1. Cost-effectiveness analysis of simple hysterectomy compared to radical hysterectomy for early cervical cancer: analysis from the GCIG/CCTG CX.5/SHAPE trial.
- Author
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Kwon JS, McTaggart-Cowan H, Ferguson SE, Samouëlian V, Lambaudie E, Guyon F, Tidy J, Williamson K, Gleeson N, de Kroon C, van Driel W, Mahner S, Hanker L, Goffin F, Berger R, Eyjólfsdóttir B, Kim JW, Brotto LA, Pataky R, Yeung SST, Chan KKW, Cheung MC, Ubi J, Tu D, Shepherd LE, and Plante M
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Middle Aged, Quality of Life, Adult, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local, Neoplasm Staging, Cost-Effectiveness Analysis, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms surgery, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms economics, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms pathology, Hysterectomy methods, Hysterectomy economics, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, Markov Chains
- Abstract
Objective: SHAPE (Simple Hysterectomy And PElvic node assessment) was an international phase III trial demonstrating that simple hysterectomy was non-inferior to radical hysterectomy for pelvic recurrence risk, but superior for quality of life and sexual health. The objective was to conduct a cost-effectiveness analysis comparing simple vs. radical hysterectomy for low-risk early-stage cervical cancer., Methods: Markov model compared the costs and benefits of simple vs. radical hysterectomy for early cervical cancer over a 5-year time horizon. Quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) were estimated from health utilities derived from EQ-5D-3L surveys. Sensitivity analyses accounted for uncertainty around key parameters. Monte Carlo simulation estimated complication numbers according to surgical procedure., Results: Simple hysterectomy was more effective and less costly than radical hysterectomy. Average overall costs were $11,022 and $12,533, and average gains were 3.56 and 3.54 QALYs for simple and radical hysterectomy, respectively. Baseline health utility scores were 0.81 and 0.83 for simple and radical hysterectomy, respectively. By year 3, these scores improved for simple hysterectomy (0.82) but not for radical hysterectomy (0.82). Assuming 800 early cervical cancer patients annually in Canada, the model estimated 3 vs. 82 patients with urinary retention, and 49 vs. 86 patients with urinary incontinence persisting 4 weeks after simple vs. radical hysterectomy, respectively. Results were most sensitive to variability in health utilities after surgery, but stable through wide ranges of costs and recurrence estimates., Conclusion: Simple hysterectomy is less costly and more effective in terms of quality-adjusted life expectancy compared to radical hysterectomy for early cervical cancer., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01658930., Competing Interests: JSK discloses research funding from Michael Smith Health Research BC (formerly Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research), ownership of shares from Hexamer Therapeutics, and speaker fee from Astra Zeneca. MP discloses research funding from Astra Zeneca, royalties from UpToDate, and serving as an Advisory Board member for Serono-Merck., (© 2024. Asian Society of Gynecologic Oncology, Korean Society of Gynecologic Oncology, and Japan Society of Gynecologic Oncology.)
- Published
- 2024
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