Cost-effectiveness analysis of treating patients with ntrk-positive cancer with the histology-independent therapy entrectinib

<p><strong>Objectives</strong><br> This study tackles several challenges of evaluating histology-independent treatments using entrectinib as an example. Histology-independent treatments are provided based on genetic marker(s) of tumors, regardless of the tumor type. We evalua...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Huygens, S, Vellekoop, H, Versteegh, M, Santi, I, Szilberhorn, L, Zelei, T, Nagy, B, Tsiachristas, A, Koleva-Kolarova, R, Wordsworth, S, Rutten-van Mölken, M
Other Authors: HEcoPerMed consortium
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2022
Description
Summary:<p><strong>Objectives</strong><br> This study tackles several challenges of evaluating histology-independent treatments using entrectinib as an example. Histology-independent treatments are provided based on genetic marker(s) of tumors, regardless of the tumor type. We evaluated the lifetime cost-effectiveness of testing all patients for NTRK fusions and treating the positive cases with entrectinib compared with no testing and standard of care (SoC) for all patients.<br><br> <strong>Methods</strong><br> The health economic model consisted of a decision tree reflecting the NTRK testing phase followed by a microsimulation model reflecting treatment with either entrectinib or SoC. Efficacy of entrectinib was based on data from basket trials, whereas historical data from NTRK-negative patients were corrected for the prognostic value of NTRK fusions to model SoC.<br><br> <strong>Results</strong><br> “Testing” (testing for NTRK fusions, with subsequent entrectinib treatment in NTRK-positive patients and SoC in NTRK-negative patients) had higher per-patient quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) and costs than “No testing” (SoC for all patients), with a difference of 0.0043 and €732, respectively. This corresponded to an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of €169 957/QALY and, using a cost-effectiveness threshold of €80 000/QALY, an incremental net monetary benefit of −€388. When excluding the costs of genetic testing for NTRK fusions, the ICER was reduced to €36 290/QALY and the incremental net monetary benefit increased to €188.<br><br> <strong>Conclusions</strong><br> When treatment requires the identification of a genetic marker, the associated costs and effects need to be accounted for. Because of the low prevalence of NTRK fusions, the number needed-to-test to identify patients eligible for entrectinib is large. Excluding the testing phase reduces the ICER substantially.</p>