Literature DB >> 30547369

Pembrolizumab for Locally Advanced or Metastatic Urothelial Cancer Where Cisplatin is Unsuitable: An Evidence Review Group Perspective of a NICE Single Technology Appraisal.

Shijie Ren1, Hazel Squires2, Emma Hock2, Eva Kaltenthaler2, Andrew Rawdin2, Constantine Alifrangis3.   

Abstract

As part of its Single Technology Appraisal (STA) process, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) invited the manufacturer (Merck Sharp & Dohme) of pembrolizumab (Keytruda®) to submit evidence of its clinical and cost effectiveness for the treatment of locally advanced or metastatic urothelial cancer where cisplatin is unsuitable. The School of Health and Related Research Technology Appraisal Group at the University of Sheffield was commissioned to act as the independent Evidence Review Group (ERG). The ERG produced a detailed review of the evidence for the clinical and cost effectiveness of the technology, based on the company's submission (CS) to NICE. The clinical effectiveness evidence in the CS for pembrolizumab was based on one phase II, single-arm, open-label, non-randomised study (KEYNOTE-052), while the evidence for the comparator (carboplatin plus gemcitabine) was based on four studies, including one randomised controlled trial and three cohort studies. In the absence of head-to-head trials, the company conducted an indirect treatment comparison for both progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS), by firstly adjusting cross-study differences using a simulated treatment comparison approach and then synthesizing the evidence based on an assumption of constant hazard ratios using a standard meta-analysis model and time-varying hazard ratios using fractional polynomial models. The treatment effect of pembrolizumab was more favourable in the adjusted population compared with the observed effect in the KEYNOTE-052 study. The company submitted a de novo partitioned survival cohort simulation model, which partitions the OS time into PFS and post-progression survival. The probabilistic incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) for pembrolizumab compared with carboplatin plus gemcitabine was estimated to be £37,081 per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) gained, based on the results within the company's health economic model. Following a critique of the model, for their preferred base case the ERG corrected some minor model errors, chose a progression approach for estimating utilities, and revised the extrapolation of PFS and OS. The ERG's probabilistic base case ICER was estimated to be £67,068 per QALY gained. The ERG also undertook a range of exploratory sensitivity analyses which suggested that the ICER was highly uncertain. In particular, the choices of extrapolation for the OS of pembrolizumab and the stopping rule for pembrolizumab had the largest impacts on the ICER. The NICE Appraisal Committee recommended pembrolizumab for use within the Cancer Drugs Fund as an option for treating locally advanced or metastatic urothelial carcinoma in adults who have had platinum-containing chemotherapy, provided that pembrolizumab was stopped at 2 years of uninterrupted treatment, or earlier if the disease progresses, and the conditions of the managed access agreement for pembrolizumab are followed.

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Year:  2019        PMID: 30547369     DOI: 10.1007/s40273-018-0750-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pharmacoeconomics        ISSN: 1170-7690            Impact factor:   4.981


  7 in total

1.  Randomized phase II/III trial assessing gemcitabine/carboplatin and methotrexate/carboplatin/vinblastine in patients with advanced urothelial cancer who are unfit for cisplatin-based chemotherapy: EORTC study 30986.

Authors:  Maria De Santis; Joaquim Bellmunt; Graham Mead; J Martijn Kerst; Michael Leahy; Pablo Maroto; Thierry Gil; Sandrine Marreaud; Gedske Daugaard; Iwona Skoneczna; Sandra Collette; Julie Lorent; Ronald de Wit; Richard Sylvester
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2011-12-12       Impact factor: 44.544

2.  Flexible parametric proportional-hazards and proportional-odds models for censored survival data, with application to prognostic modelling and estimation of treatment effects.

Authors:  Patrick Royston; Mahesh K B Parmar
Journal:  Stat Med       Date:  2002-08-15       Impact factor: 2.373

3.  Carboplatin-gemcitabine treatment of patients with transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder and impaired renal function.

Authors:  J Carles; M Nogué; M Domènech; C Pérez; E Saigí; K Villadiego; I Guasch; R Ibeas
Journal:  Oncology       Date:  2000-06       Impact factor: 2.935

4.  Gemcitabine and carboplatin combination as first-line treatment in elderly patients and those unfit for cisplatin-based chemotherapy with advanced bladder carcinoma: Phase II study of the Hellenic Co-operative Oncology Group.

Authors:  Helena Linardou; Gerassimos Aravantinos; Eleni Efstathiou; Charalambos Kalofonos; Athanasios Anagnostopoulos; Charalambos Deliveliotis; Dimitrios Bafaloukos; Meletios Athanasios Dimopoulos; Aristotelis Bamias
Journal:  Urology       Date:  2004-09       Impact factor: 2.649

5.  Biweekly carboplatin/gemcitabine in patients with advanced urothelial cancer who are unfit for cisplatin-based chemotherapy: report of efficacy, quality of life and geriatric assessment.

Authors:  Aristotle Bamias; George Lainakis; Efstathios Kastritis; Nikos Antoniou; Gerassimos Alivizatos; Andreas Koureas; Michael Chrisofos; Andreas Skolarikos; Evangelos Karayiotis; Meletios A Dimopoulos
Journal:  Oncology       Date:  2008-05-14       Impact factor: 2.935

6.  First-line pembrolizumab in cisplatin-ineligible patients with locally advanced and unresectable or metastatic urothelial cancer (KEYNOTE-052): a multicentre, single-arm, phase 2 study.

Authors:  Arjun V Balar; Daniel Castellano; Peter H O'Donnell; Petros Grivas; Jacqueline Vuky; Thomas Powles; Elizabeth R Plimack; Noah M Hahn; Ronald de Wit; Lei Pang; Mary J Savage; Rodolfo F Perini; Stephen M Keefe; Dean Bajorin; Joaquim Bellmunt
Journal:  Lancet Oncol       Date:  2017-09-26       Impact factor: 41.316

7.  Enhanced secondary analysis of survival data: reconstructing the data from published Kaplan-Meier survival curves.

Authors:  Patricia Guyot; A E Ades; Mario J N M Ouwens; Nicky J Welton
Journal:  BMC Med Res Methodol       Date:  2012-02-01       Impact factor: 4.615

  7 in total
  2 in total

1.  The Cancer Drugs Fund in Practice and Under the New Framework.

Authors:  Celia Sabry-Grant; Kinga Malottki; Alexander Diamantopoulos
Journal:  Pharmacoeconomics       Date:  2019-07       Impact factor: 4.981

Review 2.  Targeted Molecular Therapeutics for Bladder Cancer-A New Option beyond the Mixed Fortunes of Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors?

Authors:  Olga Bednova; Jeffrey V Leyton
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2020-10-01       Impact factor: 5.923

  2 in total

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