Abstract

To grade the long-term benefit of anticancer agents, the American Society of Clinical Oncology Value Framework (ASCO-VF) awards tail-of-the-curve bonus points by using milestone survival at twice the median control survival. Here, we propose an alternative, late-life expectancy that we defined as the area under the Kaplan-Meier curve from median control survival to the end of follow-up. We analyzed all indications of immune checkpoint inhibitors with survival data and found that 9 indications out of 13 (69.2%) qualified for ASCO-VF tail-of-the-curve bonus points either in progression-free or overall survival. Our proposed score recognized a long-term benefit not captured by the ASCO-VF, for example, for CHECKMATE-66 where twice the median overall survival was not reached. We found that nivolumab was associated with an increase of 65.3% (95% CI = 38.9 to 89.5) in overall survival late-life expectancy, which highlights its important long-term benefit. In conclusion, the ASCO-VF could be improved with the use of late-life expectancy.

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