1. The long-term social value of granulocyte colony-stimulating factors.
- Author
-
Sexton Ward A, Kabiri M, Yucel A, Silverstein AR, van Eijndhoven E, Bowers C, Bensink M, and Goldman D
- Subjects
- Computer Simulation, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Health Expenditures statistics & numerical data, Health Services economics, Health Services statistics & numerical data, Humans, Models, Econometric, Neoplasms drug therapy, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, Severity of Illness Index, Chemotherapy-Induced Febrile Neutropenia prevention & control, Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor administration & dosage, Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor economics, Neoplasms epidemiology
- Abstract
Objectives: Febrile neutropenia (FN) is a life-threatening complication of chemotherapy that can lead to hospitalizations, chemotherapy dose reductions or delays, and mortality. Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) prophylaxis reduces the incidence of FN, enabling patients to undergo and remain on myelosuppressive chemotherapy. We estimate the benefits of continuing current G-CSF use patterns and an alternative that aligns prophylactic G-CSF use with guideline recommendations., Study Design: Using The Health Economics Medical Innovation Simulation microsimulation, we estimated lifetime social value (SV) of prophylactic G-CSF for a nationally representative US population with breast, lung, and gynecological cancers and non-Hodgkin lymphoma., Methods: SV estimates included the cost of G-CSF, FN, chemotherapy relative dose intensity (RDI) less than 85% (RDI<85%), medical spending, and deaths for 3 scenarios: current use (current G-CSF use), targeted use (100% G-CSF use among patients with high FN risk), and reduced use (current G-CSF use reduced by 20% across all FN risk categories)., Results: Over 10 years, current use, compared with no G-CSF use, would decrease cases of FN by 3.3 million, prevent 354,000 cases of RDI<85%, and generate $96 billion in SV. Compared with current use, targeted use would decrease cases of FN by an additional 3.3 million, prevent 355,000 more cases of RDI<85%, and generate another $119 billion in SV. Reduced use would increase FN and RDI<85%, lowering SV by $18 billion compared with current use., Conclusions: Current use of G-CSF prophylaxis would provide $96 billion in SV over the next 10 years. Targeting G-CSF prophylaxis to align with guidelines would more than double SV, highlighting the substantial value of appropriate FN risk assessment and targeted G-CSF prophylaxis. more...
- Published
- 2019