| Literature DB >> 34297312 |
Massimiliano Bonifacio1, Vikalp Maheshwari2, Diana Tran3, Gianluca Agostoni4, Kalitsa Filioussi4, Ricardo Viana5.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to evaluate the cost effectiveness of second-line nilotinib versus dasatinib for the treatment of Philadelphia chromosome-positive chronic myeloid leukemia (CML-CP) patients who are intolerant or resistant to imatinib and can transition to treatment-free remission (TFR).Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34297312 PMCID: PMC8807738 DOI: 10.1007/s41669-021-00286-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacoecon Open ISSN: 2509-4262
Fig. 1Schematic of the cost-effectiveness model. AP/BC accelerated phase/blastic crisis, CP chromosome-positive, TFR treatment-free remission, TKI tyrosine kinase inhibitor
Fig. 2Proportion of patients with MR4.5 in model (calculated in model). MR4.5 molecular response 4.5
Summary of model inputs
| Model parameter | Reference case value |
|---|---|
| Perspective | Italian healthcare payer |
| Number of CML-CP patients | 1000 |
| Time horizon of analysis | 40 years |
| Cycle length | 1 month |
| Molecular response criteria for TFR eligibility | MR4.5 |
| Cost of molecular monitoring | 208.49 € |
| Cost of hematologist visit | 21.22 € |
| Cost of molecular monitoring and physician visits (per month) | |
| Second-line TKI, off second-line TKI CP, AP/BC | 90.71 € |
| TFR | 229.70 € |
| Drug costs (per month) | |
| Nilotinib (second-line TKI CP) | 3040.02 € |
| Dasatinib (second-line TKI CP) | 4748.73 € |
| Off second-line TKI CP (nilotinib, dasatinib, bosutinib, ponatinib) | 4490.42 € |
| AP/BC (bosutinib + ponatinib) | 6142.11 € |
| Health state utility decrementsa | |
| Second-line TKI and off second-line TKI CP | 0.09 |
| AP/BC | 0.22 |
AP/BC accelerated phase/blastic crisis, CML chronic myeloid leukemia, CP chromosome-positive, MR molecular response 4.5, TFR treatment-free remission, TKI tyrosine kinase inhibitor
aUtility decrements were applied to the assumed baseline utility of 0.92 for the Italian general population. Patients in TFR received no decrement
Discounted lifetime per-patient results by health state
| Dasatinib | Nilotinib | Incremental | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Costs (€) | LYs | QALYs | Costs (€) | LYs | QALYs | Costs (€) | LYs | QALYs | |
| On 2L TKI | 283,192 | 4.874 | 4.045 | 196,715 | 5.234 | 4.344 | − 86,477 | 0.360 | 0.298 |
| On TFR | 3746 | 1.359 | 1.250 | 6242 | 2.265 | 2.083 | 2496 | 0.905 | 0.833 |
| Off 2L TKI | 87,128 | 1.585 | 1.315 | 144,867 | 2.635 | 2.187 | 57,739 | 1.050 | 0.872 |
| AP/BC | 128,646 | 1.720 | 1.204 | 116,637 | 1.559 | 1.092 | − 12,009 | − 0.161 | − 0.112 |
| Dead | 5748 | 5239 | − 509 | ||||||
| Total | 508,460 | 9.538 | 7.815 | 469,700 | 11.693 | 9.706 | − 38,760 | 2.155 | 1.891 |
| ICER | Nilotinib was associated with higher numbers of LYs (2.155) and QALYs (1.891), and lower costs (− 38,760 €) versus dasatinib | ||||||||
2L second-line, AP/BC accelerated phase/blastic crisis, ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, LY life year, QALY quality-adjusted life-year, TFR treatment-free remission, TKI tyrosine kinase inhibitor
Scenario analysis results
| Variable | Test value | Incremental costs (€) | Incremental QALYs | Cost per QALY Gained (€)a |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Base case | – 38,760 | 1.89 | Strongly dominant | |
| Time horizon | 10 years | – 63,898 | 0.63 | Strongly dominant |
| Discount rate (costs & effects) | 0% | – 21,011 | 2.99 | Strongly dominant |
| 5% | – 43,896 | 1.45 | Strongly dominant | |
| Dasatinib cost reduced | 50% | 88,276 | 1.89 | 46,687 |
| Nilotinib cost increased | 50% | 63,372 | 1.89 | 33,516 |
| Dasatinib MR4.5 (hazard ratio with nilotinib) | 1.0 | – 10,941 | 1.85 | Strongly dominant |
| Percentage of patients eligible for TFR | 43.6% | – 37,472 | 1.88 | Strongly dominant |
| 77.3% | – 45,883 | 1.94 | Strongly dominant | |
| Utility of TFR and general population | 0.85 | – 38,760 | 1.74 | Strongly dominant |
| 1.0 | – 38,760 | 2.06 | Strongly dominant | |
| 0.85 for TFR only | – 38,760 | 1.83 | Strongly dominant | |
| No TFR | – 35,108 | 1.81 | Strongly dominant | |
| No adverse event costs | – 38,714 | 1.89 | Strongly dominant | |
| No AP/BC drug costs | – 26,926 | 1.89 | Strongly dominant | |
| No end-of-life costs | – 38,251 | 1.89 | Strongly dominant |
AE adverse event, AP/BC accelerated phase/blastic crisis, MR molecular response, QALY quality-adjusted life-year TFR treatment free remission
a‘Strongly dominant’ indicates that nilotinib was associated with lower costs and higher QALYs than dasatinib
Fig. 3Two-way sensitivity analysis varying the cost of dasatinib and nilotinib. Cost effectiveness is based on a willingness-to-pay threshold of 87,330 €
| Based upon real-world comparative effectiveness data, nilotinib treatment of previously-treated CML patients was found to dominate dasatinib treatment, by increasing patient benefit at a reduced cost per patient. This finding stems from nilotinib inducing a greater molecular response, increasing patients’ years in treatment-free remission (TFR), and having a lower cost of drug treatment. |
| Inclusion of TFR leads to greater cost savings and QALY gains and should be considered in future cost-effectiveness analyses. |