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PP146 Cost-Effectiveness Of Nivolumab Plus Ipilimumab In Advanced Melanoma

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 January 2019

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Abstract

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Introduction:

This study was done to assess the cost effectiveness of nivolumab plus ipilimumab (NIV+IPI) versus nivolumab alone (NIV) for previously untreated patients with advanced melanoma (AM) from the Dutch health system perspective.

Methods:

A Markov model was constructed with a lifetime horizon. Future effects and costs were discounted at 1.5 and four percent, respectively. Risks of progression and death were based on progression-free survival rates obtained from a phase III clinical trial (NIV+IPI and NIV versus ipilimumab). Conjectural overall survival rates were calculated indirectly by using progression-free survival and overall survival rates from another trial (NIV versus dacarbazine), and were extrapolated later using the Weibull distribution. Utility values of health states and disutility values of adverse events were derived from the literature. Unit costs were derived from the Dutch Diagnosis Treatment Combination Care Products Tariff, Erasmus University Medical Center prices, and Dutch pharmacy purchase prices. Chronic management costs of AM and treatment costs of adverse events were calculated based on the results of a survey of clinicians that determined the necessary healthcare services and their utilization rates.

Results:

On average, over a lifetime an AM patient treated with NIV+IPI was estimated to live 4.2 years and 2.6 quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) at a discounted net cost of EUR 262,824 per patient, while a patient treated with NIV was estimated to live 3.3 years and 2.0 QALYs at a discounted net cost of EUR 195,341 per patient. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio was EUR 70,770 per life-year saved, and the incremental cost-utility ratio was EUR 115,533 per QALY gained.

Conclusions:

At a willingness-to-pay threshold of EUR 80,000 per QALY gained, NIV+IPI may not be a cost-effective tool, compared with NIV, for preventing the high mortality and morbidity associated with AM from the Dutch health system perspective.

Type
Poster Presentations
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2018