| Literature DB >> 30194622 |
Nasuh C Büyükkaramikli1, Saskia de Groot2, Rob Riemsma3, Debra Fayter3, Nigel Armstrong3, Piet Portegijs4, Steven Duffy3, Jos Kleijnen3,4, Maiwenn J Al2.
Abstract
The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, as part of the institute's single technology appraisal process, invited the manufacturer of ribociclib (Kisqali®, Novartis) to submit evidence regarding the clinical and cost effectiveness of the drug in combination with an aromatase inhibitor for the treatment of previously untreated, hormone receptor-positive, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative, locally advanced or metastatic breast cancer. Kleijnen Systematic Reviews Ltd and Erasmus University Rotterdam were commissioned as the Evidence Review Group for this submission. The Evidence Review Group reviewed the evidence submitted by the manufacturer, corrected and validated the manufacturer's decision analytic model, and conducted exploratory analyses to assess the robustness and validity of the presented clinical and cost-effectiveness results. This article describes the company submission, the Evidence Review Group assessment and National Institute for Health and Care Excellence subsequent decisions. The main clinical effectiveness evidence was obtained from the MONALEESA-2 trial, a randomised controlled trial comparing ribociclib plus letrozole with placebo plus letrozole. Progression-free survival was significantly longer in the ribociclib group (95% confidence interval, 19.3-not reached) vs. 14.7 months (95% confidence interval 13.0-16.5) in the placebo group. To assess the cost effectiveness of ribociclib in combination with an aromatase inhibitor, the company developed an individual patient-level model using a discrete-event simulation approach in Microsoft® Excel. In the model, simulated patients move through a series of three health states until death, i.e. first-line progression-free survival, second-line progression-free survival and progressive disease. The length of progression-free survival during the first line was informed by the MONALEESA-2 trial. The benefit in progression-free survival in the first line was transferred to a benefit in overall survival assuming full progression-free survival to overall survival surrogacy (because of the immaturity of overall survival data from the MONALEESA-2 trial). Patient-level data from the BOLERO-2 trial, evaluating the addition of everolimus to exemestane in the second-line treatment of postmenopausal HR-positive advanced breast cancer, were used to inform the length of progression-free survival during the second line. Costs included in the model were treatment costs (e.g. technology acquisition costs of first, second, third and/or later line treatments), drug administration costs, monitoring costs and health state costs (including terminal care). Additionally, the costs of adverse events associated with the first-line treatment were incorporated. The Evidence Review Group recalculated the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio using data from a different data cut-off date from the MONALEESA-2 trial and by changing some assumptions (e.g. progression-free survival to overall survival surrogacy approach and post-progression third and/or later line treatment-related costs). After two appraisal committee meetings and a revised base case submitted by the company (including a second enhanced patient access scheme discount), the committee concluded that taking into account the uncertainties in the calculation of the cost effectiveness, there were plausible cost-effectiveness estimates broadly in the range that could be considered as a cost-effective use of National Health Service resources. Therefore, ribociclib was recommended as a treatment option for the first-line treatment of hormone receptor-positive, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative breast cancer, contingent on the company providing ribociclib with the discount agreed in the second enhanced patient access scheme.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30194622 PMCID: PMC6386053 DOI: 10.1007/s40273-018-0708-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacoeconomics ISSN: 1170-7690 Impact factor: 4.981
Fig. 1Model structure. PFS 1 first-line progression-free survival, PFS 2 second-line progression-free survival
Fig. 2Illustration of the full progression-free survival (PFS) to overall survival (OS) surrogacy approach. PD progressive disease, PFS1 first-line progression-free survival, PFS2 second-line progression-free survival.
Source: company submission, Fig. 20, p. 102
Fig. 3Illustration of the patient flow in an absolute, progression-free survival (PFS)-based threshold scenario. OS overall survival, PD progressive disease, PFS1 first-line progression free survival, PFS2 second-line progression-free survival.
Source: company submission, Fig. 21, p. 103
List of corrections/adjustments to obtain the evidence review group preferred base case
| Change # | Description |
|---|---|
| 1 | Fixing programming errors (mostly affected scenario analyses) |
| 2 | Updating the PFS-related clinical model inputs for the first line with the MONALEESA-2 data from the most recent data cut-off date (January 2017) |
| 3 | Incorporating the wastage costs (for the unused tablets in the last treatment cycle) |
| 4 | Using the inflation-adjusted post-progression treatment-related cost estimate from the fulvestrant appraisal (£1140) for monthly third-line treatment costs [ |
| 5 | Changing the modelling of the post-treatment discontinuation survival after second-line chemotherapy (so that the arbitrary Weibull scale parameter assumption in the CS is not used) |
| 6 | Implementing the partial PFS to OS surrogacy approach. This de novo approach decreases the time spent in states after first-line PFS in the ribociclib arm of the model in such a way that it would result in a “gain in median OS/gain in median PFS” ratio close to 38.5% (4.2 months/10.9 months) from the PALOMA-1 trial, instead of the full PFS to OS surrogacy or threshold-based PFS to OS surrogacy approaches in the company CS |
CS company submission, OS overall survival, PFS progression-free survival
List of revisions to the company base case after the second Appraisal Consultation Document
| Change # | Description |
|---|---|
| 1 | Second enhanced PAS discount |
| 2 | Updated utility inputs for PFS1 (3L mapped EQ-5D utilities from the MONALEESA-2) and PFS2 (from Mitra et al. [ |
| 3 | PFS (local assessment) and TTD exponential extrapolation for the first-line treatment, both based on a January 2017 data cut-off |
| 4 | £1500 as the treatment cost estimate for third and later lines |
PAS patient access scheme, PFS progression-free survival, PFS1 first-line progression-free survival, PFS2 second-line progression-free survival, TTD time to treatment discontinuation
| Centrally assessed progression-free survival data might be more reliable than locally assessed progression-free survival data in the presence of differences in adverse-event rates. |
| When the overall survival data from the trial are immature, different (e.g. partial or full) progression-free survival to overall survival surrogacy approaches should be explored in different scenario analyses, with different parameter realisations, which all should be taken into account in the decision-making process. |
| When there are more than one simultaneous/recent appraisals in the same indication, this can be beneficial as the results of the other appraisal might be used for external validation purposes. |
| The iterative nature of appraisal meetings may provide an opportunity to find a middle ground between the company assumptions and the Evidence Review Group point of view. The company may provide enhanced patient access scheme discounts to reduce the uncertainty surrounding the cost effectiveness of the drug in this process. |