scholarly journals COST-EFFECTIVENESS OF POST-AUTOTRANSPLANT LENALIDOMIDE IN PERSONS WITH MULTIPLE MYELOMA.

Author(s):  
Monia Marchetti ◽  
Robert Peter Gale ◽  
Giovanni Barosi

Considerable data indicate posttransplant lenalidomide prolongs progression-free survival and probably survival after an autotransplant for plasma cell myeloma (PCM).  However, optimal therapy duration is unknown, controversial and differs in the EU and US.  We compared outcomes and cost-effectiveness of 3 posttransplant lenalidomide strategies in EU and US settings: (1) none; (2) until failure; and (3) 2-year fixed duration.  We used a Markov decision model which included 6 health states and informed by published data.  The model estimated the strategy of lenalidomide given to failure achieved 1.06 quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) at costs per QALY gained of €29,232 in the EU   and $133,401 in the US settings.  Two-year fixed-duration lenalidomide averted €7,286 per QALY gained in the EU setting and saved 0.84 QALYs at $60,835 per QALY gained in the US setting.  These extremely divergent costs per QALY in the EU and US settings resulted from large differences in costs of posttransplant lenalidomide and of 2nd-line therapies driven by whether posttransplant failure was on- or off-lenalidomide.  In Monte Carlo simulation analyses which allowed us to account for variability of inputs, 2-year fixed-duration lenalidomide remained the preferred strategy for improving health-care sustainability in the EU and US settings.

2016 ◽  
Vol 37 (4) ◽  
pp. 427-439 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claire Williams ◽  
James D. Lewsey ◽  
Daniel F. Mackay ◽  
Andrew H. Briggs

Modeling of clinical-effectiveness in a cost-effectiveness analysis typically involves some form of partitioned survival or Markov decision-analytic modeling. The health states progression-free, progression and death and the transitions between them are frequently of interest. With partitioned survival, progression is not modeled directly as a state; instead, time in that state is derived from the difference in area between the overall survival and the progression-free survival curves. With Markov decision-analytic modeling, a priori assumptions are often made with regard to the transitions rather than using the individual patient data directly to model them. This article compares a multi-state modeling survival regression approach to these two common methods. As a case study, we use a trial comparing rituximab in combination with fludarabine and cyclophosphamide v. fludarabine and cyclophosphamide alone for the first-line treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukemia. We calculated mean Life Years and QALYs that involved extrapolation of survival outcomes in the trial. We adapted an existing multi-state modeling approach to incorporate parametric distributions for transition hazards, to allow extrapolation. The comparison showed that, due to the different assumptions used in the different approaches, a discrepancy in results was evident. The partitioned survival and Markov decision-analytic modeling deemed the treatment cost-effective with ICERs of just over £16,000 and £13,000, respectively. However, the results with the multi-state modeling were less conclusive, with an ICER of just over £29,000. This work has illustrated that it is imperative to check whether assumptions are realistic, as different model choices can influence clinical and cost-effectiveness results.


10.36469/9829 ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 90-102
Author(s):  
Louise Perrault ◽  
Dilip Makhija ◽  
Idal Beer ◽  
Suzanne Laplante ◽  
Sergio Iannazzo ◽  
...  

Background: Patients developing acute kidney injury (AKI) during critical illness or major surgery are at risk for renal sequelae such as costly and invasive acute renal replacement therapy (RRT) and chronic dialysis (CD). Rates of renal injury may be reduced with use of chloride-restrictive intravenous (IV) resuscitation fluids instead of chloride-liberal fluids. Objectives: To compare the cost-effectiveness of chloride-restrictive versus chloride-liberal crystalloid fluids used during fluid resuscitation or for the maintenance of hydration among patients hospitalized in the US for critical illnesses or major surgery. Methods: Clinical outcomes and costs for a simulated patient cohort (starting age 60 years) receiving either chloride-restrictive or chloride-liberal crystalloids were estimated using a decision tree for the first 90-day period after IV fluid initiation followed by a Markov model over the remainder of the cohort lifespan. Outcomes modeled in the decision tree were AKI development, recovery from AKI, progression to acute RRT, progression to CD, and death. Health states included in the Markov model were dialysis free without prior AKI, dialysis-free following AKI, CD, and death. Estimates of clinical parameters were taken from a recent meta-analysis, other published studies, and the US Renal Data System. Direct healthcare costs (in 2015 USD) were included for IV fluids, RRT, and CD. US-normalized health-state utilities were used to calculate quality-adjusted life years (QALYs). Results: In the cohort of 100 patients, AKI was predicted to develop in the first 90 days in 36 patients receiving chloride-liberal crystalloids versus 22 receiving chloride-restrictive crystalloids. Higher costs of chloride-restrictive crystalloids were offset by savings from avoided renal adverse events. Chloride-liberal crystalloids were dominant over chloride-restrictive crystalloids, gaining 93.5 life-years and 81.4 QALYs while saving $298 576 over the cohort lifespan. One-way sensitivity analyses indicated results were most sensitive to the relative risk for AKI development and relatively insensitive to fluid cost. In probabilistic sensitivity analyses with 1000 iterations, chloride-restrictive crystalloids were dominant in 94.7% of iterations, with incremental cost-effectiveness ratios below $50 000/QALY in 99.6%. Conclusions: This analysis predicts improved patient survival and fewer renal complications with chloriderestrictive IV fluids, yielding net savings versus chloride-liberal fluids. Results require confirmation in adequately powered head-to-head randomized trials.


Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 4486-4486
Author(s):  
John C. Hornberger ◽  
Carolina Reyes ◽  
Ashwini Shewade ◽  
David Loecke ◽  
Nancy Valente

Abstract Background: Extended Rituximab (R) therapy after CVP (cyclophosphamide, vincristine, prednisone) induction in the first-line treatment of low-grade, CD20-positive, B-cell NHL significantly prolongs progression-free survival (PFS). A societal cost-effectiveness analysis is performed to estimate projected lifetime clinical and economic implications of this treatment. Methods: A Markov model with 3 health states (progression-free, post-progression, and death) was developed to estimate the direct medical costs and quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) for a representative patient cohort with low-grade, CD20-positive, B-cell NHL. Kaplan-Meier estimates of PFS and overall survival (OS) up to 4 years are obtained from the ECOG/CALGB intergroup E1496 trial. After 4 years, transition rates are assumed to be the same in both arms. Costs include drug and administration costs, adverse events, treatment of relapses, and end-of-life costs. Incremental costs associated with R are based on Medicare reimbursement rates and published drug prices. Utilities are derived from the literature and a 3% discount rate is employed. Results: Projected mean OS is 1.2-yrs longer for patients assigned to extended R therapy versus observation alone (15.2 v 14.0 yrs). Extended R therapy is estimated to cost $42,822 on average, with an expected gain of 0.85 years of quality-adjusted survival. Over a lifetime, the cost per QALY gained is $57,515. Sensitivity analyses performed on all variables contributing to the model results showed that utility for follicular NHL patients (range: 0.68–1) and number of R infusions (range: 8–17) most influence the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER). Conclusion: The ICER of extended R dosing following CVP induction remains well below the threshold considered acceptable for oncology in the United States. Additional analysis of long term follow-up data will be useful for further evaluation of clinical and economic implications of this treatment for low-grade, CD20-positive, B-cell NHL patients.


2007 ◽  
Vol 25 (18_suppl) ◽  
pp. 8092-8092
Author(s):  
J. Gómez Codina ◽  
M. Provencio ◽  
A. Rueda ◽  
F. Capote ◽  
F. Carbonell ◽  
...  

8092 Background: In patients with relapsed or refractory follicular lymphoma (FL) who attain a response with either cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone (CHOP) alone or Rituximab + CHOP, maintenance treatment with Rituximab has shown to significantly improve overall survival (OS) (85% at 3 years vs. 77%, p=0.011) and progression free survival (PFS) (51,5 vs. 14.9 months, p<0.001) as compared to observation alone (OA). We analyzed the cost-effectiveness, from a Spanish perspective, of Rituximab maintenance therapy (375mg/m2 every 3 months until progression or for 2 years) versus OA according to the population and data described for the European Organization for Research Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) 20981 study (van Oers MHJ Blood 2006). Methods: Incremental cost-effectiveness was assessed through a deterministic, three health states model (disease-free, progression and death) transition model. Base case model: PFS and OS were extrapolated from EORTC 20981 data using a Weibull distribution, Rituximab maintenance benefit was assumed to last 5 years, 10 years time horizon, 3.5% discount rate on costs and benefits, and Spanish National Health Service perspective (direct costs only). Resource use was estimated from a Spanish expert panel and EORTC 20981 study. Unit costs were obtained from local databases (May 2006 €). Health states utility values were derived from an ad hoc study. Sensitivity analyses were performed for all mentioned variables. Results: For the base case, more quality-adjusted life years (QALY), life-years (LY) and progression-free survival years per patient on maintenance therapy were obtained versus OA (incremental values of 0.85, 0.94 and 1.46, respectively). Total cost per patient was higher with Rituximab than with OA (+8,026€). Incremental cost per QALY gained was 9,358€, with a cost per LY gained of 8.493€ and a cost per PFS year gained of 5,485€. In the sensitivity analysis, values ranged between 7.263€ and 22.160€ per QALY gained. Conclusions: This study confirms that in patients with relapsed /refractory FL who attain a response with further therapy, maintenance treatment with Rituximab compared to observation alone is cost-effective. No significant financial relationships to disclose.


2016 ◽  
Vol 34 (4_suppl) ◽  
pp. 639-639
Author(s):  
Vladimir Kirichenko ◽  
Ngoc Thai ◽  
William Morris ◽  
Amy Heenan ◽  
David S. Parda

639 Background: Systemic therapy combined with surgery may prolong survival of patients with isolated hepatic metastases from CRC, however, only 10-25% are resectable. We applied a Markov model to estimate and compare cost effectiveness for the two competing treatments of SBRT and RFA in management of unresectable isolated hepatic metastases. Methods: We developed a multistate Markov decision model with probabilistic sensitivity analysis to simulate a randomized controlled trial for SBRT and RFA and compare respective cost effectiveness (in dollars per quality adjusted life years, or QALY). Model assumptions were based on extensive literature search of utilities and recurrence risks, including published data from our institution. Costs were taken from the 2013 Medicare reimbursement tables. In order to reflect reported patient selection variability across literature, two mortality rates due to hepatic metastases were considered for both treatment modalities: 50% probability of death in 1.5 years and 60% in 5 years. Sensitivity analysis was performed to model uncertainty in these parameters. Results: For patients with 5-year life expectancy, Markov cohort analysis demonstrated QALY-adjusted survival advantage of SBRT over RFA with QALY 4.35 vs. 3.89 respectively. This difference was marginal for patients with 1.5-year life expectancy. Physician-hour involvement was less in SBRT group. The incremental cost adjusted effectiveness (Cost/QALY) for SBRT over RFA was $2,379 in the 5-year life expectancy cohort, and $2,216 for SBRT over RFA in the 1.5-year cohort. Sensitivity analysis demonstated robustness of these results across a range of utility values, costs, recurrence rates, and procedure-related morbidity. Conclusions: In comparison to RFA, SBRT was more cost-effective modality for unresectable or potentially resectable hepatic metastases over a wide range of treatment and disease assumptions, including recurrence rates, and procedure-related morbidity. Additionally, SBRT is a relatively fast outpatient procedure requiring less physician-hour involvement.


2017 ◽  
Vol 35 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 8030-8030 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nimer Alsaid ◽  
Ali McBride ◽  
Amit Balkrishna Agarwal ◽  
Abdulaali Mutairi ◽  
Faiz Anwer ◽  
...  

8030 Background: CAR, IXA, ELO, and DAR in triplet combination with LEN+DEX have shown superior efficacy over LEN+DEX in R/R MM, but their comparative efficacy and cost effectiveness has not been estimated. Methods: Network meta-analysis [NMA] and Bücher method were used to indirectly estimate comparative progression-free survival (PFS) efficacy. A 2-state Markov model (progression-free, progressed or death) was specified. Inputs included: cost of chemotherapy, administration, adverse events (AE) management, disease monitoring; utilities for health states; and disutilities for AEs. Incremental cost effectiveness (ICER) and cost utility ratios (ICUR) were calculated for resp. PFS life years (PFS LY) and quality adjusted life years (PFS QALY) gained in base case and probabilistic sensitivity analyses (PSA). Results: NMA and Bücher indirect comparison methods yielded similar PFS hazard ratios (HR), revealing superiority of DAR+LEN+DEX over other triplets in terms of PFS (Table). Using the exponential distribution to fit PFS data, our cost effectiveness analysis indicated that all 4 triplet regimens were associated with additional PFS LY and QALY gained over LEN+DEX at additional cost. DAR+LEN+DEX was associated with the greatest PFS LY and QALY gained at the lowest relative cost, yielding superior ICER and ICUR estimates compared to other triplet regimens. Conclusions: The superior PFS efficacy of DAR+LEN+DEX is associated with positive cost effectiveness and cost utility in the setting of R/R MM. [Table: see text]


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 5085-5085 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amer M. Zeidan ◽  
Bhavik J. Pandya ◽  
Cynthia Z. Qi ◽  
Andy Garnham ◽  
Hongbo Yang ◽  
...  

Introduction: AML is an aggressive hematopoietic malignancy, and ~30% of patients have mutations in the FLT3 gene. Historically, patients with R/R FLT3mut+ AML experienced dismal survival outcomes. The approval of FLT3-targeted agents has resulted in a paradigm change in the management of these patients. In 2018, gilteritinib was approved as the first targeted agent for R/R FLT3mut+ AML based on results of the phase 3 ADMIRAL trial, showing significantly improved median overall survival (OS) of 9.3 months. Historically, due to limited effective options and tolerability concerns, 11-40% of patients with R/R FLT3mut+ AML received BSC (defined as no active leukemia-directed therapy). Patients managed by BSC still incur substantial resource use and have poor outcomes. The estimated median OS was 2-3 months, with the majority of patients (> 90%) dying within one year. To quantify the incremental benefit and economic value of gilteritinib over BSC, a cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) model was constructed to model disease trajectory, quality of life impact, and economic impact. Methods: A CEA was developed to compare the costs and effectiveness of gilteritinib and BSC from a US third-party payer's perspective over a lifetime horizon. The model used a 1-month cycle and 3% discount rate and comprised a decision tree followed by a three-stage partitioned survival model. In the decision tree stage, patients were first classified based on whether they received allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). Following stratification, patients were distributed among three health states: event-free survival (EFS), alive and post-event, and death. Due to the palliative nature of BSC, all patients in the BSC arm were assumed to start in the alive and post-event state and were not eligible to receive subsequent HSCT based on clinical inputs. For patients in the gilteritinib arm, the efficacy inputs were based on the ADMIRAL trial for patients without HSCT or literature (Evers 2018) for those with HSCT. For patients in the BSC arm, the efficacy inputs were based on available literature (Sarkozy 2013). Parametric survival models or hazard ratios were used to predict probabilities in different health states until year 3. After year 3, all patients who remained alive were considered cured with a two-fold increase in mortality risk compared to the general population. Treatment costs (drug, administration, and hospitalization), adverse event (AE) costs, subsequent HSCT costs, medical costs for health states, FLT3 testing, post-progression treatment, and terminal care costs were obtained from public databases and literature. Patients managed by BSC were assumed not to incur any costs related to treatment, AEs, or HSCT. All costs were inflated to 2018 US dollar (USD). Utilities for each health state were derived from the ADMIRAL trial and disutilities for AEs were derived from the literature. The model calculated total costs, and total effectiveness measured by life years (LYs) and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) for gilteritinib and BSC, respectively. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs), defined as the incremental cost per additional gain in health effect (i.e., LY and QALY), were estimated comparing gilteritinib to BSC. To test the robustness of the results, deterministic sensitivity analyses (DSA) and probabilistic sensitivity analyses (PSA) were performed. Results: Over a lifetime horizon, treatment with gilteritinib, compared to BSC, was associated with an incremental LY gain of 2.82 and QALY gain of 2.32, respectively. With an additional cost of $239,623 relative to BSC, the ICER per one LY gained was $84,922, and ICER per one QALY gained was $103,110. The results were most sensitive to discount rate, cure assumptions, and gilteritinib cost. PSA showed 100% probability of being cost-effective at an acceptable willingness-to-pay threshold of $150,000/QALY in the US. Conclusions: Gilteritinib led to substantial clinical benefit compared to BSC for treatment of R/R FLT3mut+ AML. Despite the large cost difference, the ICER is still within a reasonable range of less than $150,000/QALY, as established by the US Institute for Clinical and Economic Review. Gilteritinib fulfills an important unmet need in the treatment landscape and represents a potential paradigm shift in the current management of R/R FLT3mut+ AML for patients who otherwise would not have received active therapy. Disclosures Zeidan: BeyondSpring: Honoraria; Acceleron Pharma: Consultancy, Honoraria, Research Funding; Celgene Corporation: Consultancy, Honoraria, Research Funding; Boehringer-Ingelheim: Consultancy, Honoraria, Research Funding; Trovagene: Consultancy, Honoraria, Research Funding; Incyte: Consultancy, Honoraria, Research Funding; Takeda: Consultancy, Honoraria, Research Funding; ADC Therapeutics: Research Funding; Abbvie: Consultancy, Honoraria, Research Funding; Cardinal Health: Honoraria; Otsuka: Consultancy, Honoraria, Research Funding; Pfizer: Consultancy, Honoraria, Research Funding; Jazz: Honoraria; Ariad: Honoraria; Agios: Honoraria; Novartis: Honoraria; Astellas: Honoraria; Daiichi Sankyo: Honoraria; Medimmune/AstraZeneca: Research Funding; Seattle Genetics: Honoraria. Pandya:Astellas Pharmaceuticals: Employment. Qi:Astellas: Other: I am an employee of Analysis Group, Inc., which provided paid consulting services to Astellas for the conduct of this study; Analysis Group, Inc.: Employment. Garnham:Astellas: Employment. Yang:Analysis Group, Inc.: Employment; Astellas: Other: I am an employee of Analysis Group, Inc., which provided paid consulting services to Astellas for the conduct of this study. Shah:Astellas: Employment.


2021 ◽  
pp. 019459982110268
Author(s):  
Joseph R. Acevedo ◽  
Ashley C. Hsu ◽  
Jeffrey C. Yu ◽  
Dale H. Rice ◽  
Daniel I. Kwon ◽  
...  

Objective To compare the cost-effectiveness of sialendoscopy with gland excision for the management of submandibular gland sialolithiasis. Study Design Cost-effectiveness analysis. Setting Outpatient surgery centers. Methods A Markov decision model compared the cost-effectiveness of sialendoscopy versus gland excision for managing submandibular gland sialolithiasis. Surgical outcome probabilities were found in the primary literature. The quality of life of patients was represented by health utilities, and costs were estimated from a third-party payer’s perspective. The effectiveness of each intervention was measured in quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs). The incremental costs and effectiveness of each intervention were compared, and a willingness-to-pay ratio of $150,000 per QALY was considered cost-effective. One-way, multivariate, and probabilistic sensitivity analyses were performed to challenge model conclusions. Results Over 10 years, sialendoscopy yielded 9.00 QALYs at an average cost of $8306, while gland excision produced 8.94 QALYs at an average cost of $6103. The ICER for sialendoscopy was $36,717 per QALY gained, making sialendoscopy cost-effective by our best estimates. The model was sensitive to the probability of success and the cost of sialendoscopy. Sialendoscopy must meet a probability-of-success threshold of 0.61 (61%) and cost ≤$11,996 to remain cost-effective. A Monte Carlo simulation revealed sialendoscopy to be cost-effective 60% of the time. Conclusion Sialendoscopy appears to be a cost-effective management strategy for sialolithiasis of the submandibular gland when certain thresholds are maintained. Further studies elucidating the clinical factors that determine successful sialendoscopy may be aided by these thresholds as well as future comparisons of novel technology.


2018 ◽  
Vol 67 (1) ◽  
pp. 233-253
Author(s):  
Billy Melo Araujo

AbstractThe EU and the US have long called for the linking of trade and labour standards in trade agreements at both the multilateral and bilateral level. This article examines their practice of including labour provisions in trade agreements, with a particular focus on recent attempts to include such provisions on so-called ‘mega-regionals’, which were presented by their proponents as providing the benchmark for labour protection in future trade agreements. It discusses the rationale behind the inclusion of such provisions and their practical limitations, and examines the extent to which mega-regionals address these limitations. It is argued that whilst the EU and the US have been keen advocates for trade-labour linkages, there has also been an unwillingness to convert this rhetoric into practice, raising questions about the extent of their commitment to these values.


Circulation ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 116 (suppl_16) ◽  
Author(s):  
Zefeng Zhang ◽  
Paul Kolm ◽  
Wei Zhang ◽  
Edward Ewen ◽  
Claudine Jurkovitz ◽  
...  

Background: The efficacy of enoxaparin versus unfractionated heparin in the setting of ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) has been demonstrated in EXTRACT-TIMI 25, with 17% reductions in relative risk in the primary endpoint of death or nonfatal recurrent myocardial infarction (MI) (p<0.0001). This study considers the cost effectiveness of enoxaparin versus unfractionated heparin with fibrinolysis based on EXTRACT-TIMI 25. Methods: The ITT population of 20,479 patients from 48 countries were monitored for clinical and adverse events during the index hospitalization and through 30 days. Trial-wide resource utilization from all participating countries was used in the analysis while all costs were based on 2004 US costs. Medicare Fee Schedule was used for outpatient procedures and DRGs were applied for index and subsequent hospitalizations costs. Lost life years associated with 30-day in-trial events (death, MI and stroke) were estimated from published data from Framingham. Results: Overall, costs of index hospitalizations and outpatient procedures were lower, while costs for the subsequent hospitalization were higher for the enoxaparin patients. Total 30 days’ costs remained lower for enoxaparin, although the difference did not reach significance. Life years lost were significantly less with enoxaparin. For lifetime, when costs beyond the trial period were considered, the costs of enoxaparin in patients with STEMI were $506 higher, and the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of enoxaparin compared to UFH was $4,369 per life year gained, with 99.9% of estimates falling below the $50,000 per life year gained threshold. Conclusions: Enoxaparin is effective in reducing mortality or nonfatal MI, and is highly cost-effective strategy in the US settings for the treatment of STEMI patients.


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