Cost-effectiveness of zoledronic acid and strontium-89 as bone protecting treatments in addition to chemotherapy in patients with metastatic castrate-refractory prostate cancer: results from the TRAPEZE trial (ISRCTN 12808747).
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ICR Authors
Authors
Andronis, L
Goranitis, I
Pirrie, S
Pope, A
Barton, D
Collins, S
Daunton, A
McLaren, D
O'Sullivan, JM
Parker, C
Porfiri, E
Staffurth, J
Stanley, A
Wylie, J
Beesley, S
Birtle, A
Brown, JE
Chakraborti, P
Hussain, SA
Russell, JM
Billingham, LJ
James, ND
Goranitis, I
Pirrie, S
Pope, A
Barton, D
Collins, S
Daunton, A
McLaren, D
O'Sullivan, JM
Parker, C
Porfiri, E
Staffurth, J
Stanley, A
Wylie, J
Beesley, S
Birtle, A
Brown, JE
Chakraborti, P
Hussain, SA
Russell, JM
Billingham, LJ
James, ND
Document Type
Other
Date
2017-04
Date Accepted
Abstract
Objective To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of adding zoledronic acid or strontium-89 to standard docetaxel chemotherapy for patients with castrate-refractory prostate cancer (CRPC).Patients and methods Data on resource use and quality of life for 707 patients collected prospectively in the TRAPEZE 2 × 2 factorial randomised trial (ISRCTN 12808747) were used to assess the cost-effectiveness of i) zoledronic acid versus no zoledronic acid (ZA vs. no ZA), and ii) strontium-89 versus no strontium-89 (Sr89 vs. no Sr89). Costs were estimated from the perspective of the National Health Service in the UK and included expenditures for trial treatments, concomitant medications, and use of related hospital and primary care services. Quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) were calculated according to patients' responses to the generic EuroQol EQ-5D-3L instrument, which evaluates health status. Results are expressed as incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) and cost-effectiveness acceptability curves.Results The per-patient cost for ZA was £12 667, £251 higher than the equivalent cost in the no ZA group. Patients in the ZA group had on average 0.03 QALYs more than their counterparts in no ZA group. The ICER for this comparison was £8 005. Sr89 was associated with a cost of £13 230, £1365 higher than no Sr89, and a gain of 0.08 QALYs compared to no Sr89. The ICER for Sr89 was £16 884. The probabilities of ZA and Sr89 being cost-effective were 0.64 and 0.60, respectively.Conclusions The addition of bone-targeting treatments to standard chemotherapy led to a small improvement in QALYs for a modest increase in cost (or cost-savings). ZA and Sr89 resulted in ICERs below conventional willingness-to-pay per QALY thresholds, suggesting that their addition to chemotherapy may represent a cost-effective use of resources.
Citation
BJU international, 2017, 119 (4), pp. 522 - 529
Source Title
Publisher
ISSN
1464-4096
eISSN
1464-410X
Collections
Research Team
Prostate and Bladder Cancer Research