Cargando…

Evaluating cost benefits of combination therapies for advanced melanoma

BACKGROUND: Although a number of monoimmunotherapies and targeted therapies are available to treat BRAF+ advanced melanoma, response rates remain relatively low in the range of 22–53% with progression-free survival (PFS) in the range of 4.8–8.8 months. Recently, combination targeted therapies have i...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Jensen, Ivar S., Zacherle, Emily, Blanchette, Christopher M., Zhang, Jie, Yin, Wes
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Just Medical Media Limited 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4974051/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27540409
http://dx.doi.org/10.7573/dic.212297
_version_ 1782446495492997120
author Jensen, Ivar S.
Zacherle, Emily
Blanchette, Christopher M.
Zhang, Jie
Yin, Wes
author_facet Jensen, Ivar S.
Zacherle, Emily
Blanchette, Christopher M.
Zhang, Jie
Yin, Wes
author_sort Jensen, Ivar S.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Although a number of monoimmunotherapies and targeted therapies are available to treat BRAF+ advanced melanoma, response rates remain relatively low in the range of 22–53% with progression-free survival (PFS) in the range of 4.8–8.8 months. Recently, combination targeted therapies have improved response rates to about 66–69%, PFS to 11.0–12.6 months and overall survival (OS) to 25.1–25.6 months. While combination immunotherapies have improved response rates of 67 compared with 19–29% with monotherapies and improved PFS of 11.7 compared with 4.4–5.8 months with monotherapies, the OS benefit is yet to be established in phase 3 trials. As healthcare costs continue to rise, US payers have a predominant interest in assessing the value of available treatments. Therefore, a cost-benefit model was developed to evaluate the value of treating BRAF+ advanced melanoma with two combination therapies: nivolumab + ipilimumab (N+I) and dabrafenib + trametinib (D+T). SCOPE: The model was used to estimate total costs, total costs by expenditure category, cost per month of PFS and cost per responder for the payer, and societal perspectives of treating advanced melanoma patients with the BRAF V600 mutation using combination targeted therapy (D+T) or combination immunotherapy (N+I). The model followed patients from initiation of treatment to the point of progression or death. Deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analyses were conducted to evaluate the robustness of the results and to understand the dispersion of simulated results. FINDINGS: Based on a hypothetical payer with one million covered lives, it was expected that fourteen metastatic melanoma patients with the BRAF V600 mutation would be treated each year. Cost-benefit with N+I and D+T was simulated from the payer perspective. The cost per month of PFS for N+I was $22,162, while that for D+T was $17,716 (−$4,446 cost difference); the cost per responder for N+I was $388,746 and that for D+T was $282,429 (−$106,316 cost difference). The cost per month of PFS and per responder from the societal perspective resembled the patterns observed from the payer’s perspective: the cost per month of PFS for N+I was $22,843, while that for D+T was $18,283 (−$4,560 cost difference). The cost per responder for N+I was $400,695 and that for D+T was $291,473 (−$109,222 cost difference). The totals of travel and treatment time for N+I and D+T were 58 hours and 3.9 hours per patient, respectively, of which total infusion time for N+I accounted for a majority – 59% – of the 58 hours. Sensitivity analyses indicated that results were most sensitive to model inputs for median PFS, body weight, and drug cost. Moreover, D+T is likely associated with a lower cost per month of PFS and cost per responder than N+I, except at low body weights (less than 57 kg). CONCLUSION: The model presented in this study was used to analyze the clinical and economic benefit of using combination therapies in advanced melanoma patients with the BRAF V600 mutation. This analysis suggests D+T therapy is associated with less patient time and lower costs relative to N+I to gain similar PFS and overall response rate (ORR) benefits.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4974051
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2016
publisher Just Medical Media Limited
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-49740512016-08-18 Evaluating cost benefits of combination therapies for advanced melanoma Jensen, Ivar S. Zacherle, Emily Blanchette, Christopher M. Zhang, Jie Yin, Wes Drugs Context Original Research BACKGROUND: Although a number of monoimmunotherapies and targeted therapies are available to treat BRAF+ advanced melanoma, response rates remain relatively low in the range of 22–53% with progression-free survival (PFS) in the range of 4.8–8.8 months. Recently, combination targeted therapies have improved response rates to about 66–69%, PFS to 11.0–12.6 months and overall survival (OS) to 25.1–25.6 months. While combination immunotherapies have improved response rates of 67 compared with 19–29% with monotherapies and improved PFS of 11.7 compared with 4.4–5.8 months with monotherapies, the OS benefit is yet to be established in phase 3 trials. As healthcare costs continue to rise, US payers have a predominant interest in assessing the value of available treatments. Therefore, a cost-benefit model was developed to evaluate the value of treating BRAF+ advanced melanoma with two combination therapies: nivolumab + ipilimumab (N+I) and dabrafenib + trametinib (D+T). SCOPE: The model was used to estimate total costs, total costs by expenditure category, cost per month of PFS and cost per responder for the payer, and societal perspectives of treating advanced melanoma patients with the BRAF V600 mutation using combination targeted therapy (D+T) or combination immunotherapy (N+I). The model followed patients from initiation of treatment to the point of progression or death. Deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analyses were conducted to evaluate the robustness of the results and to understand the dispersion of simulated results. FINDINGS: Based on a hypothetical payer with one million covered lives, it was expected that fourteen metastatic melanoma patients with the BRAF V600 mutation would be treated each year. Cost-benefit with N+I and D+T was simulated from the payer perspective. The cost per month of PFS for N+I was $22,162, while that for D+T was $17,716 (−$4,446 cost difference); the cost per responder for N+I was $388,746 and that for D+T was $282,429 (−$106,316 cost difference). The cost per month of PFS and per responder from the societal perspective resembled the patterns observed from the payer’s perspective: the cost per month of PFS for N+I was $22,843, while that for D+T was $18,283 (−$4,560 cost difference). The cost per responder for N+I was $400,695 and that for D+T was $291,473 (−$109,222 cost difference). The totals of travel and treatment time for N+I and D+T were 58 hours and 3.9 hours per patient, respectively, of which total infusion time for N+I accounted for a majority – 59% – of the 58 hours. Sensitivity analyses indicated that results were most sensitive to model inputs for median PFS, body weight, and drug cost. Moreover, D+T is likely associated with a lower cost per month of PFS and cost per responder than N+I, except at low body weights (less than 57 kg). CONCLUSION: The model presented in this study was used to analyze the clinical and economic benefit of using combination therapies in advanced melanoma patients with the BRAF V600 mutation. This analysis suggests D+T therapy is associated with less patient time and lower costs relative to N+I to gain similar PFS and overall response rate (ORR) benefits. Just Medical Media Limited 2016-07-15 /pmc/articles/PMC4974051/ /pubmed/27540409 http://dx.doi.org/10.7573/dic.212297 Text en © 2016 Jensen IS, Zacherle E, Blanchette CM, Zhang J, Yin W. Distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons License Deed CC BY NC ND 3.0 which allows anyone to copy, distribute, and transmit the article provided it is properly attributed in the manner specified below. No commercial use without permission.
spellingShingle Original Research
Jensen, Ivar S.
Zacherle, Emily
Blanchette, Christopher M.
Zhang, Jie
Yin, Wes
Evaluating cost benefits of combination therapies for advanced melanoma
title Evaluating cost benefits of combination therapies for advanced melanoma
title_full Evaluating cost benefits of combination therapies for advanced melanoma
title_fullStr Evaluating cost benefits of combination therapies for advanced melanoma
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating cost benefits of combination therapies for advanced melanoma
title_short Evaluating cost benefits of combination therapies for advanced melanoma
title_sort evaluating cost benefits of combination therapies for advanced melanoma
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4974051/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27540409
http://dx.doi.org/10.7573/dic.212297
work_keys_str_mv AT jensenivars evaluatingcostbenefitsofcombinationtherapiesforadvancedmelanoma
AT zacherleemily evaluatingcostbenefitsofcombinationtherapiesforadvancedmelanoma
AT blanchettechristopherm evaluatingcostbenefitsofcombinationtherapiesforadvancedmelanoma
AT zhangjie evaluatingcostbenefitsofcombinationtherapiesforadvancedmelanoma
AT yinwes evaluatingcostbenefitsofcombinationtherapiesforadvancedmelanoma