Hillner Bruce E
Department of Internal Medicine, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond 23298, USA.
Cancer. 2004 Sep 15;101(6):1311-22. doi: 10.1002/cncr.20492.
Women who have estrogen receptor (ER)-positive disease with postmenopausal onset and who receive tamoxifen as standard adjuvant treatment constitute the largest subgroup of patients with breast cancer. Recent data from the ATAC ('Arimidex, Tamoxifen Alone or in Combination') randomized trial indicate that anastrozole significantly reduces breast cancer recurrence rates but does not provide any advantage in terms of survival at 4 years posttreatment. Furthermore, anastrozole and tamoxifen were found to have different toxicity profiles. The goals of the current study were to estimate the disease-free survival (DFS) rates and potential survival benefits associated with anastrozole use and to determine whether the incremental cost-effectiveness (ICE) was low enough to warrant an immediate switch to the use of this agent, as the long-term conclusions of the ATAC trial will not be available for several years.
A computer simulation model assessed the outcomes of 64-year-old women with ER-positive breast cancer who subsequently received either anastrozole or tamoxifen for 5 years. Daily recurrence risks, as well as the relative risks associated with various treatment-related events, were calculated using data from the ATAC trial. Study endpoints included breast cancer recurrence-free survival, anticipated survival resulting from an anastrozole-induced decrease in systemic disease recurrence rates, and survival adjusted for quality of life and for hip fracture risk over periods of 4, 12, and 20 years.
After 4 years, the projected DFS benefit associated with anastrozole was 14 days, with an ICE of $167,500 per year. Projected 12 and 20 years into the future, DFS benefits increased to 2.9 months and 5.3 months, respectively. The corresponding benefits in terms of overall survival were 0.9 months and 2.0 months, respectively, with the ICE becoming < $100,000 per life year once the projection horizon exceeded 12 years. The inclusion of quality-of-life weightings for nonfatal outcomes modestly favored anastrozole in the short term; however, if anastrozole use is associated with an increased risk of hip fracture, then the long-term benefit associated with this agent is reduced by approximately 25%.
Adjuvant anastrozole is projected to result in a substantial improvement in DFS for patients with breast cancer. If this DFS benefit were to ultimately lead to a survival benefit, then the ICE of anastrozole use would be acceptable for patients expected to live longer than 12 years. Decision models are useful for generating realistic projections for stakeholders who are considering competing options that impact survival and quality of life and have associated societal costs.
患有雌激素受体(ER)阳性绝经后疾病且接受他莫昔芬作为标准辅助治疗的女性构成了乳腺癌患者的最大亚组。来自ATAC(“阿那曲唑、他莫昔芬单药或联合用药”)随机试验的最新数据表明,阿那曲唑可显著降低乳腺癌复发率,但在治疗后4年的生存方面并无优势。此外,发现阿那曲唑和他莫昔芬具有不同的毒性特征。本研究的目的是评估与使用阿那曲唑相关的无病生存期(DFS)率和潜在生存获益,并确定增量成本效益(ICE)是否低到足以保证立即改用该药物,因为ATAC试验的长期结论在数年内都无法获得。
一个计算机模拟模型评估了64岁ER阳性乳腺癌女性患者的结局,这些患者随后接受阿那曲唑或他莫昔芬治疗5年。使用ATAC试验的数据计算每日复发风险以及与各种治疗相关事件相关的相对风险。研究终点包括乳腺癌无复发生存期、因阿那曲唑导致全身疾病复发率降低而预期的生存情况,以及在4年、12年和20年期间根据生活质量和髋部骨折风险调整后的生存情况。
4年后,与阿那曲唑相关的预计DFS获益为14天,ICE为每年167,500美元。预计在未来12年和20年,DFS获益分别增加到2.9个月和5.3个月。总体生存方面的相应获益分别为0.9个月和2.0个月,一旦预测期超过12年,ICE降至每生命年<100,000美元。纳入非致命结局的生活质量权重在短期内略微有利于阿那曲唑;然而,如果使用阿那曲唑与髋部骨折风险增加相关,那么该药物的长期获益将降低约25%。
预计辅助使用阿那曲唑可使乳腺癌患者的DFS有实质性改善。如果这种DFS获益最终能带来生存获益,那么对于预期寿命超过12年的患者,使用阿那曲唑的ICE将是可接受的。决策模型对于为考虑影响生存和生活质量且伴有社会成本的竞争选项的利益相关者生成现实的预测很有用。