| Literature DB >> 32211582 |
Ann C Raldow1, David Sher2, Aileen B Chen3, Rinaa S Punglia4.
Abstract
The DCISionRT test estimates the risk of an ipsilateral breast event (IBE) in patients with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) as well as the benefit of adjuvant radiation therapy (RT). We determined the cost-effectiveness of DCISionRT using a Markov model simulating 10-year outcomes for 60-year-old women with DCIS based on nonrandomized data. Three strategies were compared: no testing, no RT (strategy 1); test all, RT for elevated risk only (strategy 2); and no testing, RT for all (strategy 3). We used utilities and costs from the literature and Medicare claims to determine incremental cost-effectiveness ratios and examined the number of women irradiated per IBE prevented. In the base-case scenario, strategy 1 was the cost-effective strategy. Strategy 2 was cost-effective compared with strategy 3 when the cost of DCISionRT was less than $4588. The number irradiated per IBE prevented were 8.37 and 15.46 for strategies 2 and 3, respectively, relative to strategy 1.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32211582 PMCID: PMC7083239 DOI: 10.1093/jncics/pkaa004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JNCI Cancer Spectr ISSN: 2515-5091
Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios for the treatment strategies*
| Strategy | Cost | Incremental cost | Effectiveness | Incremental effectiveness | Incremental cost/effectiveness | Cost/effectiveness | Dominance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Excluding dominated (Strategy 2) | |||||||
| Strategy 1 | 1695.865 | — | 8.570992 | — | — | 197.861 | Undominated |
| Strategy 3 | 12 118.17 | 10 422.31 | 8.590681 | 0.019688 | 529 365.8 | 1410.618 | Undominated |
| All | |||||||
| Strategy 1 | 1695.865 | — | 8.570992 | — | — | 197.861 | Undominated |
| Strategy 3 | 12 118.17 | 10 422.31 | 8.590681 | 0.019688 | 529 365.8 | 1410.618 | Undominated |
| Strategy 2 | 12 224.17 | 106.001 | 8.583273 | −0.00741 | −14 308.9 | 1424.186 | Absolutely dominated |
| All referencing common baseline | |||||||
| Strategy 1 | 1695.865 | — | 8.570992 | — | — | 197.861 | Undominated |
| Strategy 3 | 12 118.17 | 10 422.31 | 8.590681 | 0.019688 | 529 365.8 | 1410.618 | Undominated |
| Strategy 2 | 12 224.17 | 10 528.31 | 8.583273 | 0.01228 | 857 336.1 | 1424.186 | Absolutely dominated |
| All by increasing effectiveness | |||||||
| Strategy 1 | 1695.865 | — | 8.570992 | — | — | 197.861 | Undominated |
| Strategy 2 | 12 224.17 | — | 8.583273 | — | — | 1424.186 | Absolutely dominated |
| Strategy 3 | 12 118.17 | — | 8.590681 | — | — | 1410.618 | Undominated |
When one strategy is both less effective and more expensive, that strategy is absolutely dominated by the other strategies. Extended dominance occurs when the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio for a given treatment alternative is higher than that of the next, more effective, alternative. RT = radiation therapy; Strategy 1 = no testing, no RT; Strategy 2 = test all, RT only for elevated risk; Strategy 3 = no testing, RT for all.
Figure 1.Sensitivity analysis varying the cost of DCISionRT using a willingness-to-pay (WTP) threshold of $100 000/QALY. The net monetary benefit (NMB) of an intervention is the difference between the monetary value of total expected QALYs (WTP multiplied by expected QALYs) and total expected costs [NMB = (WTP × ΔQALYs) − Δcosts]. If the NMB of one intervention exceeds the NMB of a second intervention, the first intervention is cost-effective compared with the second intervention. RT = radiation therapy.