Division of Neurosurgery, Department of Surgery, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.
Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.
Neurosurgery. 2020 Sep 1;87(3):484-497. doi: 10.1093/neuros/nyaa075.
Stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) is an effective option in the management of brain metastases, offering improved overall survival to whole-brain radiation therapy (WBRT). However, given the need for active surveillance and the possibility of repeated interventions for local/distant brain recurrences, the balance between clinical benefit and economic impact must be evaluated.
To conduct a systematic review of health-economic analyses of SRS for brain metastases, compared with other existing intervention options, to determine the cost-effectiveness of this treatment across different clinical scenarios.
The MEDLINE, EMBASE, Cochrane, CRD, and EconLit databases were searched for health-economic analyses, according to PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses) guidelines, using terms relevant to brain metastases and radiation-based therapies. Simple cost analysis studies were excluded. Quality analysis was based on BMJ Consolidated Health Economics Reporting Standards (CHEERS) checklist.
Eleven eligible studies were identified. For lesions with limited mass effect, SRS was more cost-effective than surgical resection (6 studies). In patients with Karnofsky performance scale (KPS) >70 and good predicted survival, SRS was cost-effective compared to WBRT (7 studies); WBRT became cost-effective with poor performance status or low anticipated life span. Following SRS, routine magnetic resonance imaging surveillance saved $1326/patient compared to symptomatic imaging due to reduced surgical salvage and hospital stay (1 study).
Based on our findings, SRS is cost-effective in the management of brain metastases, particularly in high-functioning patients with longer expected survival. However, before an optimal care pathway can be proposed, emerging factors such as tumor molecular subtype, diagnosis-specific graded prognostic assessment, neuroprognostic score, tailored surveillance imaging, and patient utilities need to be studied in greater detail.
立体定向放射外科(SRS)是治疗脑转移瘤的有效方法,与全脑放疗(WBRT)相比,可提高总生存率。然而,由于需要积极监测以及局部/远处脑复发需要重复干预的可能性,必须评估临床获益与经济影响之间的平衡。
对 SRS 治疗脑转移瘤与其他现有干预方案的健康经济学分析进行系统评价,以确定在不同临床情况下该治疗的成本效益。
根据 PRISMA(系统评价和荟萃分析的首选报告项目)指南,使用与脑转移瘤和放射治疗相关的术语,对 MEDLINE、EMBASE、Cochrane、CRD 和 EconLit 数据库进行了健康经济学分析检索。排除了简单的成本分析研究。质量分析基于 BMJ 综合健康经济学报告标准(CHEERS)清单。
确定了 11 项合格研究。对于有有限肿块效应的病变,SRS 比手术切除更具成本效益(6 项研究)。在 Karnofsky 表现量表(KPS)>70 和良好预测生存的患者中,SRS 与 WBRT 相比具有成本效益(7 项研究);WBRT 在表现状态不佳或预期寿命较短的情况下具有成本效益。与因手术挽救和住院时间减少而导致的症状性影像学检查相比,SRS 后常规磁共振成像监测可使每位患者节省 1326 美元(1 项研究)。
根据我们的研究结果,SRS 在脑转移瘤的治疗中具有成本效益,特别是在预期生存时间较长且功能状态较高的患者中。然而,在提出最佳护理路径之前,需要更详细地研究肿瘤分子亚型、诊断特异性分级预后评估、神经预后评分、定制化监测成像以及患者效用等新兴因素。