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Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of Ruxolitinib vs Best Available Therapy for the Treatment of Myelofibrosis in the United States

Speaker(s)

Smith A, Martin BC
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences College of Pharmacy, Little Rock, AR, USA

Presentation Documents

OBJECTIVES: Ruxolitinib is a targeted therapy approved for the treatment of intermediate and high-risk myelofibrosis that has been shown to improve survival and quality-of-life. The aim of this study was to assess the cost-effectiveness of ruxolitinib versus the best available therapy (BAT).

METHODS: COMFORT-II trial data was used to compare the survival of ruxolitinib versus BAT treatment. A Markov model with three health states (on-treatment, off-treatment, dead) was created for a ruxolitinib treatment and BAT arm using TreeAge Pro. A U.S. healthcare perspective was adopted with a willingness-to-pay (WTP) threshold of $150,000/QALY. A lifetime horizon of 15 years was used with a 28-day cycle length with costs and utilities discounted by 3%. Data on treatment discontinuation for ruxolitinib and BAT were estimated by calibrating a Gompertz distribution to the proportion of COMFORT-II patients who discontinued treatment at the 3 and 5-year time points and wide ranges were used in the on-to-off treatment transition probabilities in sensitivity analyses. Utility weights derived from a standard gamble approach were adopted for the model and direct medical costs were synthesized from the literature and updated to 2021 USD using the consumer price index medical component. One-way sensitivity analyses and probabilistic sensitivity analyses (PSA) were conducted.

RESULTS: Ruxolitinib treatment was expected to generate 4.71 QALYs at a cost of $1,107,203 while BAT was expected to generate 1.85 QALYs at a cost of $426,355 resulting in an incremental cost effectiveness ratio (ICER) of $238,474/QALY. None of the one-way sensitivity analyses resulted in an ICER < $150,000/QALY and the PSA revealed that ruxolitinib had an ICER < $150,000/QALY in 0.7% of iterations.

CONCLUSIONS: This analysis found that ruxolitinib may extend quality adjusted survival by almost three years but at current prices is unlikely to be a cost-effective option to treat myelofibrosis compared to BAT in the U.S.

Code

EE311

Topic

Economic Evaluation, Study Approaches

Topic Subcategory

Cost-comparison, Effectiveness, Utility, Benefit Analysis, Decision Modeling & Simulation

Disease

Oncology