Cancers (Jan 2020)

A Trial-Based Cost-Utility Analysis of Metastasis-Directed Therapy for Oligorecurrent Prostate Cancer

  • Elise De Bleser,
  • Ruben Willems,
  • Karel Decaestecker,
  • Lieven Annemans,
  • Aurélie De Bruycker,
  • Valérie Fonteyne,
  • Nicolaas Lumen,
  • Filip Ameye,
  • Ignace Billiet,
  • Steven Joniau,
  • Gert De Meerleer,
  • Piet Ost,
  • Renée Bultijnck

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers12010132
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
p. 132

Abstract

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The optimal management of patients with oligorecurrent prostate cancer (PCa) is unknown. There is growing interest in metastasis-directed therapy (MDT) for this population. The objective was to assess cost-utility from a Belgian healthcare payer’s perspective of MDT and delayed androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) in comparison with surveillance and delayed ADT, and with immediate ADT. A Markov decision-analytic trial-based model was developed, projecting the results over a 5-year time horizon with one-month cycles. Clinical data were derived from the STOMP trial and literature. Treatment costs were derived from official government documents. Probabilistic sensitivity analyses showed that MDT is cost-effective compared to surveillance (ICER: €8393/quality adjusted life year (QALY)) and immediate ADT (dominant strategy). The ICER is most sensitive to utilities in the different health states and the first month MDT cost. At a willingness-to-pay threshold of €40,000 per QALY, the cost of the first month MDT should not exceed €8136 to be cost-effective compared to surveillance. The Markov-model suggests that MDT for oligorecurrent PCa is potentially cost-effective in comparison with surveillance and delayed ADT, and in comparison with immediate ADT.

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