Abstract

Background & AimsRecent observational studies showed that post-operative aspirin use reduces cancer relapse and death in the earliest stages of colorectal cancer. We sought to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of aspirin as an adjuvant therapy in Stage I and II colorectal cancer patients aged 65 years and older.MethodsTwo five-state Markov models were constructed separately for Stage I and II colorectal cancer using TreeAge Pro 2014. Two hypothetical cohorts of 10,000 individuals at a starting age of 65 years and with colorectal cancer in remission were put through the models separately. Cost-effectiveness of aspirin was evaluated against no treatment (Stage I and II) and capecitabine (Stage II) over a 20-year period from the United States societal perspective. Extensive one-way sensitivity analyses and multivariable Probabilistic Sensitivity Analyses (PSA) were performed.ResultsIn the base case analyses, aspirin was cheaper and more effective compared to other comparators in both stages. Sensitivity analyses showed that no treatment and capecitabine (Stage II only) can be cost-effective alternatives if the utility of taking aspirin is below 0.909, aspirin’s annual fatal adverse event probability exceeds 0.57%, aspirin’s relative risk of disease progression is 0.997 or more, or when capecitabine’s relative risk of disease progression is less than 0.228. Probabilistic Sensitivity Analyses (PSA) further showed that aspirin could be cost-effective 50% to 80% of the time when the willingness-to-pay threshold was varied from USD20,000 to USD100,000.ConclusionEven with a modest treatment benefit, aspirin is likely to be cost-effective in Stage I and II colorectal cancer, thus suggesting a potential unique role in secondary prevention in this group of patients.

Highlights

  • Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common cancer worldwide with more than 1.2 million new cases diagnosed annually [1]

  • In both Stage I and II CRC, the base case analyses provide preliminary results to suggest that aspirin is a cost-effective option as compared to the other options

  • The differences in quality-adjusted life year (QALY) and life year gained (LYG) of the dominated strategies were only 0.15 to 0.28 less than that of aspirin, the cost differences were substantial with a range of USD9,864 to USD61,277

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Summary

Introduction

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common cancer worldwide with more than 1.2 million new cases diagnosed annually [1]. More than half of the patients diagnosed with CRC die from the disease and it is the second leading cause of overall cancer deaths in the United States [2]. Adjuvant chemotherapy has been shown to reduce the risk of recurrence and improve overall survival (OS) in patients with Stage III CRC. Adjuvant chemotherapy has a much more limited role in earlier stages of CRC (Stage I and II) where its benefit is modest at best, and limited to tumors with high risk features in patients under 70 years [8,9]. Recent observational studies showed that post-operative aspirin use reduces cancer relapse and death in the earliest stages of colorectal cancer. We sought to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of aspirin as an adjuvant therapy in Stage I and II colorectal cancer patients aged 65 years and older

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