Abstract

BackgroundProton beam therapy (PBT) is a new-emerging cancer treatment in China but its treatment costs are high and not yet covered by Chinese public medical insurance. The advanced form of PBT, intensity-modulated proton radiation therapy (IMPT), has been confirmed to reduce normal tissue complication probability (NTCP) as compared to conventional intensity-modulated photon-radiation therapy (IMRT) in patients with oropharyngeal cancer (OPC). Herein, we evaluated the cost-effectiveness and applicability of IMPT versus IMRT for OPC patients in China, aiming at guiding the proper use of PBT.MethodsA 7-state Markov model was designed for analysis. Base-case evaluation was performed on a 56-year-old (median age of OPC in China) patient under the assumption that IMPT could provide a 25% NTCP-reduction in long-term symptomatic dysphagia and xerostomia. Model robustness was examined using probabilistic sensitivity analysis, cohort analysis, and tornado diagram. One-way sensitivity analyses were conducted to identify the cost-effective scenarios. IMPT was considered as cost-effective if the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) was below the societal willingness-to-pay (WTP) threshold.ResultsCompared with IMRT, IMPT provided an extra 0.205 quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) at an additional cost of 34,926.6 US dollars ($), and had an ICER of $170,082.4/ QALY for the base case. At the current WTP of China ($33,558 / QALY) and a current IMPT treatment costs of $50,000, IMPT should provide a minimum NTCP-reduction of 47.5, 50.8, 55.6, 63.3 and 77.2% to be considered cost-effective for patient age levels of 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50-year-old, respectively. For patients at the median age level, reducing the current IMPT costs ($50,000) to a $30,000 level would make the minimum NTCP-reduction threshold for “cost-effective” decrease from 91.4 to 44.6%, at the current WTP of China (from 69.0 to 33.5%, at a WTP of $50,000 / QALY; and from 39.7 to 19.1%, at a WTP of $100,000 / QALY).ConclusionsCost-effective scenarios of PBT exist in Chinese OPC patients at the current WTP of China. Considering a potential upcoming increase in PBT use in China, such cost-effective scenarios may further expand if a decrease of proton treatment costs occurs or an increase of WTP level.

Highlights

  • Proton beam therapy (PBT) is a new-emerging cancer treatment in China but its treatment costs are high and not yet covered by Chinese public medical insurance

  • Cost-effective scenarios of PBT exist in Chinese oropharyngeal cancer (OPC) patients at the current WTP of China

  • The costeffectiveness analysis (CEA) model was built based on the following two assumptions: (1) compared to intensity-modulated photon-radiation therapy (IMRT), intensity-modulated proton radiation therapy (IMPT) would be able to reduce symptomatic dysphagia and xerostomia (Radiation Therapy Oncology Group, RTOG grade 2–4), defined in this present study as “normal tissue complication probability (NTCP)-reduction”; per the equation: NTCP-reduction (%) = [(NTCP after IMRT - NTCP after IMPT) / NTCP after IMRT] *100%; (2) all the dysphagia and xerostomia would occur within the first year after radiotherapy and the two symptoms would be irreversible once occurred [20, 21]

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Summary

Introduction

Proton beam therapy (PBT) is a new-emerging cancer treatment in China but its treatment costs are high and not yet covered by Chinese public medical insurance. The advanced form of PBT, intensity-modulated proton radiation therapy (IMPT), has been confirmed to reduce normal tissue complication probability (NTCP) as compared to conventional intensity-modulated photon-radiation therapy (IMRT) in patients with oropharyngeal cancer (OPC). The worldwide incidence of oropharyngeal cancer (OPC) has increased in the past 40 years owing to the rising rates of human papillomavirus (HPV) infection related to sexual behavior [1]. Even with the optimal photon irradiation technique, intensity-modulated photon-radiation therapy (IMRT), symptomatic dysphagia and xerostomia (grade 2–4) occur at incidences as high as 15–23% and 32– 48%; and have been identified as independent negative factors impacting the long-term quality of life of OPC patients [6,7,8,9]

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