» Articles » PMID: 29681201

Cost Effectiveness Vs. Affordability in the Age of Immuno-oncology Cancer Drugs

Overview
Date 2018 Apr 24
PMID 29681201
Citations 18
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

After years of setback, cancer immunotherapy has begun to yield clinical dividends, which are changing the treatment landscape and offering cancer patients the potential for long-term survival, reduced treatment-related toxicity and improved quality-of-life. Using the immune system to treat cancer is known as 'Immuno-oncology' (IO) and agents are sub-classified by their ability to enhance anti-tumor response or to direct the immune system to attack cancer cells via tumor-associated antigens. Areas covered: Clinical trials have demonstrated the effectiveness of several IO agents in many disease sites such as early and advanced stage melanoma, advanced non-small cell lung cancer, bladder, head and neck, gastric, kidney as well as Hodgkin's lymphoma. Notwithstanding the therapeutic excitement generated for patients and clinicians alike, an important consideration is treatment cost, which can reach more than $US100,000 per patient annually. The cost of the drugs, coupled with high disease prevalence and the ever-expanding number of indications, means the current cost trajectory is untenable for most healthcare systems to sustain. Expert commentary: In this paper, the approved IO drugs and those in clinical development are reviewed. The issue of cost effectiveness vs. affordability is then addressed and suggestions that facilitate patient access and long-term sustainability are presented.

Citing Articles

Trends in medical care utilization in patients with cancer: An analysis of real-world data in a tertiary hospital in Korea, 2014-2019.

Won J, Chung T, Lee J, Yoon S, Jeon Y, Lee H Cancer Med. 2023; 12(22):21022-21031.

PMID: 37902239 PMC: 10709731. DOI: 10.1002/cam4.6660.


Effects of treatment methods on cutaneous melanoma related mortality and all-cause mortality in Texas: TCR-Medicare 2007-2017 database.

Ramirez F, Riva H, Digbeu B, Samaniego M, Fernandez L, Mansour S Cancer Causes Control. 2023; 35(2):265-275.

PMID: 37702966 DOI: 10.1007/s10552-023-01780-1.


An immune score reflecting pro- and anti-tumoural balance of tumour microenvironment has major prognostic impact and predicts immunotherapy response in solid cancers.

Mezheyeuski A, Backman M, Mattsson J, Martin-Bernabe A, Larsson C, Hrynchyk I EBioMedicine. 2023; 88:104452.

PMID: 36724681 PMC: 9918750. DOI: 10.1016/j.ebiom.2023.104452.


Limitations of Immunotherapy in Cancer.

Gupta S, Shukla S Cureus. 2022; 14(10):e30856.

PMID: 36465776 PMC: 9708058. DOI: 10.7759/cureus.30856.


The value measurement of emerging therapeutics in renal cell carcinoma: ASCO value framework and ESMO-MCBS.

Ha H, Kang J, Kim D, Bae S, Lee H BMC Health Serv Res. 2022; 22(1):900.

PMID: 35821026 PMC: 9275027. DOI: 10.1186/s12913-022-08279-6.