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Evaluation of Cost-Effectiveness of Adjuvant Osimertinib in Patients with Resected EGFR Mutation-Positive Non-small Cell Lung Cancer.

Authors :
Verhoek A
Cheema P
Melosky B
Samson B
Shepherd FA
de Marinis F
John T
Wu YL
Heeg B
Van Dalfsen N
Bracke B
Miranda M
Shaw S
Moldaver D
Source :
PharmacoEconomics - open [Pharmacoecon Open] 2023 May; Vol. 7 (3), pp. 455-467. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Feb 22.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: For many patients with resected epidermal growth factor receptor mutation-positive (EGFRm) non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), current standard of care (SoC) is adjuvant chemotherapy; however, disease recurrence remains high. Based on positive results from ADAURA (NCT02511106), adjuvant osimertinib was approved for treatment of resected stage IB‒IIIA EGFRm NSCLC.<br />Objective: The aim was to assess the cost-effectiveness of adjuvant osimertinib in patients with resected EGFRm NSCLC.<br />Methods: A five-health-state, state-transition model with time dependency was developed to estimate lifetime (38 years) costs and survival of resected EGFRm patients treated with adjuvant osimertinib or placebo (active surveillance), with/without prior adjuvant chemotherapy, using a Canadian Public Healthcare perspective. Transitions between health states were modeled using ADAURA and FLAURA (NCT02296125) data, Canadian life tables, and real-world data (CancerLinQ Discovery <superscript>®</superscript> ). The model used a 'cure' assumption: patients remaining disease free for 5 years after treatment completion for resectable disease were deemed 'cured.' Health state utility values and healthcare resource usage estimates were derived from Canadian real-world evidence.<br />Results: In the reference case, adjuvant osimertinib treatment led to a mean 3.20 additional quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs; (11.77 vs 8.57) per patient, versus active surveillance. The modeled median percentage of patients alive at 10 years was 62.5% versus 39.3%, respectively. Osimertinib was associated with mean added costs of Canadian dollars (C$)114,513 per patient and a cost/QALY (incremental cost-effectiveness ratio) of C$35,811 versus active surveillance. Model robustness was demonstrated by scenario analyses.<br />Conclusions: In this cost-effectiveness assessment, adjuvant osimertinib was cost-effective compared with active surveillance for patients with completely resected stage IB‒IIIA EGFRm NSCLC after SoC.<br /> (© 2023. The Author(s).)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2509-4254
Volume :
7
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
PharmacoEconomics - open
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
36811822
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s41669-023-00396-0