Abstract

6057 Background: Two-drug platinum-containing regimens are considered the standard of care in advanced non-small cell lung cancer. A recent randomized trial (ECOG 4599) compared carboplatin + paclitaxel (PC) with PC + bevacizumab (PCB). PCB was found to result in a modest improvement in survival (12.5 months vs 10.2 months with PC, p = .007). This finding was exceptional in showing a survival benefit with the addition of a molecularly targeted agent to chemotherapy in a largely unselected population, and doing so in this most common cause of malignant death in the US. Additionally, new therapies can have a major impact on health care costs. Using the known survival data and costs, we analyzed the cost-effectiveness of the addition of bevacizumab to this chemotherapy regimen. Methods: Medicare reimbursement (cost) of the two regimens was developed using the CMS Drug Payment Table and Physician Fee Schedule for January, 2005. Incremental cost effectiveness was calculated. Results: Carboplatin and paclitaxel regimen costs $14,073 for 6 cycles (the number of cycles planned in the clinical trial.) The addition of bevacizumab increases cost by $66,270 to $80,343. Given an increase of 2.3 months in median overall survival over chemotherapy alone, the addition of bevacizumab to chemotherapy costs $345,762 per year of life gained. Conclusions: Adding bevacizumab to chemotherapy is not cost effective even at the $100,000 per Year of Life Gained (YLG) threshold. To be cost effective at the $100,000/YLG level, bevacizumab reimbursement would have to be reduced to $14.70/10 mg. ($1,764/cycle) or 26% of 2005 Medicare reimbursement of $57.08/10 mg. ($6,849/cycle). Prior analyses have examined the impact of chemotherapy on survival and cost-effectiveness. Several factors beneficially influence survival in NSCLC, as shown in meta-analyses, including: chemotherapy vs supportive care, two-agents vs one, and the choice of which platinum agent to use. While all of these may increase costs, some are cost-effective, while others are not. The addition of bevacizumab is the most costly and least cost-effective of any of these interventions. [Table: see text]

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