| Literature DB >> 35233755 |
Yuki Takumoto1,2, Takeru Shiroiwa3, Kojiro Shimozuma4, Hiroji Iwata5, Masato Takahashi6, Shinichi Baba7, Kokoro Kobayashi8, Yasuhiro Hagiwara9, Takuya Kawahara10, Yukari Uemura11, Hirofumi Mukai12, Naruto Taira13, Masataka Sawaki5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35233755 PMCID: PMC8930935 DOI: 10.1007/s40261-022-01124-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Drug Investig ISSN: 1173-2563 Impact factor: 2.859
Input utility parameters
| Status | Period | H + CT | H | Reference | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | STD | Mean | STD | |||
| Stable disease | Baselines | 0.819 | 0.164 | 0.781 | 0.153 | RESPECT trial [ |
| 1–2 months | 0.782 | 0.171 | 0.829 | 0.158 | RESPECT trial [ | |
| 3–12 months | 0.818 | 0.164 | 0.841 | 0.152 | RESPECT trial [ | |
| 13–36 months | 0.808 | 0.159 | 0.846 | 0.172 | RESPECT trial [ | |
| After 48 months | 0.715 | Lloyd et al. [ | ||||
| Progressive disease | 0.715 | Lloyd et al. [ | ||||
H + CT trastuzumab with chemotherapy, H trastuzumab monotherapy
Fig. 1Partitioned survival model with three health states
Input cost parameters (Japanese Yen (JPY)/month)
| Status | Period | H + CT | H | Reference | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | STD | Mean | STD | |||
| Stable disease | 0–6 months | 245,447 | 189,797 | 220,061 | 102,582 | RESPECT trial [ |
| 7–12 months | 215,146 | 119,305 | 202,290 | 98,640 | RESPECT trial [ | |
| 13–24 months | 111,379 | 102,890 | 60,190 | 81,863 | RESPECT trial [ | |
| After 25 months | 28,963 | Estimationa | ||||
| Progressive disease | 166,893 | Estimationb | ||||
H + CT trastuzumab with chemotherapy, H trastuzumab monotherapy
aAssuming that the cost at month 25 and beyond in stable disease would continue to be the cost at month 24 in the RESPECT trial
bEstimated patient data of both arms for the progressive disease state in the RESPECT trial
Total cost, total QALYs, and ICER for each regimen
| Result | H + CT | H | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total cost (JPY) | 14,752,181 | 14,196,642 | 555,539 |
| Stable disease | 7,862,234 | 6,625,437 | 1,236,798 |
| Progressive disease | 6,889,947 | 7,571,205 | − 681,259 |
| Total QALYs | 9.308 | 9.101 | 0.206 |
| Stable disease | 6.848 | 6.398 | 0.450 |
| Progressive disease | 2.460 | 2.703 | − 0.243 |
| ICER (JPY/QALY) | 2,691,739 | – | – |
QALY quality-adjusted life year, ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, H + CT trastuzumab with chemotherapy, H trastuzumab monotherapy
Fig. 2Estimated disease-free survival and overall survival curves. H + CT trastuzumab with chemotherapy, H trastuzumab monotherapy
One-way sensitivity analysis
| Scenario | Basis for setting | ICER | |
|---|---|---|---|
| (JPY/QALY) | |||
| Lower or base | Upper | ||
| 1-A: Cost of stable disease in H + CT arm | ± 20% | Dominant | 10,310,676 |
| 1-B: Cost of stable disease in H arm | ± 20% | 9,112,151 | Dominant |
| 2-A: Cost of progressive disease in H + CT arm | ± 20% | Dominant | 9,368,476 |
| 2-B: Cost of progressive disease in H arm | ± 20% | 10,028,653 | Dominant |
| 3-A: Utility value of stable disease in H + CT arm | ± 5% | Dominated | 1,012,299 |
| 3-B: Utility value of stable disease in H arm | ± 5% | 1,055,537 | Dominated |
| 4-A: Utility value of progressive disease in H + CT arm | ± 5% | 6,661,475 | 1,686,633 |
| 4-B: Utility value of progressive disease in H arm | ± 5% | 1,626,578 | 7,798,701 |
| 5: Using a X-year time horizon | 10 year | Dominated | – |
| 6: Using a X-year time horizon | 15 year | 11,860,467 | – |
| 7: Using X% discount rate for both costs and QALYs | 3% | 3,237,786 | – |
| 8: The OS curve of both arms is equala | – | 3,011,252 | – |
| 9: The OS curve and utility value after 36 months of both arms are equala | – | 4,433,041 | – |
QALY quality-adjusted life year, ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, H + CT trastuzumab with chemotherapy, H trastuzumab monotherapy
aControl arm was H + CT arm
Fig. 3Scatter plot of probabilistic sensitivity analysis results. WTP willingness to pay, QALY quality-adjusted life year
Fig. 4Cost-effectiveness acceptability curves. QALY quality-adjusted life year
| We examined the cost-effectiveness of trastuzumab + chemotherapy as adjuvant chemotherapy (AdjCT) in patients with human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-positive breast cancer (BC) aged over 70 years in Japan, comparing it with trastuzumab monotherapy using the three-state partitioned survival model. |
| The base-case analysis suggests that AdjCT with trastuzumab + chemotherapy is likely to be a cost-effective choice for patients with HER2-positive BC aged 70 years or older. |
| In contrast, this result was uncertain because the incremental cost-effectiveness ratios and quality-adjusted life years of trastuzumab + chemotherapy mainly depended on the number of events and long-term efficacy in both arms. |