Hanna Catherine R, Robles-Zurita Jose A, Briggs Andrew, Harkin Andrea, Kelly Caroline, McQueen John, Allan Karen, Pearson Sarah, Hollander Henrik, Glimelius Bengt, Salazar Ramon, Segelov Eva, Saunders Mark, Iveson Tim, Jones Robert J, Boyd Kathleen A
Cancer Research UK Clinical Trials Unit, Institute of Cancer Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Scotland.
Health Economics and Health Technology Assessment, Institute of Health and Wellbeing, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Scotland.
Clin Colorectal Cancer. 2021 Sep;20(3):236-244. doi: 10.1016/j.clcc.2021.04.001. Epub 2021 Apr 15.
The Short Course Oncology Treatment (SCOT) trial demonstrated non-inferiority, less toxicity, and cost-effectiveness from a UK perspective of 3 versus 6 months of oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy for patients with colorectal cancer. This study assessed the cost-effectiveness of shorter treatment and the budget impact of implementing trial findings from the perspectives of all countries recruited to SCOT: Australia, Denmark, New Zealand, Spain, Sweden, and the United Kingdom.
Individual cost-utility analyses were performed from the perspective of each country. Resource, quality of life, and survival estimates from the SCOT trial (N = 6065) were used. Probabilistic sensitivity analysis and subgroup analyses were undertaken. Using undiscounted costs from these cost-utility analyses, the impact on country-specific healthcare budgets of implementing the SCOT trial findings was calculated over a 5-year period. The currency used was US dollars (US$), and 2019 was the base year. One-way and scenario sensitivity analysis addressed uncertainty within the budget impact analysis.
Three months of treatment were cost saving and cost-effective compared to 6 months from the perspective of all countries. The incremental net monetary benefit per patient ranged from US$8972 (Spain) to US$13,884 (Denmark). The healthcare budget impact over 5 years for the base-case scenario ranged from US$3.6 million (New Zealand) to US$61.4 million (UK) and totaled over US$150 million across all countries.
This study has widened the transferability of results from the SCOT trial, showing that shorter treatment is cost-effective from a multi-country perspective. The vast savings from implementation could fully justify the investment in conducting the SCOT trial.
短疗程肿瘤治疗(SCOT)试验表明,从英国的角度来看,对于结直肠癌患者,3个月与6个月的奥沙利铂化疗相比,具有非劣效性、更低的毒性和成本效益。本研究从参与SCOT试验的所有国家(澳大利亚、丹麦、新西兰、西班牙、瑞典和英国)的角度评估了较短疗程治疗的成本效益以及实施试验结果对预算的影响。
从每个国家的角度进行个体成本效用分析。使用了SCOT试验(N = 6065)的资源、生活质量和生存估计数据。进行了概率敏感性分析和亚组分析。利用这些成本效用分析中的未贴现成本,计算了在5年期间实施SCOT试验结果对各国特定医疗保健预算的影响。使用的货币是美元($),以2019年为基年。单向和情景敏感性分析解决了预算影响分析中的不确定性。
从所有国家的角度来看,3个月的治疗与6个月相比具有成本节约和成本效益。每位患者的增量净货币效益从8972美元(西班牙)到13884美元(丹麦)不等。基础情景下5年的医疗保健预算影响从360万美元(新西兰)到6140万美元(英国)不等,所有国家总计超过1.5亿美元。
本研究拓宽了SCOT试验结果的可转移性,表明从多国角度来看,较短疗程治疗具有成本效益。实施带来的巨大节省完全可以证明进行SCOT试验的投资是合理的。