Abstract

64 Background: In patients with prostate cancer (PC), progression to a metastatic disease stage is associated with substantial decline in prognosis as well as incremental economic burden. There is limited real-world evidence combining clinical data and payer claims to evaluate economic outcomes of patients with mCSPC. This study described healthcare costs of patients with mCSPC before and after the initiation of advanced therapy. Methods: Linked data from the Flatiron Metastatic PC Core Registry and all-payer claims data from Komodo Health Solutions were evaluated (Jan 2016 to Dec 2021). Patients in Flatiron who initiated advanced therapy for mCSPC (index date) in 2017 or later and had a corresponding pharmacy or medical claim in Komodo, following evidence of metastasis in the absence of castration resistance were included. Advanced therapies considered were androgen-receptor signaling inhibitors, chemotherapies, estrogens, immunotherapies, poly ADP-ribose polymerase inhibitors, and radiopharmaceuticals. Patients were excluded if they initiated a clinical trial drug as their index regimen or had <12 months of health insurance eligibility pre-index. All-cause and PC-related total costs (medical and pharmacy) per-patient-per-month (PPPM) were described from a payer’s perspective in the 12-month pre- and post-index period using 2022 US dollars. The post-index period was censored at evidence of castration resistance. Flatiron Health, Inc. did not participate in data analyses. Results: In total, 418 patients with mCSPC were identified (mean age 68 years, 56% white, 53% commercially insured, and 37% on Medicare). Pre-index androgen deprivation therapy was observed in 74% of patients. Pre-index, mean all-cause costs were $2,334 PPPM and PC-related costs were $964 PPPM with $90 PPPM attributable to PC-related pharmacy costs (Table). Post-index, patients averaged 14.5 months of follow-up, in which mean all-cause costs were $8,829 PPPM with PC-related costs of $7,232 PPPM, an increase of >7 times compared to pre-mCSPC therapy initiation. Conclusions: This real-world study demonstrated that costs associated with disease progression in PC are significant and lead to a need for more innovative therapies and medical management in this patient population. Approaches that effectively slow disease progression at earlier stages of PC disease may result in better overall outcomes and lower overall costs associated with progression to metastatic disease. [Table: see text]

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