The ProtecT randomised trial cost-effectiveness analysis comparing active monitoring, surgery, or radiotherapy for prostate cancer
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Published:2020-07-16
Issue:7
Volume:123
Page:1063-1070
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ISSN:0007-0920
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Container-title:British Journal of Cancer
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Br J Cancer
Author:
Noble Sian M.ORCID, Garfield Kirsty, Lane J. Athene, Metcalfe Chris, Davis Michael, Walsh Eleanor I., Martin Richard M., Turner Emma L., Peters Tim J., Thorn Joanna C., Mason Malcolm, Bollina Prasad, Catto James W. F., Doherty Alan, Gnanapragasam Vincent, Hughes Owen, Kockelbergh Roger, Kynaston Howard, Paul Alan, Paez Edgar, Rosario Derek J., Rowe Edward, Oxley Jon, Staffurth John, Neal David E., Hamdy Freddie C., Donovan Jenny L.
Abstract
Abstract
Background
There is limited evidence relating to the cost-effectiveness of treatments for localised prostate cancer.
Methods
The cost-effectiveness of active monitoring, surgery, and radiotherapy was evaluated within the Prostate Testing for Cancer and Treatment (ProtecT) randomised controlled trial from a UK NHS perspective at 10 years’ median follow-up. Prostate cancer resource-use collected from hospital records and trial participants was valued using UK reference-costs. QALYs (quality-adjusted-life-years) were calculated from patient-reported EQ-5D-3L measurements. Adjusted mean costs, QALYs, and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios were calculated; cost-effectiveness acceptability curves and sensitivity analyses addressed uncertainty; subgroup analyses considered age and disease-risk.
Results
Adjusted mean QALYs were similar between groups: 6.89 (active monitoring), 7.09 (radiotherapy), and 6.91 (surgery). Active monitoring had lower adjusted mean costs (£5913) than radiotherapy (£7361) and surgery (£7519). Radiotherapy was the most likely (58% probability) cost-effective option at the UK NICE willingness-to-pay threshold (£20,000 per QALY). Subgroup analyses confirmed radiotherapy was cost-effective for older men and intermediate/high-risk disease groups; active monitoring was more likely to be the cost-effective option for younger men and low-risk groups.
Conclusions
Longer follow-up and modelling are required to determine the most cost-effective treatment for localised prostate cancer over a man’s lifetime.
Trial registration
Current Controlled Trials number, ISRCTN20141297: http://isrctn.org (14/10/2002); ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT02044172: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov (23/01/2014).
Funder
DH | NIHR | Health Technology Assessment Programme Cancer Research UK
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Cancer Research,Oncology
Reference21 articles.
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