| Literature DB >> 22934286 |
Anju Parthan1, Narin Pruttivarasin, Diane Davies, Douglas C A Taylor, Vivek Pawar, Akash Bijlani, Kristen Hassmiller Lich, Ronald C Chen.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine the cost-effectiveness of several external beam radiation treatment modalities for the treatment of patients with localized prostate cancer.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; cost-effectiveness; localized; prostate; radiation
Year: 2012 PMID: 22934286 PMCID: PMC3422724 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2012.00081
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Markov model. GI, gastrointestinal; GU, genitourinary; SD, sexual dysfunction.
Characteristics of the 10 studies chosen for the meta-analysis.
| Treatment | Study | Sample size | Follow-up time (months) | Age (range) | Toxicity studied |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SBRT | Friedland et al. ( | 112 | 24 | Mean 70 (55–87) | SD |
| Katz et al. ( | 206 | 17 (dose 36.25) | Mean 69 (45–88) | GU, GI, SD | |
| 30 (dose 35) | |||||
| King et al. ( | 41 | 33 | Median 66 (48–83) | GU, GI | |
| Wiegner and King ( | 20 | 35.5 | Median 68 (57–83) | SD | |
| IMRT | Kirichenko et al. ( | 928 | 36 | NA | GU, GI |
| Zelefsky et al. ( | 772 | 36 | Median 69 (46–86) | GU, GI, SD | |
| Zelefsky et al. ( | 561 | 96 | Median 68 (46–86) | GU, GI, SD | |
| PT | Schulte et al. ( | 870 | 36 | NA | GU, GI |
| Slater et al. ( | 643 | 36 | NA | GU, GI | |
| Slater et al. ( | 315 | 36 | NA | GU, GI |
GI, gastrointestinal; GU, genitourinary; IMRT, intensity-modulated radiation therapy; NA, not available; PT, proton beam therapy; SBRT, stereotactic body radiation therapy; SD, sexual dysfunction.
Model cost inputs.
| Cost parameters | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|
| SBRT | $20,889 | Medicare rates – data on file, Accuray Inc. |
| IMRT | $28,805 | Konski et al. ( |
| PT | $65,250 | Ollendorf et al. ( |
| $20 | Bureau of Labor Statistics ( | |
| Urologist | $177 | MAG Mutual ( |
| Office visit | $102 | MAG Mutual ( |
| PSA | $103 | MAG Mutual ( |
| GU toxicity | ||
| Daily pharmacologic treatment (oxybutynin) | $1 | Red Book ( |
| Cystoscopy | $214 | MAG Mutual ( |
| GI toxicity | ||
| Enema (additional colonoscopy and sigmoidoscopy if needed) | $259 | MAG Mutual ( |
| SD toxicity | ||
| Daily pharmacologic treatment (sildenafil) | $12 | Red Book ( |
GI, gastrointestinal; GU, genitourinary; IMRT, intensity-modulated radiation therapy; PSA, prostate specific antigen; PT, proton beam therapy; SBRT, stereotactic body radiation therapy; SD, sexual dysfunction.
*Patients experiencing late GI toxicity were first treated with a 6-month course of enema in 70% of the cases. The remaining patients were assumed to undergo a colonoscopy followed by an average of three sigmoidoscopies and an additional 6-month course of enema. The cost is calculated as a one-time weighted average cost.
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Treatment-related mortality and long-term toxicity.
| Probabilities | Base-case default value | SE | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| SBRT | 0.000 | – | Assumption |
| IMRT | 0.000 | – | Assumption |
| PT | 0.000 | – | Assumption |
| GU | 0.040 | 0.023 | Friedland et al. ( |
| GI | 0.027 | 0.010 | Katz et al. ( |
| SD | 0.159 | 0.088 | Friedland et al. ( |
| GU | 0.035 | 0.016 | Kirichenko et al. ( |
| GI | 0.013 | 0.008 | Kirichenko et al. ( |
| SD | 0.272 | 0.232 | Zelefsky et al. ( |
| GU | 0.019 | 0.004 | Schulte et al. ( |
| GI | 0.015 | 0.006 | Schulte et al. ( |
| SD | 0.272 | 0.232 | Assume the same as IMRT |
GI, gastrointestinal; GU, genitourinary; IMRT, intensity-modulated radiation therapy; PT, proton beam therapy; SBRT stereotactic body radiation therapy; SD, sexual dysfunction; SE, standard error.
An RTOG (Radiation Therapy Oncology Group) scale was used to measure toxicity in all but the Kirichenko et al., .
Model utility inputs.
| Utility parameters | Base-case default value | SE | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| No long-term toxicities | 1.00 | 0.00 | Assumption |
| GU | 0.83 | 0.02 | Stewart et al. ( |
| GI | 0.71 | 0.02 | Stewart et al. ( |
| SD | 0.89 | 0.01 | Stewart et al. ( |
| GU & GI | 0.70 | 0.04 | Stewart et al. ( |
| GU & SD | 0.79 | 0.03 | Stewart et al. ( |
| GI & SD | 0.57 | 0.04 | Stewart et al. ( |
| GU & GI & SD | 0.45 | 0.04 | Stewart et al. ( |
| Death | 0.00 | 0.00 | By definition |
GI, gastrointestinal; GU, genitourinary; SD, sexual dysfunction; SE, standard error; QALYs in each Markov state and cycle are determined by the product of the baseline age-specific background utility for males (Hamner et al., .
Model resource utilization inputs.
| Utilization parameters | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|
| SBRT | ||
| Work-time lost (hours per treatment) | 10 | Expert opinion |
| IMRT | ||
| Work-time lost (hours per treatment) | 90 | Ollendorf et al. ( |
| PT | ||
| Work-time lost (hours per treatment) | 100 | Ollendorf et al. ( |
| Office visit (1st year) | 2 | Expert opinion |
| Office visit (subsequent years) | 1 | Expert opinion |
| PSA | 2 | Expert opinion |
| GU toxicity (per year) | ||
| Routine office visit | 2 | Expert opinion |
| Pharmacologic treatment (oxybutynin) | 365 | Daily dosage based on package insert |
| Cystoscopy | 1 | Expert opinion |
| GI toxicity (one-time utilization) | ||
| Routine office visit | 2 | Assumption |
| Enema (additional colonoscopy and sigmoidoscopy if needed) | 1 | Assume one-time treatment for GI toxicity |
| SD toxicity (per year) | ||
| Pharmacologic treatment (sildenafil) | 22 | Cooke et al. ( |
GI, gastrointestinal; GU, genitourinary; IMRT, intensity-modulated radiation therapy; PSA, prostate specific antigen; PT, proton beam therapy; SBRT, stereotactic body radiation therapy; SD, sexual dysfunction.
*Patients experiencing late GI toxicity were first treated with a 6-month course of enema in 70% of the cases. The remaining patients were assumed to undergo a colonoscopy followed by an average of three sigmoidoscopies and an additional 6-month course of enema. The cost is calculated as a one-time weighted average cost.
Cost-effectiveness results for all comparator treatments for the base-case.
| Total per patient | Incremental | ICER Costs/QALY gained | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Costs | QALYs | Costs | QALYs | ||
| SBRT | $24,873 | 8.11 | – | – | Reference |
| IMRT | $33,068 | 8.05 | $8,195 | −0.062 | Dominated |
| PT | $69,412 | 8.06 | $44,539 | −0.047 | Dominated |
| SBRT | $25,097 | 8.11 | – | – | Reference |
| IMRT | $35,088 | 8.05 | $9,991 | −0.062 | Dominated |
| PT | $71,657 | 8.06 | $46,560 | −0.047 | Dominated |
ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; IMRT, intensity-modulated radiation therapy; QALY, quality-adjusted life year.
NOTE: Results are estimated for a patient 65 years old using Medicare reimbursement rates.
*Dominated – higher cost and lower QALY.
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Probability of SBRT being cost-effective at the $50,000/QALY threshold.
| SBRT Comparator | Payer perspective $50,000/QALY | Societal perspective $50,000/QALY |
|---|---|---|
| IMRT | 75.1% | 75.1% |
| PT | 94.1% | 95.5% |
IMRT, intensity-modulated radiation therapy; PT, proton beam therapy; QALY, quality-adjusted life year; SBRT, stereotactic body radiation therapy.
Figure 2Probability of SBRT being cost-effective when compared to IMRT and Proton Therapy, from the Payer (A) and Societal (B) Perspective. Note: the cost-effectiveness acceptability curve shows the percentage of iterations in the probabilistic sensitivity analysis that are cost-effective at a certain threshold.
Alternative sensitivity analysis with proton therapy toxicity set equal to SBRT toxicity.
| Total per patient | Incremental | ICER Costs/QALY gained | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Costs | QALYs | Costs | QALYs | ||
| SBRT | $24,873 | 8.11 | – | – | Reference |
| IMRT | $33,068 | 8.05 | $8,195 | −0.062 | Weakly dominated |
| PT | $69,094 | 8.17 | $44,221 | 0.057 | $13,755,207 |
| SBRT | $25,097 | 8.11 | – | – | Reference |
| IMRT | $35,088 | 8.05 | $9,991 | −0.062 | Weakly dominated |
| PT | $71,339 | 8.17 | $46,242 | 0.057 | $14,383,693 |
ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; IMRT, intensity-modulated radiation therapy; PT, proton beam therapy; QALY, quality-adjusted life year; SBRT, stereotactic body radiation therapy.
NOTE: Results are estimated for a patient 65 years old using Medicare reimbursement rates.
*Dominated – higher cost and lower QALY.
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