| Literature DB >> 31139024 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: External beam radiotherapy is the recommended but expensive treatment option for localized prostate cancer. Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in men worldwide. A cost-effectiveness study is needed given the excessive cost of radiotherapy treatment and the high prevalence of prostate cancer. The aim of this systematic review was to assess and identify studies that examined model based economic evaluation of external beam radiation therapy for the treatment of localized prostate cancer.Entities:
Keywords: Cost effectiveness; Decision analysis; Economic evaluation; Markov model; Prostate cancer; Radiation therapy
Year: 2019 PMID: 31139024 PMCID: PMC6528358 DOI: 10.1186/s12962-019-0178-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cost Eff Resour Alloc ISSN: 1478-7547
Fig. 1PRISMA 2009 flow diagram for model-based economic evaluations for localized prostate cancer [3]
Cost-effectiveness analyses comparing IMRT and 3D-CRT for prostate cancer
| Study (authors, year) | Target population risk group | Time horizon/cycle length | Perspective/country | Data sources | Discount rate for costs and outcomes | Model type/type of evaluation/sensitivity analysis | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Effectiveness data | Cost data/year | ||||||
| Carter et al. (2014) [ | Hypothetical cohort of 65 years patients receiving radiotherapy to the prostate bed | 20 years/1 year | 3rd party payer perspective/Australia | Literature sources and their clinical interpretation, expert opinions | Literature sources, AR-DRG cost weights, medicare benefits schedule, pharmaceutical benefits schedule | Annual discount rate of 5% was used for costs and outcomes | Markov model/cost-utility analysis/one-way and probabilistic sensitivity analysis |
| Hummel et al. (2012) [ | 70-year-old-man with well-differentiated tumor | Lifetime/NA | Payer NHS/UK | Systematic literature review | Single-centre hospital costs, literature sources, expert opinion/2008 | Costs and QALYs were discounted at a rate of 3.5% per year | Discrete event simulation model/cost-utility analysis/one-way and probabilistic sensitivity analysis |
| Konski et al. (2005) [ | 70-year-old man with a good and intermediate-risk prostate cancer | 10 years | Payer US medicare | Administrative data: billing department at the Fox Chase Cancer Center | Medicare insurance | Markov model | |
| Konski et al. (2006) [ | 70-year-old intermediate risk patients | 15 years/1 year | 3rd payer medicare perspective/US | Literature sources | Literature sources, drug red book/2005 | Cost and benefits were discounted at 3% per year | Markov model/cost-utility analysis/probabilistic sensitivity analysis |
| Yong et al. (2012) [ | Cohort of 70-year-old men with localized prostate cancer | Lifetime/1 month | Health system perspective/Canada | Literature sources | Activity-based costing, Ontario physician fee schedule, OCCI ambulatory care Ontario laboratory fee schedule, literature sources, drug formularies/2009 | 5% discount rate was used to adjust costs and quality-adjusted life-years | Markov model/cost-utility analysis/one-way sensitivity analysis |
| Cooperberg et al. (2013) [ | Men aged 65 years old with low-risk, intermediate-risk, or high-risk prostate cancer | Lifetime | Payer US medicare | Literature review | Medicare cost data | Costs and QALY were discounted at 3% annually | Markov model |
| Zemplenyi et al. (2016) [ | Low-, mid, and high-risk patients with localized prostate cancer | 10 years/1 month | 3rd party payer perspective/Hungary | Literature sources (three retrospective cohort studies and two RCTs) | Single-center cost collection study (micro-costing) | Costs and the quality-adjusted life years were discounted at a rate of 3.7% per year | Markov model cost-utility analysis/one-way and probabilistic sensitivity analysis, subgroup analysis |
Cost-effectiveness analyses comparing IMRT, SBRT and PBT for localized prostate cancer treatment
| Study (authors, year) | Target population risk group | Time horizon/cycle length | Interventions compared | Perspective/country | Data sources | Discount rate for costs and outcomes | Model type/type of evaluation/sensitivity analysis | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Effectiveness data | Cost data/year | |||||||
| Parthan et al. (2012) [ | 65-year-old men with localized prostate cancer | Lifetime/not reported | SBRT vs. IMRT vs. PBT | 3rd party Medicare payer and societal perspective/US | Published sources, meta-analytical techniques | Medicare rates, Bureau of Labour Statistic, literature sources, Red Book/2011 | Costs and utilities discounted at 3.0% annually | Markov model/cost-utility analysis/one-way deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analysis |
| Hodges et al. (2012) [ | 70-year-old low-to intermediate-risk patient with confined prostate cancer | 10 years/1 year | IMRT vs SBRT | 3rd party medicare payer perspective/US | Literature sources | Literature sources, medicare allowable costs, ambulatory payment classification/2010 | Costs and utilities were discounted at a rate of 3% per year | Markov model/cost-utility analysis/probabilistic sensitivity analysis |
| Sher et al. (2014) [ | 65-year-old men with low-risk prostate cancer | Lifetime/4 months | IMRT vs. robotic and non-robotic SBRT | 3rd party medicare payer perspective/US | Literature sources | Medicare payment schedule for hospital-based practice/2012 | Markov model/cost-utility analysis/one-way deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analysis | |
| Lundkvist et al. (2005) [ | Theoretical cohort age: 65-year | Lifetime | IMRT vs PBT | Societal Sweden | Literature sources | Literature sources | Costs and effects were discounted with 3% annually. | Markov model cost-utility analysis |
| Konski et al. (2007) [ | Men aged 60 or 70 years old with intermediate-risk prostate cancer | NA | IMRT vs PBT | payer US medicare | literature | literature and from patient interviews | Costs and effects were discounted with 3% annually | Markov model |
Main findings of Cost-effectiveness studies comparing IMRT and 3D-CRT for localized prostate cancer
| Study (authors, year) | Results | Conclusions | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean cost | QALYs | ICER | ||
| Carter et al. (2014) [ | After 5 years IMRT: $9932 3D-CRT: $9706 After 20 years IMRT: $32,816 3D-CRT: $ 33,917 | After 5 years IMRT: 4.244 3D-CRT: 4.239 After 20 years IMRT: 10.079 3D-CRT: 10.060 | $41,572/QALY IMRT is dominant | IMRT was estimated to have a modest long-term advantage over 3D-CRT in terms of both improved effectiveness and reduced cost |
| Hummel et al. (2012) [ | Scenario 1 IMRT: £6173 3D-CRT: £5184 Scenario 2 IMRT: £4946 3D-CRT: £4214 Scenario 3 IMRT: £4946 3D-CRT: £4486 Scenario 4 IMRT: £5687 3D-CRT: £7489 | Scenario 1 IMRT: 6.802 3D-CRT: 6.792 Scenario 2 IMRT: 7.070 3D-CRT: 7.046 Scenario 3 IMRT: 7.070 3D-CRT: 6.983 Scenario 4 IMRT: 7.015 3D-CRT: 6.402 | Scenario 1: £104,066/QALY Scenario 2: £31,162/QALY Scenario 3: £5295/QALY Scenario 4: dominant strategy | If IMRT can be used to prolong survival, it is very cost-effective. Otherwise, cost-effectiveness is uncertain |
| Konski et al. (2005) [ | 70 years old with intermediate risk IMRT: $33,837 3D-CRT: $21,377 70 years old with good risk IMRT: $31,950 3D-CRT: $19,213 | 70 years old with intermediate risk US$16,182/QALY 70 years old with good risk US$17,448/QALY | Intensity-modulated radiation therapy was found to be cost effective in the treatment of 70 years old man with prostate cancer | |
| Konski et al. (2006) [ | 3D-CRT: $21,865 IMRT: $47,931 | 3D-CRT: 6.27 IMRT: 5.62 | $40,101/QALY | IMRT therapy was found to be cost-effective at the upper limits of acceptability |
| Yong et al. (2012) [ | 3D-CRT $13,501 IMRT $14,520 | 3D-CRT: 6.062 IMRT: 6.085 | $26,768/QALY | For radical radiation treatment of prostate cancer, IMRT seems to be cost-effective when compared with an equivalent dose of 3D-CRT |
| Cooperberg (2013) [ | IMRT: $37,718 3D-CRT: $27,636 | IMRT: 9.6 3D-CRT: 10.3 | Not calculated | IMRT was found to be cost effective with a 0.5 QALYs gained |
| Zemplenyi et al. (2016) [ | 3D-CRT: €7160 IMRT: €6831 HF-IMRT: € 6.019 | 3D-CRT: €5.753 IMRT: €5.956 HF-IMRT: €5.957 | 3D-CRT dominated IMRT | Compared to 3D-CRT, both IMRT and HF-IMRT resulted in more health gains at a lower cost |
Main findings of Cost-effectiveness studies comparing IMRT, SBRT and PBT for localized prostate cancer
| Study (authors, year) | Result | Conclusions | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean cost | QALYs | ICER | ||
| Hodges et al. (2012) [ | SBRT: $22,152 IMRT: $35,431 | SBRT = 7.9 IMRT = 7.9 | NA | “Compared with IMRT, SBRT for low- to intermediate-risk prostate cancer has great potential cost savings” |
| Sher et al. (2014) [ | IMRT: $27,564 Non-robotic SBRT: $10,108 Cyber-knife SBRT: $19,275 | IMRT: 9.96 SBRT: 9.93 | IMRT vs robotic SBRT: $285,000/QALY IMRT vs Non- robotic: US$591,100/QALY | “SBRT clearly contained more value than IMRT for external-beam treatment” |
| Parthan et al. (2012) [ | Payer perspective IMRT: $33,068 PBT: $69,412 SBRT: $24,873 Societal perspective SBRT: $25,097, IMRT: $35,088 PBT: $71,657 | SBRT: 8.11 IMRT: 8.05 PBT: 8.06 | SBRT was dominating over RT and IMRT (less costly and more QALYs) | “Based on the assumption that each treatment modality results in equivalent long-term efficacy, SBRT is a cost-effective strategy resulting in improved quality-adjusted survival compared to IMRT and PT for the treatment of localized prostate cancer” |
| Lundkvist, et al. (2005) [ | Proton: €13,491 IMRT: €5477 | Cost Standard case result: 7952.6 High proton radiation cost estimate: 10,485.2 Low proton radiation cost estimate: 7343.9 | QALY Standard case result: 0.297 High proton radiation cost estimate: 0.297 Low proton radiation cost estimate: 0.297 | “Investment in a proton facility may thus be cost-effective. The results must be interpreted with caution, since there is a lack of data, and consequently large uncertainties in the assumptions used” |
| Konski et al. (2007) [ | 70-year-old man PBT: $63,511 IMRT: $36,808 60-year-old man PBT: $64,989 IMRT: $39,355 | 70-year-old man PBT: 8.54 IMRT: 8.12 60-year-old man PBT: 9.91 IMRT: 9.45 | 70-year-old man $63,578/QALY 60-year-old man $55,726/QALY | “Even when based on the unproven assumption that protons will permit a 10-Gy escalation of prostate dose compared with IMRT photons, proton beam therapy is not cost effective for most patients with prostate cancer using the commonly accepted standard of $50,000/QALY” |