Cost-Effectiveness of Granulocyte Colony–Stimulating Factor Prophylaxis for Febrile Neutropenia in Breast Cancer in the United Kingdom

Jun 1, 2011, 00:00
10.1016/j.jval.2010.10.037
https://www.valueinhealthjournal.com/article/S1098-3015(10)00056-2/fulltext
Title : Cost-Effectiveness of Granulocyte Colony–Stimulating Factor Prophylaxis for Febrile Neutropenia in Breast Cancer in the United Kingdom
Citation : https://www.valueinhealthjournal.com/action/showCitFormats?pii=S1098-3015(10)00056-2&doi=10.1016/j.jval.2010.10.037
First page : 465
Section Title : Economic Evaluation
Open access? : No
Section Order : 8

Objective

We report a cost-effectiveness evaluation of granulocyte colony–stimulating factors (G-CSFs) for the prevention of febrile neutropenia (FN) after chemotherapy in the United Kingdom (UK).

Methods

A mathematical model was constructed simulating the experience of women with breast cancer undergoing chemotherapy. Three strategies were modeled: primary prophylaxis (G-CSFs administered in all cycles), secondary prophylaxis (G-CSFs administered in all cycles after an FN event), and no G-CSF prophylaxis. Three G-CSFs were considered: filgrastim, lenograstim, and pegfilgrastim. Costs were taken from UK databases and utility values from published sources. A systematic review provided data on G-CSF efficacy. Probabilistic sensitivity analyses examined the effects of uncertainty in model parameters.

Results

In the UK, base-case analysis with a willingness-to-pay (WTP) threshold of £20K per quality-adjusted life year gained and also using list prices, the most cost-effective strategy was primary prophylaxis with pegfilgrastim for a patient with baseline FN risk greater than 38%, secondary prophylaxis with pegfilgrastim for baseline FN risk 11% to 37%, and no G-CSFs for baseline FN risk less than 11%. Using a WTP threshold of £30K and list prices, primary prophylaxis with pegfilgrastim was cost-effective for baseline FN risks greater than 29%. In all analyses, pegfilgrastim dominated filgrastim and lenograstim. Sensitivity analyses demonstrated that higher WTP threshold, younger age, earlier stage at diagnosis, or reduced G-CSF prices result in G-CSF prophylaxis being cost-effective at lower baseline FN risk levels.

Conclusion

Pegfilgrastim was the most cost-effective G-CSF. The most cost-effective strategy (primary or secondary prophylaxis) was dependent on the FN risk level for an individual patient, patient age and stage at diagnosis, and G-CSF price.

Categories :
  • Cost-comparison, Effectiveness, Utility, Benefit Analysis
  • Decision Modeling & Simulation
  • Economic Evaluation
  • Oncology
  • Specific Diseases & Conditions
  • Study Approaches
Tags :
  • cost-effectiveness
  • economic model
  • Febrile Neutropenia
  • granulocyte colony–stimulating factors
  • prophylaxis
Regions :
  • Western Europe
ViH Article Tags :