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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 December 2022
Chemotherapy-induced alopecia (CIA), although reversible, is one of the most common and distressing side effects of cancer therapy, affecting approximately 65 percent of all patients and influencing treatment decisions in some of them. Scalp cooling (SC) is a method aiming to prevent CIA. Our study aims to evaluate the real value of SC devices.
A systematic review of the available scientific literature on the safety, effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of the use of SC compared with no intervention was performed. Overall effect size was estimated through a meta-analysis. An economic analysis in the Spanish context from the Spanish National Healthcare System (NHS) and social perspectives was performed.
Thirteen randomized controlled trials (n = 832) were included but only nine contributed to the meta-analysis. A large effect in favor of SC reducing hair loss was found (RR=0.57; 95% CI: 0.46-0.69). No differences were observed according to the type of cancer, although there was a small positive effect for breast cancer. A higher effect was found in patients treated with a combination anthracyclines/taxanes treatment compared to those treated only with anthracyclines. The only economic evaluation found in the literature was conducted in The Netherlands and concluded that Paxman system was less costly than usual care from societal perspective and no differences in quality adjusted life years (QALYs) were observed. The de novo economic analysis showed that the strategies including SC devices generated more costs and QALYs (given some assumed utility values) than usual care (not SC), presenting incremental cost-effectiveness ratios below the threshold calculated for Spain (EUR 25,000 /QALY), from both perspectives.
The results suggest that SC are effective for the prevention of CIA. Furthermore, assuming the utility values used in the model, SC devices are cost-effective compared to usual care (not SC).