Literature DB >> 32469095

Drug cost savings in phase III hematological oncology clinical trials in a university hospital.

Chloé Herledan1,2, Florence Ranchon1,2, Vérane Schwiertz1, Amandine Baudouin1, Lionel Karlin3, Hervé Ghesquières3,4, Gilles Salles3,4, Catherine Rioufol1,2.   

Abstract

The rapid emergence of expensive anticancer therapies is leading to exponential growth in healthcare expenses. In clinical trials, most investigational drugs are provided free of charge by industrial and academic sponsors. This results in drug cost savings for healthcare payers, who are no longer charged with the cost of the standard-of-care treatment, which would have been administered outside the trial. This study aims to estimate drug cost savings resulting from patient enrolment in hematological oncology clinical trials, from a public payer perspective. Retrospective screening identified all patients with hematological malignancies included from 2011 to 2016 in a phase III trial and having received at least one sponsor-provided cycle. Drug cost savings were defined as the standard treatment costs not charged to the payer due to sponsor provision of treatment. For each patient, cost savings were determined by the number of cycles received in the trial and the cost of standard (control arm) treatment. Of the 345 patients included in eligible trials during study period, 272 received sponsor-provided drugs. Drug cost savings could be estimated for 177 patients (65.1%) included in 27 trials. Total cost savings were €5218 million (US$ 6804 million) for 1720 sponsor-provided cycles. Mean cost saving per patient was €19 182.7 ± 29 865.7 ($25 015.24 ± 39 478.25). Most cost-saving trials were industry-sponsored (77.8%), although academic trials generated 40.15% of total cost savings. Enrolling patients in clinical trials, whether industry-sponsored or academic, leads to substantial drug cost savings for payers. Implications are significant for public payers facing increasing financial constraints, as savings can be reallocated to patient care.
© 2020 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  clinical trials; drug cost savings; healthcare costs; hematological malignancies; investigational drugs

Year:  2020        PMID: 32469095     DOI: 10.1002/hon.2753

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hematol Oncol        ISSN: 0278-0232            Impact factor:   5.271


  2 in total

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Authors:  Claudio Jommi; Federico Pantellini; Lisa Stagi; Maria Verykiou; Marianna Cavazza
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2.  Drug cost avoidance analysis of cancer clinical trials in Spain: a study on cost contributors and their impact.

Authors:  Domingo Antonio Sánchez Martínez; Federico Salas-Lucia; Hanzi Jiang; Paula Ruiz-Carreño; José Luis Alonso Romero
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2022-07-26       Impact factor: 2.908

  2 in total

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