4.6 Article

Cost-effectiveness of azacitidine and venetoclax in unfit patients with previously untreated acute myeloid leukemia

Journal

BLOOD ADVANCES
Volume 5, Issue 4, Pages 994-1002

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2020003902

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Funding

  1. Frederick A. DeLuca Foundation
  2. American Society of Hematology Physician-Scientist Career Development Award
  3. National Cancer Institute (NCI) Cancer Clinical Investigator Team Leadership Award
  4. NCI, National Institutes of Health [P30 CA016359]

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The combination therapy of azacitidine-venetoclax shows improved survival rates for previously untreated AML patients but is deemed cost-ineffective due to significantly higher healthcare costs. Further reduction in the price of venetoclax is necessary to make it a more cost-effective treatment option.
The phase 3 VIALE-A trial reported that venetoclax in combination with azacitidine significantly improved response rates and overall survival compared with azacitidine alone in older, unfit patients with previously untreated acute myeloid leukemia (AML). However, the cost-effectiveness of azacitidine-venetoclax in this clinical setting is unknown. In this study, we constructed a partitioned survival model to compare the cost and effectiveness of azacitidine-venetoclax with azacitidine alone in previously untreated AML. Event-free and overall survival curves for each treatment strategy were derived from the VIALE-A trial using parametric survival modeling. We calculated the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of azacitidine-venetodax from a US-payer perspective. Azacitidine-venetoclax was associated with an improvement of 0.61 quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) compared with azacitidine alone. However, the combination led to significantly higher lifetime health care costs (incremental cost, $159 595), resulting in an ICER of $260 343 per QALY gained. The price of venetoclax would need to decrease by 60% for azacitidine-venetoclax to be cost-effective at a willingness-to-pay threshold of $150000 per QALY. These data suggest that use of azacitidine-venetoclax for previously untreated AML patients who are ineligible for intensive chemotherapy is unlikely to be cost-effective under current pricing. Significant price reduction of venetoclax would be required to reduce the ICER to a more widely acceptable value.

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