Cost-effectiveness analysis of endocrine therapy alone versus partial-breast irradiation alone versus combined treatment for low-risk hormone-positive early-stage breast cancer in women aged 70 years or older Journal Article


Authors: Ward, M. C.; Vicini, F.; Al-Hilli, Z.; Chadha, M.; Pierce, L.; Recht, A.; Hayman, J.; Thaker, N.; Khan, A. J.; Keisch, M.; Shah, C.
Article Title: Cost-effectiveness analysis of endocrine therapy alone versus partial-breast irradiation alone versus combined treatment for low-risk hormone-positive early-stage breast cancer in women aged 70 years or older
Abstract: Purpose: We performed a cost-effectiveness analysis of three strategies for the adjuvant treatment of early breast cancer in women age 70 years or older: an aromatase inhibitor (AI-alone) for 5 years, a 5-fraction course of accelerated partial-breast irradiation using intensity-modulated radiation therapy (APBI-alone), or their combination. Methods: We constructed a patient-level Markov microsimulation from the societal perspective. Effectiveness data (local recurrence, distant metastases, survival), and toxicity data were obtained from randomized trials when possible. Costs of side effects were included. Costs were adjusted to 2019 US dollars and extracted from Medicare reimbursement data. Quality-adjusted life-years (QALY) were calculated using utilities extracted from the literature. Results: The strategy of AI-alone ($12,637) was cheaper than both APBI-alone ($13,799) and combination therapy ($18,012) in the base case. All approaches resulted in similar QALY outcomes (AI-alone 7.775; APBI-alone 7.768; combination 7.807). In the base case, AI-alone was the cost-effective strategy and dominated APBI-alone, while combined therapy was not cost-effective when compared to AI-alone ($171,451/QALY) or APBI-alone ($107,932/QALY). In probabilistic sensitivity analyses, AI-alone was cost-effective at $100,000/QALY in 50% of trials, APBI-alone in 28% and the combination in 22%. Scenario analysis demonstrated that APBI-alone was more effective than AI-alone when AI compliance was lower than 26% at 5 years. Conclusions: Based on a Markov microsimulation analysis, both AI-alone and APBI-alone are appropriate options for patients 70 years or older with early breast cancer with small cost differences noted. A prospective trial comparing the approaches is warranted. © 2020, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
Keywords: cancer survival; controlled study; aged; cancer recurrence; intensity modulated radiation therapy; drug withdrawal; cancer adjuvant therapy; cancer staging; sensitivity analysis; breast cancer; aromatase inhibitor; distant metastasis; simulation; cost effectiveness analysis; health care cost; medicare; patient compliance; intermethod comparison; radiation therapy; hormonal therapy; osteoporosis; toxicity; quality adjusted life year; cost; endocrine therapy; osteopenia; accelerated partial breast irradiation; estrogen receptor positive breast cancer; low risk population; human; female; priority journal; article; markov chain
Journal Title: Breast Cancer Research and Treatment
Volume: 182
Issue: 2
ISSN: 0167-6806
Publisher: Springer  
Date Published: 2020-07-01
Start Page: 355
End Page: 365
Language: English
DOI: 10.1007/s10549-020-05706-2
PUBMED: 32468336
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 1 July 2020 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Atif Jalees Khan
    152 Khan