4.7 Review

Cost-effectiveness of precision diagnostic testing for precision medicine approaches against non-small-cell lung cancer: A systematic review

Journal

MOLECULAR ONCOLOGY
Volume 15, Issue 10, Pages 2672-2687

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/1878-0261.13038

Keywords

biomarker; cost-effectiveness analysis; economic evaluation; non-small-cell lung cancer; precision diagnostic test; precision medicine

Categories

Funding

  1. UKRI through Innovate UK
  2. Scottish Funding Council
  3. Welsh Government
  4. Invest Northern Ireland
  5. Defra
  6. BEIS
  7. Health Data Research Wales Northern Ireland through a Substantive Site grant from Health Data Research UK
  8. UK's Health Data Research Hub for Cancer through the Industrial Strategy Challenge Fund

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Precision diagnostic testing for non-small-cell lung cancer was evaluated for cost-effectiveness, revealing that 53% of scenarios were cost-effective, and all scenarios comparing PDT-guided therapy with therapy for all patients were cost-effective. However, 81% of the studies analyzed had poor design, indicating the need for more robust health economic evaluations.
Precision diagnostic testing (PDT) employs appropriate biomarkers to identify cancer patients that may optimally respond to precision medicine (PM) approaches, such as treatments with targeted agents and immuno-oncology drugs. To date, there are no published systematic appraisals evaluating the cost-effectiveness of PDT in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). To address this gap, we conducted Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses searches for the years 2009-2019. Consolidated Health Economic Evaluation Reporting Standards were employed to screen, assess and extract data. Employing base costs, life years gained or quality-adjusted life years, as well as willingness-to-pay (WTP) threshold for each country, net monetary benefit was calculated to determine cost-effectiveness of each intervention. Thirty-seven studies (50%) were included for analysis; a further 37 (50%) were excluded, having failed population-, intervention-, comparator-, outcomes- and study-design criteria. Within the 37 studies included, we defined 64 scenarios. Eleven scenarios compared PDT-guided PM with non-guided therapy [epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), n = 5; programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1), n = 6]. Twenty-eight scenarios compared PDT-guided PM with chemotherapy alone (anaplastic lymphoma kinase, n = 3; EGFR, n = 17; PD-L1, n = 8). Twenty-five scenarios compared PDT-guided PM with chemotherapy alone, while varying the PDT approach. Thirty-four scenarios (53%) were cost-effective, 28 (44%) were not cost-effective, and two were marginal, dependent on their country's WTP threshold. When PDT-guided therapy was compared with a therapy-for-all patients approach, all scenarios (100%) proved cost-effective. Seven of 37 studies had been structured appropriately to assess PDT-PM cost-effectiveness. Within these seven studies, all evaluated scenarios were cost-effective. However, 81% of studies had been poorly designed. Our systematic analysis implies that more robust health economic evaluation could help identify additional approaches towards PDT cost-effectiveness, underpinning value-based care and enhanced outcomes for patients with NSCLC.

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