| Literature DB >> 25404424 |
Patricia R Blank1, Martin Filipits, Peter Dubsky, Florian Gutzwiller, Michael P Lux, Jan C Brase, Karsten E Weber, Margaretha Rudas, Richard Greil, Sibylle Loibl, Thomas D Szucs, Ralf Kronenwett, Matthias Schwenkglenks, Michael Gnant.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The individual risk of recurrence in hormone receptor-positive primary breast cancer patients determines whether adjuvant endocrine therapy should be combined with chemotherapy. Clinicopathological parameters and molecular tests such as EndoPredict(®) (EPclin) can support decision making in patients with estrogen receptor-positive, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-negative cancer.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25404424 PMCID: PMC4305105 DOI: 10.1007/s40273-014-0227-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacoeconomics ISSN: 1170-7690 Impact factor: 4.981
Characteristics of the study population
| Characteristic |
| % |
|---|---|---|
| Number of samples | 1,619 | 100 |
| Age | ||
| Median (years) | 64 | |
| Range (years) | 42–81 | |
| | 551 | 44 |
| >60 years | 1,068 | 66 |
| Tumor size | ||
| T1 (size ≤2 cm) | 1,110 | 69 |
| T2 (size >2 cm to ≤5 cm) | 494 | 31 |
| T3 (size >5 cm) | 15 | 1 |
| Nodal status | ||
| Negative | 1,165 | 72 |
| 1–3 positive lymph nodes | 454 | 28 |
| Tumor grading | ||
| Grade G1 | 368 | 23 |
| Grade G2 | 1,196 | 74 |
| Grade G3 | 53 | 3 |
| Estrogen receptora | ||
| Low | 166 | 10 |
| Medium | 521 | 32 |
| High | 932 | 58 |
| Progesterone receptora | ||
| Negative | 335 | 21 |
| Low | 277 | 17 |
| Medium | 536 | 33 |
| High | 471 | 29 |
| Ki67b | ||
| Low (<14 %) | 1,215 | 75 |
| High (≥14 %) | 343 | 21 |
| Unknown | 61 | 4 |
| Type of endocrine therapy | ||
| Tamoxifen | 965 | 60 |
| Tamoxifen + anastrozole | 654 | 40 |
aClassification based on the Reiner score [55]
bAccording to cut-off in the St. Gallen recommendations [11]
Fig. 1Structure of Markov model. The three Markov stages are only shown for the first strategy but apply to all strategies. M Markov node, NCCN National Comprehensive Cancer Center Network, S strategy
Average per patient cost (€) of breast cancer management for different testing and non-testing strategies
| Strategy | St. Gallen/EPclin | German-S3/EPclin | NCCN/EPclin | EPclin | German-S3 | St. Gallen | NCCN |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Recourses accumulated in the first year of therapy | |||||||
| EndoPredict® | 1,451 | 1,370 | 1,708 | 1,819 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Diagnostics | 805 | 805 | 805 | 805 | 807 | 807 | 808 |
| Chemotherapy | 3,094 | 3,208 | 3,387 | 3,422 | 7,533 | 7,984 | 9,394 |
| Adverse effects of chemotherapy | 399 | 414 | 437 | 441 | 971 | 1,030 | 1,211 |
| Recourses accumulated in the first and subsequent years of therapy | |||||||
| Endocrine therapy | 3,284 | 3,284 | 3,284 | 3,284 | 3,286 | 3,286 | 3,286 |
| Follow-up care | 4,139 | 4,139 | 4,140 | 4,140 | 4,150 | 4,150 | 4,154 |
| Metastasis | 964 | 961 | 954 | 950 | 876 | 874 | 846 |
| End-of-life management | 14,133 | 14,131 | 14,127 | 14,124 | 14,074 | 14,073 | 14,055 |
| Total* | 28,268 | 28,311 | 28,841 | 28,987 | 31,699 | 32,205 | 33,756 |
EPclin EndoPredict® test, NCCN National Comprehensive Cancer Center Network
* Numbers may not sum to total due to rounding
Cost effectiveness of testing and non-testing strategies in comparison with the German-S3 guideline (reference) strategy
| Strategy | Cost (€) | Incremental cost (€)a | Effects (QALYs) | Effects (LYG) | Incremental effects (QALYs)a | ICER (€/QALY)a |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| German S3 (reference) | 31,699 | – | 13.169 | 17.006 | – | – |
| St. Gallen | 32,205 | 506 | 13.166 | 17.007 | −0.003 | Dominated |
| NCCN | 33,756 | 2,057 | 13.165 | 17.018 | −0.004 | Dominated |
| German S3/EPclin | 28,311 | −3,388 | 13.171 | 16.969 | 0.002 | Dominant |
| St. Gallen/EPclin | 28,268 | −3,431 | 13.171 | 16.968 | 0.002 | Dominant |
| NCCN/EPclin | 28,841 | −2,858 | 13.172 | 16.972 | 0.003 | Dominant |
| EPclin | 28,987 | −2,712 | 13.173 | 16.974 | 0.004 | Dominant |
Dominated: a strategy is dominated by another if the former both costs more and is less clinically effective. Dominated strategies are excluded from the calculation of ICERs
Dominant: a strategy is dominant to the reference the former both costs less and is more effective
EPclin EndoPredict® test, ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, LYG life-years gained, NCCN National Comprehensive Cancer Center Network, QALY quality-adjusted life-year
aIn comparison with the German-S3 guideline (reference) strategy
Fig. 2Cost-effectiveness plane: a cost per quality-adjusted life-year gained; b cost per life-year gained. A strategy is dominated by another if the former both costs more and is less clinically effective. Dominated strategies are excluded from the calculation of incremental cost-effectiveness ratios. EUR euros, NCCN National Comprehensive Cancer Center Network
Fig. 3Probabilistic sensitivity analysis results: a cost versus quality-adjusted life-years; b cost per life-year gained. The cost-effectiveness acceptability curves show probabilistic sensitivity analysis-based probabilities of strategies being cost effective. For different willingness-to-pay thresholds, different strategies may be optimal. EUR euros, LYG life-years gained, NCCN National Comprehensive Cancer Center Network, QALYS quality-adjusted life-years
| In current practice, clinical and pathological factors, but also molecular tests, are used to assess the individual risk of recurrence among early estrogen receptor-positive, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-negative breast cancer patients. |
| It is of utmost importance that patients with a low risk of recurrence are identified to avoid unnecessary chemotherapy resulting in only marginal risk reduction and bearing a risk of significant toxicities. |
| By using a life-long Markov state transition model, we show that molecular markers such as EndoPredict® can sensibly be combined with clinical guidelines and help reduce chemotherapy usage and associated treatment costs in primary breast cancer patients. |