| Literature DB >> 34211842 |
Dirk Mehrens1, Marcus Unterrainer1, Stefanie Corradini2, Maximilian Niyazi2, Farkhad Manapov2, C Benedikt Westphalen3, Matthias F Froelich4, Moritz Wildgruber1, Max Seidensticker1, Jens Ricke1, Johannes Rübenthaler1, Wolfgang G Kunz1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In certain malignancies, patients with oligometastatic disease benefit from radical ablative or surgical treatment. The SABR-COMET trial demonstrated a survival benefit for oligometastatic patients randomized to local stereotactic ablative radiation (SABR) compared to patients receiving standard care (SC) alone. Our aim was to determine the cost-effectiveness of SABR.Entities:
Keywords: OMD; SABR; cancer; cost-effectiveness (economics); radiation therapy (radiotherapy)
Year: 2021 PMID: 34211842 PMCID: PMC8239286 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2021.667993
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1State-transition diagram for modeling cost and effectiveness for the SABR and SC strategies over time intervals. For example, patients in the oligometastatic disease state can either remain in the oligometastatic state, transition to the polymetastatic disease state, or die. Death is an absorbing state and will discontinue the individual simulation.
Detailed Model Input Parameters.
| Model Input | Base Case Value | Range for Sensitivity Analysis* | Distribution | Reference |
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| oligometastatic state | 1 | Palma et al. ( | ||
| polymetastatic state | 0 | |||
| death | 0 | |||
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| OS for SC | Palma et al. ( | |||
| 1st year | 0.88 | |||
| 2nd year | 0.58 | |||
| 3rd year | 0.38 | ± 15% | ß | |
| 4th year | 0.18 | |||
| 5th year | 0.18 | |||
| 6th year | 0.18 | |||
| OS for SABR | ||||
| 1st year | 0.88 | |||
| 2nd year | 0.69 | |||
| 3rd year | 0.62 | |||
| 4th year | 0.52 | |||
| 5th year | 0.42 | |||
| 6th year | 0.42 | |||
| PFS for SC | ||||
| 1st year | 0.19 | |||
| 2nd year | 0.13 | |||
| 3rd year | 0.07 | |||
| 4th year | 0.04 | |||
| 6th year | 0 | |||
| 5th year | 0 | |||
| PFS for SABR | ||||
| 1st year | 0.5 | |||
| 2nd year | 0.38 | |||
| 3rd year | 0.3 | |||
| 4th year | 0.21 | |||
| 5th year | 0.18 | |||
| 6th year | 0.18 | |||
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| cumulative | $ 97,440 | $ 77,952 - 116,928 | y | adapted from Reyes et al. ( |
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| cumulative | $ 189,840 | $ 151,872 - 227,808 | y | adapted from Reyes et al. ( |
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| Last 180 Days | $ 19,174 | $ 15,339 - 23,009 | y | Bekelman et al. ( |
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| unit costs | $ 11,070 | $ 8,856 - 13,284 | y | Agarwal et al. ( |
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| cumulative | $ 11,700 | $ 8,190 - 14,040 | y | Hess et al. ( |
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| OMD | 0.82 | 0.70 - 0.90 | ß | Palma et al. ( |
| PMD | 0.59 | 0.50 - 0.70 | ß | Lloyd et al. ( |
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| Disutility | SABR: -0.002 | ± 10% | ß | Palma et al. ( |
| Treatment costs | SABR: $ 1,443 | SABR: $ 1,154 - 1,732 | y | Palma et al. ( |
Detailed model input parameters. Survival probabilities and utility for OMD were derived from the SABR-COMET trial. All costs, transitions probabilities for long term survival as well as utility for PMD and disutility from adverse events were derived from the literature. Ranges for deterministic sensitivity analysis were determined by the 95% confidence interval of the initial probabilities and by ±20% for costs. For PSA y-distribution for costs and ß-distribution for utilities was applied. All costs were converted to 2019 USD. *The minimum and maximum values for ranges were derived from reported 95% confidence intervals or from calculated 95% confidence intervals with the use of variance estimates as available.
Figure 2Tornado diagrams for the sensitivity analysis during (A) the trial duration and (B) long-term simulation extrapolated based on SEER survival data. (A) Costs for PMD and OMD demonstrated the strongest impact on ICER during trial duration. (B) For long-term analysis costs for PMD influenced ICER the most followed by costs for PMD and utility for OMD.
Figure 3One-way sensitivity analysis proved cost-effectiveness for SABR up to unit costs of $88,696 over the trial duration and $93,750 for long-term survival for a willingness-to-pay (WTP) threshold of $100,000/QALY.
Cost-effectiveness analysis results.
| Trial duration | |||||||
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| Patient group | Cost ($) | IC ($) | Effect (QALY) | IE (QALY) | NMB ($) | ICER | Acceptability |
| ($/QALY) | at WTP (%) | ||||||
| SABR | 304,459 | 1,105 | 2.58 | 0.78 | -46,000 | 1,412 | 100 |
| SC | 303,354 | 1.80 | -123,149 | ||||
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| SABR | 403,149 | 52,072 | 3.37 | 1.34 | -66,632 | 38,740 | 99.95 |
| SC | 351,077 | 2.02 | -148,975 | ||||
Results of cost-effectiveness analysis. SABR proved to be cost effective over the trial duration as well as long-term analysis with an ICER of $1,405 and $38,740 respectively. The willingness-to-pay was set to $100,000 per QALY. SABR, stereotactic ablative radiotherapy; SC, standard care; NMB, net monetary benefit; ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; IC, incremental cost; IE, incremental effectiveness; WTP, willingness-to-pay threshold.
Comparison of SABR-COMET cost-effectiveness analysis.
| Mehrens et al. | Kumar et al. | Qu et al. | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Region | US | US | Canada/US |
| Year | 2019 | 2019 | 2018 |
| Perspective | healthcare | healthcare/societal | healthcare |
| Model | PSA | Markov | Markov |
| Duration | 16 years | 10 years | 20 years |
| Cycle length | monthly | monthly | 3 months |
| WTP | 100,000 USD | 100,000 USD | 100,000 CAD |
| Discount | 3% | 3% | 1.50% |
| Analysis | BCS/DSA/PSA | BCS/DSA/PSA | BCS/DSA/PSA |
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| Survival data | SEER | SEER | Weibull |
| Cost SABR | 11,700 USD/treatment | 12,242 USD/treatment | 8,378 CAD/ |
| Cost SC (annually) | 97,440 USD | 96,468 USD | chemotherapy 20,813 CAD |
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| Total cost | |||
| SABR | 403,149 USD | 460,161 USD | 169,693 CAD |
| SC | 351,007 USD | 405,901 USD | 135,452 CAD |
| Effectiveness | |||
| SABR | 3.37 | 4.84 | 2.77 |
| SC | 2.02 | 2.96 | 1.85 |
| ICER | 38,740 USD | 28,906 USD | 37,157 CAD |
| Acceptability SABR | 99.95% | 99.8% | 97% |
| Miscellaneous | SABR cost-effective until 93,750 USD | SABR cost-effective until 145,688 USD cost-effective for a hazard ratio from 0.3 until 0.76 | to remain cost-effective, the HR must decrease by approx. 0.047 for each additional metastasis |
Comparison of different cost-effectiveness analysis of the SABR-COMET trial. Results stated are from a healthcare perspective and only long-term survival data were compared. Currency as well as year of the respective analysis were not adapted. Our study demonstrated similar results as the analysis of Kumar et al. Input parameters as well as results from Qu et al. differed from our study as well as from Kumar et al. In probability sensitivity analysis SABR was cost-effective in nearly all of the iterations. PSA, Partitioned survival analysis; BCS, Base case scenario; DSA, Deterministic sensitivity analysis; USD, US-Dollar; CAD, Canadian Dollar.