Current Oncology (May 2021)

Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of 12-Versus 4-Weekly Administration of Bone-Targeted Agents in Patients with Bone Metastases from Breast and Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer

  • Megan M. Tu,
  • Mark Clemons,
  • Carol Stober,
  • Ahwon Jeong,
  • Lisa Vandermeer,
  • Mihaela Mates,
  • Phillip Blanchette,
  • Anil Abraham Joy,
  • Olexiy Aseyev,
  • Gregory Pond,
  • Dean Fergusson,
  • Terry L. Ng,
  • Kednapa Thavorn

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol28030171
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28, no. 3
pp. 1847 – 1856

Abstract

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A cost–utility analysis was performed based on the Rethinking Clinical Trials (REaCT) bone-targeted agents (BTA) clinical trial that compared 12-weekly (once every 12 weeks) (n = 130) versus 4-weekly (once every 4 weeks) (n = 133) BTA dosing for metastatic breast and castration-resistant prostate (CRPC) cancer. Using a decision tree model, we calculated treatment and symptomatic skeletal event (SSE) costs as well as quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) for each treatment option. Deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analyses were performed to assess the robustness of the study findings. The total cost of BTA treatment in Canadian dollars (C$) and estimated QALYs was C$8965.03 and 0.605 QALY in the 4-weekly group versus C$5669.95 and 0.612 QALY in the 12-weekly group, respectively. De-escalation from 4-weekly to 12-weekly BTA reduces cost (C$3293.75) and improves QALYs by 0.008 unit, suggesting that 12-weekly BTA dominates 4-weekly BTA in breast and CRPC patients with bone metastases. Sensitivity analysis suggests high levels of uncertainty in the cost-effectiveness findings. De-escalation of bone-targeted agents is cost-effective from the Canadian public payer’s perspective.

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