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Quantifying Societal Burden of Radiation-Induced Cardiovascular Events in Breast Cancer Survivors

Authors :
Kimpe, E.
Werbrouck, A.
Mark De Ridder
Putman, K.
Faculty of Medicine and Pharmacy
Public Health Sciences
Interuniversity Centre For Health Economics Research
Clinical sciences
Radiation Therapy
Translational Radiation Oncology and Physics
Organisation, policy and social inequalities in health care
Source :
Web of Science
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Frontiers Media SA, 2022.

Abstract

Background and PurposeRadiation-induced cardiotoxicity is an important health concern for clinicians during treatment of breast cancer (BC) patients. Underlying mechanisms are well-documented, whereas little is known about the societal impact of this long-term effect. This study aimed to quantify the additional burden of radiation-induced cardiovascular (CV) diseases in BC survivors.Materials and MethodsConventional health economic modelling techniques were applied to estimate attributed CV-related costs and disutility in a hypothetical cohort of BC survivors. A situation in which radiotherapy caused an additional CV risk was compared with a situation in which this risk was not taken into account. Uncertainty was assessed via deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analyses. Analyses were performed from a broad societal perspective up until 20 years after BC treatment.ResultsRadiation-induced cardiotoxicity evokes a mean incremental cost of €275.10 per woman over a time horizon of 20 years after BC treatment. An additional decrement of 0.017 QALYs (per woman) might be expected when taking the radiation-induced cardiotoxic risk into account in BC survivors. Incremental costs and disutility increased with age. A scenario analysis showed that these results were more profound in women with more advanced staging.ConclusionOur analyses suggest that with current radiation techniques, rather minor costs and disutility are to be expected from radiation-induced cardiotoxicity in BC survivors. The cost of past investments in order to achieve current mean heart dose (MHD) seems justified when considering the gains from cost and disutility reduction resulting from radiation-induced cardiovascular events. The question we might consider is whether future opportunity costs associated with investments on further technological advancements offset the expected marginal benefit from further reducing the MHD.

Details

ISSN :
2234943X
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Frontiers in Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....994a6d239e2b822ee0c4baba632bb5aa
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2022.869529