| Literature DB >> 26573043 |
Jan Norum1, Erik R Traasdahl, Arpad Totth, Carsten Nieder, Jan Abel Olsen.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Prostate cancer (PC) is the most common cancer in Western countries. Recent advances in the treatment of metastatic castration resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) have caused significant pressure on health care budgets. We aimed to exemplify this dilemma presenting an example, radium-223 (Xofigo®), and review the literature.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26573043 PMCID: PMC4873580 DOI: 10.5539/gjhs.v8n4p1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob J Health Sci ISSN: 1916-9736
The search strategy and criteria employed when searching the Medline database and web pages of several cancer associations. (ASCO = American Society of Clinical Oncology, ESMO = European Society for Medical Oncology, ISPOR = International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcome Research)
| Source | Search criteria | Hits | Selected |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medline (PubMed) | Prostate cancer, Xofigo®, radium-223 and alpharadin | 181 | 14 |
| ASCO | Radium-223 with prostate | 94 | 2 |
| ESMO | Radium-223 with prostate | 134 | 0 |
| ISPOR | Radium-223 | 7 | 6 |
Summary of various guidelines´ recommendations for the use of radium-223 in metastatic prostate cancer. (CRPC = castration-resistant prostate cancer, QALY = quality adjusted life years)
| Reference | Institution | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|
| European Society of Medical Oncology (ESMO). | Recommend bone targeted therapy with one of the beta particle emitting radio-nucleotides should be considered for patients with painful bone metastases. Ra-223 may become a new treatment option for symptomatic patients. | |
| Sociedad Española de Oncología Médica (SEOM). | Recommend patients with only bone disease and nodes less than 2 cm to be considered for radium-223. | |
| American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) and Cancer Care Ontario (CCO). | Recommend radium-223 offered to men with bone metastases and state that cost-effectiveness assessment is not included in their guideline. | |
| National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN). | A favourable toxicity profile and extension of survival renders radium-223 an attractive first-line or second-line option for patients with symptomatic bone metastases and no known visceral disease. Radium-223 given in combination with chemotherapy outside clinical trials is not recommended. | |
| European Association of Urology (EAU). | Radium-223 is available for second-line treatment of CRPC following docetaxel. | |
| Norwegian Directorate of Health. | The use of isotopes may be considered for patients with symptomatic bone metastases when external radiotherapy has limited effect and docetaxel has been considered/used. Ra-223 has documented effect, but is not licensed and has not undergone national cost-effectiveness analysis. | |
| Swedish National Board for Health and Welfare. | Radium-223 may be indicated in patients with mCRPC with skeletal metastases and following chemotherapy (when appropriate). High evidence of effect, but cost per QALY is very high. The figures are uncertain. |
Summary of Health Technology Assessments (HTAs) of radium-223 (Xofigo®) used in castration-resistant prostate cancer. (ICER = incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, QALY = quality adjusted life years, ALSYMPCA = pivotal phase III trial of radium-223)
| Reference | Institution | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|
| National Centre for Pharmaco-economics (NCPE), Ireland. | Following the assessment of the company submission, the NCPE considers that the cost-effectiveness of radium-223 has not been demonstrated. Reimbursement is not recommended. ICER €79,948. | |
| Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Health Technology Assessment. | No ultimate statement can be made because radium-223 was not examined in combination with a valid comparator. Furthermore, the risk of secondary malignancies, contamination from body fluids for medical staff and family members as well as the optimal dose of radium-223 need to be examined. Cost for radium-223 was $69,000-$82,800 (€52,600-67,900) in a six-month course of treatment. | |
| National Institute for Health and Care Excellence | Base case ICER for radium-223 compared with best supportive care (BSC) was £55,500 (€70,800) per QALY. Concerns around the time horizon, utilities and costs would be likely to increase the ICER further. It was not possible to determine whether radium-223 could be considered a cost-effective use of NHS resources, because the appropriate comparison with docetaxel and abiraterone acetate had not been presented. Based on the comparison with BSC, radium-223 could not be considered a cost-effective use of NHS resources. | |
| German Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care (IQWiG). | Radium-223 in prostate cancer: Major added benefit for certain patients. In comparison with best supportive care (BSC): Patients survive longer and get bone symptoms later/no evaluable data in comparison with docetaxel. Depending on the patients’ age (</> 65 yrs) and the concomitant treatment (with/without bisphosphonates), there is an indication of major and an indication of minor added benefit of radium-223 compared with BSC. | |
| Aberdeen HTA group. National Institute of Health Research (NIHR) | The evidence is weaker to support the use of radium-223 for first line use as the 1st line patient population in ALSYMPCA is highly selective and radium-223 has not been compared against all valid comparators. Abiraterone acetate should be evaluated as a comparator. It is difficult to conclude whether the submission contains an unbiased estimate of the cost effectiveness of radium-223 dichloride. The exclusion of patients with visceral metastatic disease could be problematic for generalizing results to the wider treatment population. Results are particularly sensitive to the time horizon. The analysis of the EQ-5D quality of life data is limited. | |
| Swedish National Board for Health and Welfare. | They conclude radium-223 offers a gain of 0.20 QALY compared to BSC. The cost/QALY was indicated SEK 905,000,- (€94,000). A sensitivity analysis indicated a range between SEK 492,000–2,203,000 (€51,000-229,000). |