Abstract P5-15-02: The benefit of targeted therapeutics in medical oncology since the development of trastuzumab

2012 
Background: Trastuzumab has achieved widespread approval and funding across much of the developed world for metastatic and, later, adjuvant HER2/neu positive breast cancer. This success may be attributed to a favorable therapeutic index and incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER). Has the success of trastuzumab been replicated by newer therapeutics? Methods: The societal marginal benefit gained from a new drug can be estimated by calculating the difference between the incremental quality-adjusted life-years gained (QALY) and the maximum willingness-to-pay (WTP) for the increase in health by society. A systematic review was employed to amass all English-language cost-effectiveness analyses (CEA) on small-molecule inhibitors and monoclonal antibodies approved for the treatment of solid malignancies. Searches of PubMed and EMBASE provided citations published between 1995 and February 5, 2012. Two reviewers each independently assessed the eligibility of all abstracts and subsequently abstracted data from published abstracts and manuscripts. CEAs comparing two experimental treatments to each other were excluded. Incremental costs and ICERs were converted from their native currency to U.S. dollars according to their average exchange-rates since publication. Results: Of the 1,576 citations identified, 60 were included in the final analysis. Tumor-types studied included breast, colorectal, gastric, gastrointestinal stromal, head and neck, non-small cell lung, ovarian, hepatocellular, and renal cancers, and pancreatic neuro-endocrine tumor. Studies originated from USA (14%), continental Europe (37%), England (12%), Canada (12%), Asia (11%), and Latin America (12%). Median WTP was $65,000 (range $30,000-$297,000). 92% of all CEAs included considered to be cost-effective by the CEA9s authors. Trastuzumab was studied for breast cancer treatment by 13 CEAs in the adjuvant setting and by 3 CEAs in the metastatic setting. Trastuzumab is significantly more cost-effective than other targeted treatments (mean ICER $32,000 vs. $108,000, p = 0.001). 84% of trastuzumab studies found its ICER Conclusion: Trastuzumab represents a significant achievement in clinical medicine and also provides greater value than newer targeted chemotherapy, in general. Newer therapeutics are being priced close to the maximum WTP of society. Adjuvant therapy may prove more cost-effective than therapy in the metastatic setting. Unless better pricing arrangements can be made or future therapies produce greater incremental clinical benefits for the same cost, it seems unlikely that the societal success of trastuzumab will be replicated. However, this analysis assumes that maximizing societal health, not profit, is of primary concern. Citation Information: Cancer Res 2012;72(24 Suppl):Abstract nr P5-15-02.
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