Melnikow Joy, Kuenneth Christina, Helms L Jay, Barnato Amber, Kuppermann Miriam, Birch Stephen, Nuovo James
Department of Family and Community Medicine, University of California-Davis, Sacramento, California 95817, USA.
Cancer. 2006 Sep 1;107(5):950-8. doi: 10.1002/cncr.22075.
Tamoxifen is a prototypic cancer chemopreventive agent, yet clinical trials have not evaluated its effect on mortality or the impact of drug pricing on its cost-effectiveness.
A state-transition Markov model for a hypothetical cohort of women age 50 years was used to evaluate the effects of tamoxifen on mortality and tamoxifen price on cost-effectiveness. Incidence and mortality rates for breast and endometrial cancers were derived from Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results statistics, and noncancer outcomes were obtained from published studies. Relative risks of outcomes were derived from the National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project P-1 trial. Costs were based on Medicare reimbursements.
Projected overall mortality for women at 1.67% 5-year breast cancer risk showed little difference with or without tamoxifen, resulting in a cost-effectiveness ratio of $1,335,690 per life-year saved as a result of tamoxifen use. Adjusting for the differential impact of estrogen receptor-negative cancers, tamoxifen increased mortality for women with a uterus until the 5-year breast cancer risk reached > or =2.1%. Assigning the Canadian price for tamoxifen dramatically reduced the incremental cost (to $123,780 per life-year saved). At that price, the use of tamoxifen was less costly and more effective for women with 5-year breast cancer risks >4%.
Tamoxifen may increase mortality in women at the lower end of the "high-risk" range for breast cancer. If prices in the U.S. approximated Canadian prices, then tamoxifen use for breast cancer risk reduction in women with a 5-year risk >3% could be a reasonable strategy to reduce the incidence of breast cancer. Because they are used by many unaffected individuals, the price of chemopreventive agents has a major influence on their cost-effectiveness.
他莫昔芬是一种典型的癌症化学预防药物,但临床试验尚未评估其对死亡率的影响或药物定价对其成本效益的影响。
使用针对50岁女性假设队列的状态转换马尔可夫模型来评估他莫昔芬对死亡率的影响以及他莫昔芬价格对成本效益的影响。乳腺癌和子宫内膜癌的发病率和死亡率数据来自监测、流行病学和最终结果统计,非癌症结局数据来自已发表的研究。结局的相对风险来自国家外科辅助乳腺和肠道项目P-1试验。成本基于医疗保险报销费用。
对于5年乳腺癌风险为1.67%的女性,预计总体死亡率在使用或不使用他莫昔芬的情况下差异不大,使用他莫昔芬导致每挽救一个生命年的成本效益比为1,335,690美元。调整雌激素受体阴性癌症的差异影响后,他莫昔芬会增加有子宫女性的死亡率,直到5年乳腺癌风险达到≥2.1%。采用加拿大的他莫昔芬价格可大幅降低增量成本(降至每挽救一个生命年123,780美元)。在该价格下,对于5年乳腺癌风险>4%的女性,使用他莫昔芬成本更低且更有效。
他莫昔芬可能会增加处于乳腺癌“高风险”范围下限的女性的死亡率。如果美国的价格接近加拿大的价格,那么对于5年风险>3%的女性使用他莫昔芬来降低乳腺癌风险可能是降低乳腺癌发病率的合理策略。由于许多未受影响的个体也会使用化学预防药物,其价格对成本效益有重大影响。