| Literature DB >> 26855584 |
Yanlan Chai1, Juan Wang1, Tao Wang1, Fan Shi1, Jiquan Wang1, Jin Su1, Yunyi Yang1, Xi Zhou1, Hailin Ma1, Bin He1, Zi Liu1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Recent literature reports that radical hysterectomy followed by adjuvant radiotherapy has comparable progression-free survival and overall survival compared to radical radiotherapy for International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics stage IIB cervical cancer. Now, we evaluate the cost-effectiveness (CE) of these two treatment regimens. PRIMARY AND SECONDARY OUTCOME MEASURES: A decision-tree model was constructed comparing CE between treatment arms using the published studies for overall survival rates and treatment-related toxicity rates for 5 years. The cost data were obtained from the hospital system of the First Affiliated Hospital of Xi'an Jiaotong University. Effectiveness was measured as quality-adjusted life year (QALY). Treatment arms were compared with regard to costs and life expectancy using incremental CE ratio, and the results were presented using costs per QALY.Entities:
Keywords: FIGO stage IIB; cervical cancer; cost-effectiveness; radiotherapy; surgery
Year: 2016 PMID: 26855584 PMCID: PMC4727512 DOI: 10.2147/OTT.S90798
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Onco Targets Ther ISSN: 1178-6930 Impact factor: 4.147
Figure 1Decision analysis model.
Notes: Cost-effectiveness model. Markov model comparing radical hysterectomy plus adjuvant radiotherapy versus radical radiotherapy for FIGO stage IIB cervical cancer.
Abbreviations: OS, overall survival; RT, radiotherapy.
Patient demographics
| Treatment arm S | Treatment arm R | |
|---|---|---|
| Median age, years (range) | 48 (25–70) | 51 (24–88) |
| Histopathology, n (%) | ||
| Squamous | 136 (92.0) | 272 (93.8) |
| Non-squamous | 12 (8.0) | 18 (6.2) |
| Maximum tumor diameter (mm), n (%) | ||
| >40 | 26 (17.57) | 89 (30.69) |
| ≤40 | 122 (82.43) | 201 (69.31) |
| One or more risk factors | 69 (46.62) | – |
Abbreviations: R, radiotherapy-based; S, surgery-based.
Model costs (year 2012, US $) and outcomes
| Clinical parameter | Treatment arm S | Treatment arm R |
|---|---|---|
| 5-year overall survival | 84.7% | 86.8% |
| Treatment cost (per patient) ($) | ||
| Surgery | 2,742 | 0 |
| EBRT | 3,500 | 3,500 |
| ICRT | 0 | 688 |
| PF regimen | 0 | 1,021 |
| TP regimen | 2,182 | 0 |
| Treatment cost for toxicity (per patient) ($) | ||
| Grade 3–4 anemia | 523 | 523 |
| Grade 3–4 neutropenia | 1,109 | 1,109 |
| Grade 3–4 GI toxicity | 718 | 718 |
| Grade 3–4 GU toxicity | 628 | 628 |
| Grade 3–4 lower limb lymphedema | 313 | 313 |
Abbreviations: EBRT, external beam radiotherapy; GI, gastrointestinal; GU, genito urinary; ICRT, intracavitary brachytherapy; PF, cisplatin and 5-fluorouracil; R, radiotherapy-based; S, surgery-based; TP, paclitaxel and cisplatin.
Figure 2Sensitivity analysis.
Abbreviation: RT, radiotherapy.
Results of the CE model
| Treatment arm | Cost | Incremental cost | Effectiveness (QALYs) | Incremental effectiveness (QALYs) | Incremental CE |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Surgery-based treatment | $10,872 | $5,173 | 4.37 | −0.07 | –$76,453 |
| RT-based treatment | $5,702 | NA | 4.44 | NA | NA |
Abbreviations: CE, cost-effectiveness; NA, not available; RT, radiotherapy; QALYs, quality-adjusted life years.