MAINTENANCE AND CONSOLIDATION THERAPIES- COST-EFFECTIVE STRATEGIES TO PROLONG REMISSION IN PATIENTS WITH FOLLICULAR LYMPHOMA

Published Mar 20, 2015
Atlanta, GA, USA – An analysis of two treatment strategies for follicular lymphoma, conducted by researchers at Georgia Institute of Technology and Winship Cancer Institute of Emory University, indicates that the treatments are cost-effective. Follicular lymphoma (FL) is the most common type of indolent lymphoma, accounting for about 1 in 5 lymphomas in the United States. Patients with FL can have a long survival of about two decades, but they usually experience multiple relapses, along with poorer responses to treatments and lower quality of life. The researchers looked at maintenance therapy with rituximab (MR) versus observation, and radioimmunotherapy consolidation (RIT) versus observation, immediately following the first-line treatment for FL.  Clinical research has established that these treatment strategies can effectively extend the duration of remission after the first-line treatment and help patients maintain good quality of life. Given the current costs of therapy for individuals with FL of about $20,000-$36,000 per patient per year, it is also important for physicians and policy makers to understand whether the additional costs of MR and RIT are worth their clinical benefits. The main results of the study indicate that both MR and RIT are cost-effective strategies, at an additional cost of about $40,000 per additional quality-adjusted life-year, given that a threshold of $50,000 to $100,000 has been commonly used to justify cost-effective health intervention programs in health economics studies. The researchers concluded that MR and RIT following frontline FL therapy demonstrate favorable and similar cost-effectiveness. These findings support the coverage and use of both approaches in clinical practice, although RIT has been less commonly used. The researchers remarked that these findings do not imply a gold standard for selection of either approach or observation, and the treatment strategy for an individual with FL needs to be tailored based on individual characteristics and risk for each patient. The full study, “Comparing the Cost-Effectiveness of Rituximab Maintenance and Radioimmunotherapy Consolidation versus Observation Following First-Line Therapy in Patients with Follicular Lymphoma,” is published in Value in Health.

Related Stories

The Ozempic Paradox: How Spending Billions on Weight-Loss Drug Would Actually Reduce Overall Medicare Costs

Oct 14, 2025

Value in Health, the official journal of ISPOR—The Professional Society for Health Economics and Outcomes Research, announced today the publication of a landmark study by researchers at the University of Washington, Curta, Inc, and the University of North Carolina showing that broad Medicare coverage of semaglutide in diabetes, obesity, and liver disease could generate significant cost savings while delivering substantial health benefits to beneficiaries. The report, “Comprehensive Access to Semaglutide: Clinical and Economic Implications for Medicare,” was published in the October 2025 issue of Value in Health.

ISPOR Launches New Content on Whole Health

Sep 23, 2025

ISPOR announced that it has launched new website content on whole health, a topic of increasing importance as health systems across the globe grapple with providing the best possible healthcare to patients within constrained budgets.
Your browser is out-of-date

ISPOR recommends that you update your browser for more security, speed and the best experience on ispor.org. Update my browser now

×