Budget Impact Analysis of Comprehensive Genomic Profiling in Patients With Advanced Non–Small-Cell Lung Cancer

Author:

Harvey Michael J.1ORCID,Cunningham Rachel2ORCID,Sawchyn Bethany2,Montesion Meagan2ORCID,Reddy Prasanth2,McBride Ali3,Chawla Anita J.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Analysis Group, London, United Kingdom

2. Foundation Medicine Inc, Cambridge, MA

3. University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ

4. Analysis Group, Menlo Park, CA

Abstract

PURPOSE This study assessed the economic impact of increased use of comprehensive genomic profiling (CGP) versus conventional testing strategies among patients with advanced non–small-cell lung cancer (aNSCLC) from a US commercial health plan perspective. METHODS A decision analytic model was developed to estimate the incremental benefits and costs across testing methodologies (CGP v non-CGP), as well as across sample types (tissue-based and liquid-based), for patients with newly diagnosed aNSCLC. Model outcomes included total direct costs, testing costs, and per member per month budget impact. Secondary model outcomes included the number of patients needed to test with CGP to add 1 life-year, and the number of patients needed to test with CGP to treat one individual with a biomarker-matched therapy. RESULTS In a hypothetical 2,000,000-member health plan, 790 members were estimated to have incident aNSCLC; 609 underwent molecular diagnostic testing with 122 (20%) tested with CGP (109 tissue-based and 13 liquid) in the base-case. An increase in CGP from 20% to 30% (an additional 61 patients tested with CGP) was associated with 3.11 additional life-years gained and a $0.01 in US dollars per member per month budget impact. Approximately 19.6 patients would need to be tested with CGP versus non-CGP to add one life-year and 5.9 patients would need to be tested with CGP to treat at least one patient with a biomarker-matched therapy. CONCLUSION An increase in CGP from 20% to 30% among patients with aNSCLC undergoing molecular diagnostic testing was associated with modest budget impact, most of which was attributable to prolonged survival associated with increased use of more effective treatments.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

Reference65 articles.

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