AI Article Synopsis

  • The study assessed the cost-effectiveness of sunitinib combined with best supportive care (BSC) for treating non-resectable pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (NET) from a Mexican healthcare perspective.
  • Sunitinib treatment was found to enhance overall survival, progression-free survival, and quality-adjusted life years (QALY) compared to placebo, but resulted in higher medical costs per patient.
  • The analysis indicated that sunitinib+BSC could be a cost-effective option if the willingness to pay exceeds certain thresholds, suggesting significant clinical benefits despite increased treatment costs.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Sunitinib had showed a substantial clinical benefit in patients with non-resectable pancreatic Neuroendocrine Tumors (NET). The objective of this study was to estimate the cost-effectiveness of sunitinib in the treatment of non-resectable pancreatic NET, from the perspective of the Social Security Mexican Institute (IMSS).

Methods: A Markov model (2-week cycles) was used to estimate the health and economic consequences of sunitinib 37.5mg/day+best supportive care (BSC) regarding placebo+BSC (ten-years horizon, discount rate: 5%). Effectiveness measures were: overall survival (OS), progression-free survival (PFS) and quality adjusted life years (QALY). Resource utilization (BSC, adverse events management, medical follow-up) was estimated through a survey with Mexican oncologists (n=10). Unit costs of medication and medical resources were obtained from institutional sources. Sensitivity analyses were performed and acceptability curves were constructed.

Results: Sunitinib+BSC gained 0.49 years (PFS), 1.18 years (OS) and 0.70 QALY against placebo+BSC. Sunitinib+BSC increased medical direct costs (2011 US$) per patient in $20,854, which was driven by acquisition costs of sunitinib and medical follow up before progression. ICER's were $42,157, $17,662 and $29,808 per progression-free year, life-year and QALY gained, respectively, which remained robust through±25% changes in main parameters. At willingness to pay higher than $40,000, $22,400 and $37,600 sunitinib+BSC becomes the most cost-effective alternative in regards to PFS, OS and QALYs, respectively.

Conclusion: At IMSS, sunitinib+BSC would provide substantial clinical benefits to patients suffering unresectable pancreatic NET, although the latter would increase medical costs of treatment and clinical follow up.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.vhri.2012.10.005DOI Listing

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