Thursday, October 28, 2004
Improving Survival and Costs for Leukemia Patients
By Julie McKeel
The life expectancy and cost-effectiveness of treatment options
for patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) were explored in
companion articles published recently in Cancer.
Dr. Kevin Schulman, Director of the Center
for Clinical and Genetic Economics, with Kevin J. Anstrom, PhD,
Shelby D. Reed, PhD, Andrew S. Allen, PhD, and Jennifer A. Ludmer,
MS, all of the Outcomes
Research and Assessment Group, studied the long-term
survival of patients newly diagnosed with chronic-phase CML
given imatinib versus interferon-a plus low-dose cytarabine. The
companion
article compared the costs associated with both therapies.
Interferon-a was the treatment of choice for CML patients during
the 1990s. However, imatinib has shown promising results across
all phases of CML. In the first article, the research team estimated
long-term survival rates for patients who received imatinib as the
initial treatment.
The researchers estimated the long-term survival based on the rate
of complete cytogenetic response (the absence of mutated cells)
seen among treated patients. Two-year survival and gene-response
data were gathered from 553 patients in the International Randomized
Interferon versus ST571 Study (IRIS). Data from two other trials
? one studying long-term survival for patients with a positive gene
response to the combination therapy (317 patients), and one studying
patients with no gene response to the combination therapy (275 patients)
? also were included in the analysis.
Based on existing survival data for patients with a positive gene
response and those without, the authors assumed that similar survival
data applied when establishing their estimates for the same patient
population.
Estimated survival for patients treated with imatinib was 6.23
years longer than that of patients treated with the combination
therapy (15.3 versus 9.07 years). The advantage decreased slightly
to 5.9 years longer after adjusting for quality of life.
“We found that patients achieving [a positive gene response]
have superior survival compared with typical CML patients. Using
two independent survival data sources, we obtained multiple estimates
of life-years gained with highly consistent results,” the
investigators noted.
Based on results of individual studies similar to these, imatinib
has become standard therapy for patients who are newly diagnosed
with chronic-phase CML. However, the current healthcare environment
also demands cost-effectiveness, even for breakthrough therapies.
The second article therefore estimated the long-term cost-effectiveness
of imatinib versus combination therapy in the treatment of these
patients.
Cost, survival, and quality-adjusted survival estimates were based
on data from the first article. Survival estimates also were based
on published data for patients with and without mutated cells who
were treated with combination therapy.
Compared with combination therapy, imatinib is a cost-effective
initial treatment option. Estimated total lifetime costs for patients
first treated with imatinib were $242,000 higher than those first
given combination treatment. As noted above, the estimated survival
for these patients averages 6.2 years longer.
After adjustment for both quality of life and future cost increases,
the imatinib group survival estimate was almost 4 years longer,
and their costs were $168,000 higher. This translates to an extra
$43,300 in costs per additional year of life saved with imatinib
treatment.
The traditional threshold for cost-effectiveness is having extra
costs of less than $50,000 per additional year of life with a given
treatment, adjusted for quality of life. Thus the results for imatinib
fall well within this range.
“As additional [treatment] strategies emerge and long-term
data become available, it will be important to evaluate the cost-effectiveness
of add-on therapies, update our evaluation of existing therapies,
and determine how well our analysis reflects real-world experience,
“ note the investigators. “Our analysis shows that imatinib
is a cost-effective initial treatment option for newly diagnosed
chronic-phase CML patients.”
Novartis, the maker of imatinib, funded these analyses.
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