Abstract
Background: To describe healthcare costs, excluding ipilimumab drug costs, in patients with advanced melanoma receiving ipilimumab in the US community practice setting. Methods: This was a retrospective chart review of unresectable stage III/IV melanoma patients who received first-line ipilimumab monotherapy between 04/2011 and 09/2012. Healthcare resource utilization included inpatient, emergency, specialist and hospice visits, laboratory tests, radiation, surgeries, and nursing home stays. Publicly available US unit costs were applied to each resource type to estimate costs, which were analyzed by time periods: during ipilimumab treatment, post-ipilimumab treatment (post-regimen), and within 90 days prior to death (pre-death). Generalized linear mixed models were used to explore cost predictors during the treatment period, on a per-dose-interval basis, defined as the time between ipilimumab doses. Results: Data were abstracted from 273 patient charts at 34 sites. Excluding ipilimumab drug costs, total monthly costs during the treatment regimen, post-regimen, and pre-death periods were $690, $2151, and $5123, respectively. Total healthcare costs were 27 times higher during dose intervals with a grade 3/4 adverse event compared with intervals without a grade 3/4 adverse event. Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status ≥ 2 (vs 0) was also associated with significantly higher cost per dose interval. Conclusions: In this population, monthly costs exclusive of drug were significantly lower during the treatment period than in subsequent periods. Unfavorable ECOG PS was associated with significant increases in cost per dose interval. Grade 3/4 adverse events were associated with a marked increase in healthcare costs, but occurred in a small proportion of dose intervals.
Highlights
The incidence of melanoma has increased dramatically in recent years, from 18.2 cases per 100,000 in 1992 to 26.3 per 100,000 in 2004 [1]
This was an analysis of healthcare resource utilization (HCRU) and associated costs data collected from a multisite, observational chart review study of advanced melanoma patients in the United States receiving first-line treatment with ipilimumab in a real-world setting
This study found that monthly non-ipilimumab costs among patients with advanced melanoma were significantly lower during the treatment period than in subsequent periods
Summary
The incidence of melanoma has increased dramatically in recent years, from 18.2 cases per 100,000 in 1992 to 26.3 per 100,000 in 2004 [1]. A historical median survival of about 6 months [7] has recently improved significantly to rates that approaching and exceeding one year with new immune checkpoint inhibitors and molecularly targeted agents [8] [9]. A large pooled analysis has shown that ipilimumab confers long-term survival benefit in patients with advanced melanoma, with 22% of patients surviving at least 3 years and a median OS of 11.4 months [10]. These results were validated in a retrospective study conducted in a real-world setting that found a median OS of 14.5 months among patients receiving ipilimumab as first-line therapy for advanced melanoma [11]. Grade 3/4 adverse events were associated with a marked increase in healthcare costs, but occurred in a small proportion of dose intervals
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