Abstract

BackgroundThe cost of new anticancer drugs is rising. We aimed to assess the clinical benefit and price of anti‐cancer drugs approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for advanced gastrointestinal cancers.MethodsDrugs approved between 2006 and 2017 for advanced GI malignancies were identified from FDA.gov, and their updated supporting trial data were searched. Incremental clinical benefit was quantified by using ESMO Magnitude of Clinical Benefit Scale version 1.1 (grade 0‐5) and ASCO Value Framework version 2 (score range −20 to 180). Higher scores indicate larger net benefit, and substantial benefit was defined as score 4 or 5 by the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO). The Micromedex REDBOOK was used to estimate the monthly average wholesale price (AWP) and total drug price (TDP) over the median treatment duration per patient. Clinical benefit, AWP and TDP of each drug class were assessed.ResultsIn total, 16 GI cancer drugs received FDA approval for 24 indications, including five monoclonal antibodies (mAbs), five oral targeted therapies (TT), two immunotherapeutics (IO), three cytotoxic chemotherapies (CT), and one recombinant fusion protein (aflibercept). Most supporting trials (82%) reported overall survival benefit of less than 3 months and no significant improvement in quality of life. Only five agents (including one TT and one IO) with 21% the of approved indications met the ESMO's threshold of substantial clinical benefit. Median incremental benefit scores of TT and IO were comparable to other drug classes. However their median TDP was much higher at $153 402 and $98 208, respectively, compared to $30 330 USD per patient for CT. The estimated TDP did not correlate with clinical benefit scores.ConclusionMost FDA–approved gastrointestinal cancer drugs do not meet the ESMO threshold of substantial clinical benefit. TT and IO are estimated to carry significant drug costs, and further cost analysis of these drugs is urgently needed.

Highlights

  • By 2020, the cost of cancer care in the United States is expected to reach $158 billion US dollars.[1]

  • To address the growing disconnect between clinical benefit and cost, various frameworks have been developed by organizations including the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) and the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO).[9,10]

  • More than half of the accelerated US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval indications of new anticancer drugs were based on single–arm studies and could not be assessed with the original ESMO Magnitude of Clinical Benefit Scale (MCBS) 15,16; these can be evaluated with ESMO MCBS version 1.1.17

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

By 2020, the cost of cancer care in the United States is expected to reach $158 billion US dollars.[1]. Unlike TT in lung cancer in which distinct driver pathways and predictive biomarkers such as EGFR have been identified, treatment of GI cancers often rely on multityrosine kinase inhibitors and monoclonal antibodies without the ability to predict responders. In light of these findings and the current emphasis on value in cancer care, we aimed to quantify the net clinical benefit and price of newly FDA–approved anticancer drugs for advanced GI malignancies using ASCO VF and ESMO MCBS, with a special focus on TT and IO

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
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