Department of Radiation Oncology, Jean Bernard Center, Inter-Regional Institute of Oncology, Le Mans, France.
Department of Radiation Oncology, Jean Bernard Center, Inter-Regional Institute of Oncology, Le Mans, France; Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
J Thorac Oncol. 2019 Jun;14(6):1012-1020. doi: 10.1016/j.jtho.2019.02.005. Epub 2019 Feb 15.
A multicenter randomized clinical trial in France found an overall survival benefit of web-based patient-reported outcome (PRO)-based surveillance after initial treatment for lung cancer compared with conventional surveillance. The aim of this study was to assess the cost-effectiveness of this PRO-based surveillance in lung cancer patients.
This medico-economic analysis used data from the clinical trial, augmented by abstracted chart data and costs of consultations, imaging, transportations, information technology, and treatments. Costs were calculated based on actual reimbursement rates in France, and health utilities were estimated based on scientific literature review. Willingness-to-pay thresholds of €30,000 per quality-adjusted life year (QALY) and €90,000 per QALY were used to define a very cost-effective and cost-effective strategy, respectively. Average annual costs of experimental and control surveillance approaches were calculated. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio was expressed as cost per life-year gained and QALY gained, from the health insurance payer perspective. One-way and multivariate probabilistic sensitivity analyses were performed.
Average annual cost of surveillance follow-up was €362 lower per patient in the PRO arm (€941/year/patient) compared to control (€1,304/year/patient). The PRO approach presented an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of €12,127 per life-year gained and €20,912 per QALY gained. The probabilities that the experimental strategy is very cost-effective and cost-effective were 97% and 100%, respectively.
Surveillance of lung cancer patients using web-based PRO reduced the follow-up costs. Compared to conventional monitoring, this surveillance modality represents a cost-effective strategy and should be considered in cancer care delivery.
法国的一项多中心随机临床试验发现,与传统监测相比,基于网络的患者报告结局(PRO)监测在初始肺癌治疗后具有总体生存获益。本研究旨在评估这种基于 PRO 的监测在肺癌患者中的成本效益。
这项医疗经济分析使用了临床试验数据,并结合了图表数据摘要和咨询、影像学、交通、信息技术以及治疗的费用。成本是根据法国的实际报销率计算的,健康效用是根据文献综述估计的。使用 30,000 欧元/QALY 和 90,000 欧元/QALY 的意愿支付阈值分别定义非常有成本效益和成本效益的策略。计算了实验和对照监测方法的平均年度成本。增量成本效益比表示从健康保险支付者的角度来看,每获得一个生命年和 QALY 的成本。进行了单因素和多变量概率敏感性分析。
与对照组(每年每个患者 1304 欧元)相比,PRO 组的监测随访每年每位患者的平均成本降低了 362 欧元(每年每个患者 941 欧元)。PRO 方法的增量成本效益比为每获得一个生命年增加 12,127 欧元,每获得一个 QALY 增加 20,912 欧元。实验策略非常具有成本效益和成本效益的概率分别为 97%和 100%。
使用基于网络的 PRO 对肺癌患者进行监测可降低随访成本。与传统监测相比,这种监测模式是一种具有成本效益的策略,应在癌症护理中考虑。