| Literature DB >> 29532613 |
Darren Hunter1, Emily Mauldon2, Nigel Anderson1.
Abstract
Recent technological advances in radiation therapy have allowed for greater accuracy in planning and treatment delivery. The development of hypofractionated radiation treatment regimens is an example, and has the potential to decrease the cost per episode of care, relative to conventional treatments. Our aim was to analyse published literature on the cost-effectiveness and budgetary implications of hypofractionated radiation therapy. As such, this article will quantify the projected health care cost savings and address the optimal means of treatment delivery, associated patient outcomes, and implications arising from an increased use of hypofractionated regimens.Entities:
Keywords: Australia; cancer; cost; hypofractionation; radiotherapy
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29532613 PMCID: PMC5985996 DOI: 10.1002/jmrs.273
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Radiat Sci ISSN: 2051-3895
Figure 1Literature search – screening and eligibility.
Overview of literature reviewed
| Reference | Tumour stream | Publication type | Recruitment figure | Key study outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Konski, AA, | Multiple | Review | N/A | Increased use of hypofractionation may increase patient value by reducing direct/indirect medical and productivity costs. |
| Laine, AM et al., | Multiple | Review | N/A | Hypofractionation provides an efficacious, cost‐effective, efficient and convenient alternative to standard fractionation for a limited range of tumours. |
| Lievens, Y, | Breast | Review | N/A | Despite acute gains to clinical outcomes and cost, long‐term data must assess the post‐treatment management costs attributed with increased hypofractionation. |
| Aneja, S et al., | Prostate | Review | N/A | Hypofractionated prostate radiotherapy promises resource‐efficient and comparable patient outcomes to standard fractionation. |
| Kang, JJ et al., | Bladder | Retrospective Analysis | 26 patients (M/F), T2–4 N0–2M0 urothelial cancer | Hypofractionated partial bladder radiotherapy offers comparable local control and survival, with reduced cost/time. |
| Voong, KR, | Prostate | Conference Abstract | N/A | Hypofractionated prostate radiotherapy is seen to reduce costs, including the management of late radiation toxicities. |
| Greenup, RA et al., | Breast | Retrospective Analysis | 43,247 patients (F), T1–T2 N0 invasive breast cancer | Hypofractionated breast radiotherapy offers high‐value care, with a potential to reduce overall treatment costs by 39%. |
| Dwyer, P et al., | Breast | Retrospective Analysis | 279 patients (F), T1–T2 N0 invasive breast cancer | Hypofractionation could reduce costs by 24%; allowing for an additional 14 patients to be treated at the department each month. |
| Mortimer, JW et al., | Breast | Retrospective Analysis | 196 patients (F). T1–T4 N0–3 invasive breast cancer | Hypofractionated breast cancer radiotherapy could reduce costs by 29.3% (22.1–32.0%). |
| Barry et al., | Breast | Cost‐effective Analysis | N/A | Conventional breast radiotherapy is financially burdensome in weeks 5–7, with no clear benefit to quality of care and patient outcomes. Once‐weekly hypofractionation could reduce costs by 65%. |
| Khan, AJ et al., | Breast | Retrospective Analysis | 100 patients (F), T1–T4 N0–3 invasive breast cancer | Hypofractionation not only provides efficiency and cost saving, but translates to improved access to care in developing economies. |
| Konski, AA et al., | Multiple | Cost‐effective Analysis | N/A | Increasing the rate of hypofractionation to 40% would reduce annual technical revenue by $540,661 and patient workflow by five patients (1–1.5 h) per day. |
| Muller‐Riemenschneider, FM et al., | Cranial | Review | N/A | Increased use of hypofractionated techniques such as SRS must consider the economic implications of adaptive/dedicated equipment utilisation. |
| Deshmukh, AA et al., | Breast | Cost‐effective Analysis | N/A | Hypofractionated breast radiotherapy offers the most cost‐effective option overall, as compared with conventional fractionation or brachytherapy (IORT). |
| Ojerholm, E et al., | Breast | Editorial | N/A | Increased use of hypofractionated breast radiotherapy could provide equivalent patient outcomes, improve convenience and save $100 million each year. |
| Sharieff, W et al., | Prostate | Cost‐effective Analysis | 5000 patients (M), T < 2a, Gleason score <6, PSA <10 ng/mL prostate cancer | Providing equivalent efficacy and safety of SBRT delivery methods, arc‐based delivery offers the most cost‐effective method. |
| Zemplenyi, AT et al., | Prostate | Cost‐effective Analysis | N/A | Hypofractionated IMRT for prostate cancer offers the most cost‐effective means of delivery, as compared with standard fractionated 3D‐CRT or IMRT. |
| Lievens, Y et al., | Lung | Cost‐effective Analysis | Financial data from 10 participating centres. | Time‐based reimbursement may provide a means of supporting the introduction of advanced radiotherapy techniques. |
| Min, C et al., | Breast | Prospective Randomised Trial | 84 patients (F), Tis‐T2, N0–Nx invasive breast cancer | At 3‐year follow‐up, hypofractionated breast radiotherapy appears to provide a promising option – particularly for elderly, non‐surgical candidates. |
| Bekelman, JE et al., | Breast | Retrospective Analysis | Financial data from 14 commercial health care plans. | Though the rate of use has increased, a mere 21.2–34.5% of eligible patients receive hypofractionated breast radiotherapy. |
| Ohri, N & Haffty, BG, | Breast | Review | N/A | Hypofractionated approaches to breast cancer (including accelerated partial breast irradiation) offer an effective alternative for selected patients. |
| Voong, KR et al., | Prostate | Prospective Randomised Trial | 204 patients (M), T1–T2, Gleason score 6–8 | Moderate hypofractionated prostate radiotherapy offers increased value, considerate of late toxicity. |
| Eblan, MJ et al., | Breast | Review | N/A | Hypofractionated breast radiotherapy offers cost savings, increased patient throughput and reduced waiting lists. |
| Konski, AA, | Prostate | Commentary | N/A | Although hypofractionated prostate radiotherapy offers convenience to patients, brachytherapy provides further cost reduction. |