. It is also indicated for patients with RA, GPA, and MPA. Rituximab-abbs was the first rituximab biosimilar approved in the US and is expected to reduce drug acquisition costs. This budget impact model (BIM) estimated the impact of replacing a share of originator rituximab (IV-R-REF) use with rituximab-abbs (IV-R-BIOSIM) for NHL (DLBCL and FL), CLL, RA, GPA, and MPA. The objective was to project incremental annual cost differences between IV-R-BIOSIM and IV-R-REF for a hypothetical 1-million-member US healthcare insured (Medicare) population. Methods: An illustrative BIM estimated changes in 1-year drug and administration costs for an increased IV-R-BIOSIM uptake from 17.5% to 22.0%. Values for epidemiology, market share distribution, drug dosing, administration, and costs were derived from scientific literature, product labels, and publicly available cost resources. Dosing was based on a mean patient body surface area of 1.8 m2. Annual dose counts per patient were: 10 untreated FL with maintenance; 8 untreated FL (without maintenance), relapsed/refractory FL, or untreated DLBCL; 6 CLL, and 4 for RA, GPA, or MPA. All treatments were assumed to infuse over 3 hours. Drug acquisition and administration costs were from 2020 Average Sales Price pricing file and Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Physician Fee Schedule. Patient cost share was based on 2020 Medicare Part B 20% cost-share for office visits and drug products. Univariate sensitivity analyses were conducted. A scenario analysis was performed to project 2-year costs for extended FL maintenance treatment. Results: Estimated total annual plan incremental savings for a 1-million-member payer after the utilization shift were $312,379, equating to $0.31 per enrolled member per year (PMPY). Per-patient incremental drug cost savings with IV-R-BIOSIM for 1-year were $5,474–$12,924 (Table). The model was most sensitive to IV-R-REF cost and proportion of patients with RA. Conclusions: This analysis estimated annual savings of over $310,000 ($0.31 PMPY) for a 1-million-member US payer following a 4.5% utilization shift from IV-R-REF to IV-R-BIOSIM, demonstrating that IV-R-BIOSIM may confer considerable economic benefits vs originator rituximab.[Table: see text]


2010 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 288-293 ◽  
Author(s):  
Americo Cicchetti ◽  
Matteo Ruggeri ◽  
Lara Gitto ◽  
Francesco Saverio Mennini

Objectives: Influenza (vernacular name, flu) is a viral infection that causes a high consumption of resources. Several studies have been carried out to provide an economic evaluation of the vaccination programs against influenza. Nevertheless, there is still a lack of evidence about the dynamic effects resulting from the reduction of the transmission power. This study considers the impact on contagiousness of alternative strategies against influenza in people aged 50–64 in Italy, France, Germany, and Spain.Methods: By using the Influsim 2.0 dynamic model, we have determined the social benefits of different coverage levels in every country compared with the ones currently recommended. We have subsequently performed a Budget Impact Analysis to determine whether the currently recommended coverage results from an optimal budget allocation. A probabilistic sensitivity analysis was also conducted.Results: We found that in Germany, the optimal coverage level is 38.5 percent, in France 32.4 percent, in Italy 32.75 percent, and 28.3 percent in Spain. By extending the coverage level, social saving tends to increase up to 100 percent for France and Italy and up to 80 percent for Germany and Spain.Conclusions: Decision makers should allocate the budget for vaccination against influenza consistently with the estimation of the optimal coverage level and with the dynamic effects resulting from the reduction of the transmission power.


2009 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 19-31 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maurizio Benucci ◽  
Sergio Iannazzo ◽  
Luciano Sabadini

Objective: a Budget Impact analysis was performed to evaluate cost implications for the Italian National Health Service (NHS) of the introduction of rituximab (RTX) in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Methods: RA patients eligible to treatment with a second-line biologic DMARD (Disease Modifying Antirheumatic Drugs) were identified and quantified and available strategies for their management were explored. Costs associated with the different alternatives were estimated, and the impact on the NHS budget was estimated using a cohort simulation based on a Markov chain with a time horizon of 5 years and 1-year cycles. Seven alternative strategies were analyzed, each of them starting after the failure of a first anti-TNFα: 1) the use of a second and a third anti-TNFα; 2) the use of a second anti-TNFα followed by RTX; 3) the use of a second anti-TNFα followed by abatacept (ABAT); 4) the use of RTX as a second biological line, followed by an anti-TNFα; 5) the use of ABAT as a second biological line, followed by an anti-TNFα; 6) the use of RTX as a second biological line, followed by ABAT; 7) the use of ABAT as a second biological line, followed by RTX. Only direct medical costs were considered: drug acquisition, administration, incidental premedication and monitoring exams. Results: Italian patients eligible to second biological line therapies (RA patients refractory or intolerant to at least one anti-TNFα therapy) were estimated in about 650 per year. The adoption of RTX as a second line therapy produced a substantial saving in total costs (-33% at the fifth year) with respect to the strategy with RTX as third line and the one with only anti-TNFα (the last two resulting substantially cost-equivalent). The number of patients in active treatment (biologic DMARD) per unit cost resulted of about 8.1 patient-years/100,000 € with the strategy based only on anti-TNFα and increased of 10% with RTX as a third line. The strategy of RTX as a second line provided a further 41% increase (with respect to RTX as a third line). Conclusions: the introduction of RTX in the treatment of Italian RA patients represents a valuable new therapeutic option for this population especially if anticipated after a first anti-TNFα failure; it can also induce a reduction in health resources consumption for the NHS.


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 437-449 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Kuhlmann ◽  
Henning Krüger ◽  
Susanne Seidinger ◽  
Andreas Hahn

Abstract Background The safe use of a prosthesis in activities of daily living is key for transfemoral amputees. However, the number of falls varies significantly between different prosthetic device types. This study aims to compare medical and economic consequences of falls in transfemoral amputees who use the microprocessor-controlled knee joint C-Leg with patients who use non-microprocessor-controlled (mechanical) knee joints (NMPK). The main objectives of the analysis are to investigate the cost-effectiveness and budget impact of C-Legs in transfemoral amputees with diabetes mellitus (DM) and without DM in Germany. Methods A decision-analytic model was developed that took into account the effects of prosthesis type on the risk of falling and fall-related medical events. Cost-effectiveness and budget impact analyses were performed separately for transfemoral amputees with and without DM. The study took the perspective of the statutory health insurance (SHI). Input parameters were derived from the published literature. Univariate and probabilistic sensitivity analyses (PSA) were performed to investigate the impact of changes in individual input parameter values on model outcomes and to explore parameter uncertainty. Results C-Legs reduced the rate of fall-related hospitalizations from 134 to 20 per 1000 person years (PY) in amputees without DM and from 146 to 23 per 1000 PY in amputees with DM. In addition, the C-Leg prevented 15 or 14 fall-related death per 1000 PY. Over a time horizon of 25 years, the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) was 16,123 Euro per quality-adjusted life years gained (QALY) for amputees without DM and 20,332 Euro per QALY gained for amputees with DM. For the period of 2020–2024, the model predicted an increase in SHI expenditures of 98 Mio Euro (53 Mio Euro in prosthesis users without DM and 45 Mio Euro in prosthesis users with DM) when all new prosthesis users received C-Legs instead of NMPKs and 50% of NMPK user whose prosthesis wore out switched to C-Legs. Results of the PSA showed moderate uncertainty and a probability of 97–99% that C-Legs are cost-effective at an ICER threshold of 40,000 Euro (≈ German GDP per capita in 2018) per QALY gained. Conclusion Results of the study suggest that the C-Leg provides substantial additional health benefits compared with NMPKs and is likely to be cost-effective in transfemoral amputees with DM as well as in amputees without DM at an ICER threshold of 40,000 Euro per QALY gained.


2002 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
pp. 1008-1016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenchi Liang ◽  
Caroline B. Burnett ◽  
Julia H. Rowland ◽  
Neal J. Meropol ◽  
Lynne Eggert ◽  
...  

PURPOSE: To identify factors associated with patient-physician communication and to examine the impact of communication on patients’ perception of having a treatment choice, actual treatment received, and satisfaction with care among older breast cancer patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Data were collected from 613 pairs of surgeons and their older (≥ 67 years) patients diagnosed with localized breast cancer. Measures of patients’ self-reported communication included physician- and patient-initiated communication and the number of treatment options discussed. Logistic regression analyses were conducted to examine the relationships between communication and outcomes. RESULTS: Patients who reported that their surgeons mentioned more treatment options were 2.21 times (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.62 to 3.01) more likely to report being given a treatment choice, and 1.33 times (95% CI, 1.02 to 1.73) more likely to get breast-conserving surgery with radiation than other types of treatment. Surgeons who were trained in surgical oncology, or who treated a high volume of breast cancer patients (≥ 75% of practice), were more likely to initiate communication with patients (odds ratio [OR] = 1.62; 95% CI, 1.02 to 2.56; and OR = 1.68; 95% CI, 1.01 to 2.76, respectively). A high degree of physician-initiated communication, in turn, was associated with patients’ perception of having a treatment choice (OR = 2.46; 95% CI, 1.29 to 4.70), and satisfaction with breast cancer care (OR = 2.13; 95% CI, 1.17 to 3.85) in the 3 to 6 months after surgery. CONCLUSION: Greater patient-physician communication was associated with a sense of choice, actual treatment, and satisfaction with care. Technical information and caring components of communication impacted outcomes differently. Thus, the quality of cancer care for older breast cancer patients may be improved through interventions that improve communication within the physician-patient dyad.


2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (Supplement_5) ◽  
Author(s):  
S Conti ◽  
P Ferrara ◽  
L S D'Angiolella ◽  
S C Lorelli ◽  
G Agazzi ◽  
...  

Abstract Background In 2017, the Global Burden of Disease Study estimated that in Europe 0.42 million deaths and 8.9 million disability-adjusted life years were attributable to air pollution. Monetizing this burden is a key step for estimating benefits of exposure reduction strategies. However, robust and synthetic estimates of direct (e.g. due to hospitalizations or medications) and indirect (e.g. due to premature mortality or loss of productivity) health-related costs of air pollution seem to be still lacking. We carried out a systematic review, aimed at identifying evidence from research in Europe. Methods We searched 5 electronic databases (MEDLINE, EMBASE, Cochrane Library, SCOPUS, Web Of Science) in which we applied algorithms tracing keywords such as “cost of illness”, “health care costs”, “economics” and synonyms, together with “air pollution” and synonyms. We limited our search to articles written in English and Italian, without date restriction. Results The initial search retrieved 2420 records. 200 were classified as relevant, and 38 fulfilled inclusion criteria. Most of them (68%) were published after 2010. 26% were multi-country studies, while the remaining focused on a single country or city. Investigated pollutants were usually particulate matter (79% of the studies) and nitrogen oxides (37%). The approaches to the economic analysis were heterogeneous: estimates could include direct and/or indirect costs. Among the studies, the most comprehensive one (12 countries) estimated that complying with WHO guidelines would avert €31 billion yearly, of which €19 million due to hospitalizations. Conclusions Over the last decade, progress has been made in evaluating the economic burden of air pollution. However, estimates based on indirect costs are affected by high levels of uncertainty, while those based on direct costs are more robust and should be further investigated, since they are crucial information for healthcare policy makers. Key messages Air pollution poses a high economic burden on European countries, mainly due to social costs. More attention should be devoted to estimating direct healthcare costs of air pollution, in order to properly inform policy makers about the impact on healthcare systems.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document