Frankfurt School of Finance & Management, Adickesallee 32-34, 60322, Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2021 Dec 11;21(1):1328. doi: 10.1186/s12913-021-07327-x.
Health care systems around the world struggle with high prices for new cancer drugs. The purpose of this study was to conduct a gedankenexperiment and calculate how much health expenditures would change if a cure for cancer through pharmaceutical treatment were made available. The cancer cure was conceived to eliminate both cancer deaths and the underlying morbidity burden of cancer. Furthermore, the cure was hypothesized to arrive in incremental steps but at infinitesimally small time intervals (resulting, effectively, in an immediate cure).
The analysis used secondary data and was conducted from the viewpoint of the German social health insurance. As its underlying method, it used a cause-elimination life-table approach. To account for the age distribution of the population, the study weighted age-specific increases in remaining life expectancy by age-specific population sizes. It considered drug acquisition costs as well as savings and life extension costs from eliminating cancer. All cancer drugs that underwent a mandatory early benefit assessment in Germany between 2011 and 2015/16 and were granted an added benefit were included. Data on age- and gender-specific probabilities of survival, population sizes, causes of death, and health expenditures, as well as data on cancer costs were taken from the German Federal Office of Statistics and the German Federal Social Insurance Office.
Based on the cause-elimination life-table approach and accounting for the age structure of the German population, curing cancer in Germany yields an increase in average remaining life expectancy by 2.66 life years. Based on the current incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of new cancer drugs, which is on average €101,493 per life year gained (€39,751/0.39 life years), the German social health insurance would need to pay €280,497 per insuree to eliminate cancer. Dividing this figure by current average remaining lifetime health expenditures yields a ratio of 2.07, which represents a multiplier of current health expenditures.
Eliminating cancer at current price levels would more than triple total health expenditures in Germany. As the current price of a cure requires a drastic reduction of non-health consumption, it appears that current prices for cancer drugs already on the market (i.e., small steps towards a cure) need careful reconsideration.
全球各国的医疗体系都面临着新抗癌药物高昂价格的问题。本研究旨在进行思维实验,计算如果通过药物治疗实现癌症治愈,卫生支出会发生怎样的变化。该癌症治愈方案旨在消除癌症死亡和癌症相关发病,且假设该治愈方案分阶段实现,但各阶段之间的时间间隔非常小(实际上是立即治愈)。
本分析使用了二手数据,从德国社会健康保险的角度进行。其基本方法是采用消除病因寿命表法。为了考虑人口年龄分布,该研究根据年龄特异性人口规模,对特定年龄的预期余寿增加进行加权。它考虑了药物获得成本以及消除癌症带来的节省和寿命延长成本。本研究纳入了 2011 年至 2015/16 年期间在德国进行强制性早期效益评估且获得附加效益的所有抗癌药物。年龄和性别特异性生存率、人口规模、死亡原因以及卫生支出的数据来自德国联邦统计局和德国联邦社会保险办公室,癌症成本数据来自德国联邦统计局。
根据消除病因寿命表法,并考虑德国人口的年龄结构,德国治愈癌症可使平均余寿增加 2.66 岁。根据新抗癌药物的当前增量成本效益比(平均每增加 1 个生命年需 101493 欧元,即 39751 欧元/0.39 个生命年),德国社会健康保险需要为每位参保人支付 280497 欧元来消除癌症。将该数字除以当前平均剩余寿命的卫生支出得出 2.07,这代表当前卫生支出的乘数。
以当前价格水平消除癌症将使德国的总卫生支出增加两倍以上。由于治愈的当前价格水平需要大幅减少非健康消费,因此似乎需要重新考虑当前市场上的抗癌药物价格(即,向治愈迈进的小步骤)。