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Challenges in Assessing the Cost-effectiveness of Cancer Immunotherapy

Mené dans un contexte américain, cette étude analyse le rapport coût-efficacité du pembrolizumab en traitement de deuxième ligne chez des patients atteints d'un carcinome hépatocellulaire

Chiang et al examine the cost-effectiveness of pembrolizumab for the second-line treatment of patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma previously treated with sorafenib, on the basis of the results of the pivotal phase 3 trial KEYNOTE-240. The study finds that pembrolizumab for this indication is not cost-effective at the reference willingness-to-pay threshold in the US of $150 000 per quality-adjusted life-year. This result was consistent even in the optimistic setting, which assumed that patients living beyond 30 months were cured with pembrolizumab. Using a 2-way sensitivity analysis, Chiang et al conclude that to be cost-effective, the median survival benefit vs placebo would need to be longer than 12 months, instead of the benefit of 3.3 months demonstrated in KEYNOTE-240. Alternatively, the list price of pembrolizumab could be reduced by more than half (58%) from $6915 to $2925 per cycle. This work by Chiang et al adds to a growing body of literature demonstrating high cancer drug costs relative to the benefits provided to patients treated on a large scale. There is a concern that such costs, given the widespread use of novel agents, such as immunotherapy, in oncology and an aging US demographic threaten the financial sustainability of our health care system.

JAMA Network Open

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