Westwood Marie, van Asselt Thea, Ramaekers Bram, Whiting Penny, Joore Manuela, Armstrong Nigel, Noake Caro, Ross Janine, Severens Johan, Kleijnen Jos
Kleijnen Systematic Reviews Ltd, York, UK.
Department of Clinical Epidemiology and Medical Technology Assessment, Maastricht University Medical Centre, Maastricht, the Netherlands.
Health Technol Assess. 2014 Oct;18(62):1-132. doi: 10.3310/hta18620.
Bowel cancer is the third most common cancer in the UK. Most bowel cancers are initially treated with surgery, but around 17% spread to the liver. When this happens, sometimes the liver tumour can be treated surgically, or chemotherapy may be used to shrink the tumour to make surgery possible. Kirsten rat sarcoma viral oncogene (KRAS) mutations make some tumours less responsive to treatment with biological therapies such as cetuximab. There are a variety of tests available to detect these mutations. These vary in the specific mutations that they detect, the amount of mutation they detect, the amount of tumour cells needed, the time to give a result, the error rate and cost.
To compare the performance and cost-effectiveness of KRAS mutation tests in differentiating adults with metastatic colorectal cancer whose metastases are confined to the liver and are unresectable and who may benefit from first-line treatment with cetuximab in combination with standard chemotherapy from those who should receive standard chemotherapy alone.
Thirteen databases, including MEDLINE and EMBASE, research registers and conference proceedings were searched to January 2013. Additional data were obtained from an online survey of laboratories participating in the UK National External Quality Assurance Scheme pilot for KRAS mutation testing.
A systematic review of the evidence was carried out using standard methods. Randomised controlled trials were assessed for quality using the Cochrane risk of bias tool. Diagnostic accuracy studies were assessed using the QUADAS-2 tool. There were insufficient data for meta-analysis. For accuracy studies we calculated sensitivity and specificity together with 95% confidence intervals (CIs). Survival data were summarised as hazard ratios and tumour response data were summarised as relative risks, with 95% CIs. The health economic analysis considered the long-term costs and quality-adjusted life-years associated with different tests followed by treatment with standard chemotherapy or cetuximab plus standard chemotherapy. The analysis took a 'no comparator' approach, which implies that the cost-effectiveness of each strategy will be presented only compared with the next most cost-effective strategy. The de novo model consisted of a decision tree and Markov model.
The online survey indicated no differences between tests in batch size, turnaround time, number of failed samples or cost. The literature searches identified 7903 references, of which seven publications of five studies were included in the review. Two studies provided data on the accuracy of KRAS mutation testing for predicting response to treatment in patients treated with cetuximab plus standard chemotherapy. Four RCTs provided data on the clinical effectiveness of cetuximab plus standard chemotherapy compared with that of standard chemotherapy in patients with KRAS wild-type tumours. There were no clear differences in the treatment effects reported by different studies, regardless of which KRAS mutation test was used to select patients. In the 'linked evidence' analysis the Therascreen KRAS RGQ PCR Kit (QIAGEN) was more expensive but also more effective than pyrosequencing or direct sequencing, with an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of £17,019 per quality-adjusted life-year gained. In the 'assumption of equal prognostic value' analysis the total costs associated with the various testing strategies were similar.
The results assume that the differences in outcomes between the trials were solely the result of the different mutation tests used to distinguish between patients; this assumption ignores other factors that might explain this variation.
There was no strong evidence that any one KRAS mutation test was more effective or cost-effective than any other test.
PROSPERO CRD42013003663.
The National Institute for Health Research Health Technology Assessment programme.
肠癌是英国第三大常见癌症。大多数肠癌最初通过手术治疗,但约17%会扩散至肝脏。发生这种情况时,有时肝脏肿瘤可通过手术治疗,或使用化疗使肿瘤缩小以便进行手术。 Kirsten大鼠肉瘤病毒癌基因(KRAS)突变会使一些肿瘤对西妥昔单抗等生物疗法的治疗反应降低。有多种检测这些突变的方法。这些方法在检测的特定突变、检测到的突变数量、所需肿瘤细胞数量、给出结果的时间、错误率和成本方面各不相同。
比较KRAS突变检测在区分成人转移性结直肠癌患者中的性能和成本效益,这些患者的转移灶局限于肝脏且不可切除,可能从一线西妥昔单抗联合标准化疗中获益,与那些应仅接受标准化疗的患者。
检索了包括MEDLINE和EMBASE在内的13个数据库、研究登记册和会议记录,截至2013年1月。通过对参与英国国家外部质量保证计划KRAS突变检测试点的实验室进行在线调查获得了额外数据。
使用标准方法对证据进行系统评价。使用Cochrane偏倚风险工具评估随机对照试验的质量。使用QUADAS - 2工具评估诊断准确性研究。没有足够的数据进行荟萃分析。对于准确性研究,我们计算了敏感性和特异性以及95%置信区间(CIs)。生存数据总结为风险比,肿瘤反应数据总结为相对风险,并带有95% CIs。卫生经济分析考虑了与不同检测随后接受标准化疗或西妥昔单抗加标准化疗相关的长期成本和质量调整生命年。该分析采用“无比较者”方法,这意味着每种策略的成本效益将仅与下一个最具成本效益的策略进行比较。从头模型由决策树和马尔可夫模型组成。
在线调查表明,不同检测方法在批次大小、周转时间、失败样本数量或成本方面没有差异。文献检索确定了7903篇参考文献,其中五项研究的七篇出版物被纳入综述。两项研究提供了关于KRAS突变检测预测接受西妥昔单抗加标准化疗患者治疗反应准确性的数据。四项随机对照试验提供了西妥昔单抗加标准化疗与KRAS野生型肿瘤患者标准化疗临床疗效比较的数据。无论使用哪种KRAS突变检测方法选择患者,不同研究报告的治疗效果均无明显差异。在“关联证据”分析中,Therascreen KRAS RGQ PCR试剂盒(QIAGEN)比焦磷酸测序或直接测序更昂贵,但也更有效,每获得一个质量调整生命年的增量成本效益比为17,019英镑。在“预后价值相等假设”分析中,各种检测策略的总成本相似。
结果假设试验之间结果的差异完全是由于用于区分患者的不同突变检测方法造成的;这一假设忽略了可能解释这种差异的其他因素。
没有有力证据表明任何一种KRAS突变检测方法比其他检测方法更有效或更具成本效益。
PROSPERO CRD42013003663。
英国国家卫生研究院卫生技术评估计划。