Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t8hqh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T22:39:46.021Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Tisagenlecleucel for relapsed/refractory acute lymphoblastic leukemia in the Irish healthcare setting: cost-effectiveness and value of information analysis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 July 2022

Niamh Carey*
Affiliation:
National Centre for Pharmacoeconomics, Old Stone Building, St James’s Hospital, Dublin, Ireland Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Trinity Centre for Health Sciences, St James’s Hospital, Dublin, Ireland
Joy Leahy
Affiliation:
National Centre for Pharmacoeconomics, Old Stone Building, St James’s Hospital, Dublin, Ireland Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Trinity Centre for Health Sciences, St James’s Hospital, Dublin, Ireland
Lea Trela-Larsen
Affiliation:
National Centre for Pharmacoeconomics, Old Stone Building, St James’s Hospital, Dublin, Ireland Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Trinity Centre for Health Sciences, St James’s Hospital, Dublin, Ireland
Laura McCullagh
Affiliation:
National Centre for Pharmacoeconomics, Old Stone Building, St James’s Hospital, Dublin, Ireland Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Trinity Centre for Health Sciences, St James’s Hospital, Dublin, Ireland
Michael Barry
Affiliation:
National Centre for Pharmacoeconomics, Old Stone Building, St James’s Hospital, Dublin, Ireland Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Trinity Centre for Health Sciences, St James’s Hospital, Dublin, Ireland
*
* Author for correspondence: Niamh Carey, E-mail: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Objectives

This study evaluates the cost-effectiveness of tisagenlecleucel (a CAR T-cell therapy), versus blinatumomab, for the treatment of pediatric and young adult patients with relapsed/refractory acute lymphoblastic leukemia (R/R ALL) in the Irish healthcare setting. The value of conducting further research, to investigate the value of uncertainty associated with the decision problem, is assessed by means of expected value of perfect information (EVPI) and partial EVPI (EVPPI) analyses.

Methods

A three-state partitioned survival model was developed. A short-term decision tree partitioned patients in the tisagenlecleucel arm according to infusion status. Survival was extrapolated to 60 months; general population mortality with a standardized mortality ratio was then applied. Estimated EVPI and EVPPI were scaled up to population according to the incidence of the decision.

Results

At list prices, the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio was EUR 73,086 per quality-adjusted life year (QALY) (incremental costs EUR 156,928; incremental QALYs 2.15). The probability of cost-effectiveness, at the willingness-to-pay threshold of EUR 45,000 per QALY, was 16 percent. At this threshold, population EVPI was EUR 314,455; population EVPPI was below EUR 100,000 for each parameter category.

Conclusions

Tisagenlecleucel is not cost effective, versus blinatumomab, for the treatment of pediatric and young adult patients with R/R ALL in Ireland (at list prices). Further research to decrease decision (parameter) uncertainty, at the defined willingness-to-pay threshold, may not be of value. However, there is a high degree of uncertainty underpinning the analysis, which may not be captured by EVPI analysis.

Type
Assessment
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press

B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is one of the most common childhood cancers. Five-year survival in patients with newly diagnosed ALL has been reported to exceed 80 percent (Reference Bonaventure, Harewood and Stiller1;2). However, the prognosis of patients with relapsed or refractory (R/R) disease is poor (3). Complete response rates in patients who experience a second, third, and fourth or later relapse have been reported to be 44, 27, and 12 percent, respectively (Reference Ko, Ji and Barnette4). For these patients, allogeneic stem cell transplant (alloSCT) is a treatment option with potential long-term benefit. Successful alloSCT, however, is contingent on response to chemotherapy and availability of an appropriate donor. Treatment of these patients is a key challenge.

Tisagenlecleucel (a chimeric antigen receptor [CAR] T-cell therapy) received European Medicines Agency (EMA) conditional marketing authorization (2018) for the treatment of pediatric and young adult patients (up to 25 years of age) with ALL that is refractory, in relapse post-transplant, or in second or later relapse (5). The pivotal trials of tisagenlecleucel, ELIANA and ENSIGN, are single-arm with short duration of follow-up (Reference Maude, Laetsch and Buechner6;7). The lack of randomized controlled trial evidence, and long-term follow-up data leads to much uncertainty regarding the expected benefits of this therapy, and its longevity. Patients and clinicians are at risk, should tisagenlecleucel not demonstrate long-term survival benefit. Payers are at financial risk due to the associated high upfront cost.

Aim

The aim of this study was to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of tisagenlecleucel, versus blinatumomab with or without alloSCT (henceforth “blinatumomab”), for R/R ALL in pediatric and young adult patients in the Irish healthcare setting. The value of conducting further research to address uncertainties in the model was assessed by expected value of perfect information (EVPI) and partial EVPI (EVPPI) analyses.

Method

Model Structure

Short-Term Decision Tree

The model comprised a short-term decision tree (tisagenlecleucel) and a long-term partitioned survival model (tisagenlecleucel and blinatumomab). The decision tree represented the tisagenlecleucel pretreatment phase. During this phase, events may occur, which prevent patients proceeding to tisagenlecleucel infusion. All patients in the tisagenlecleucel arm entered the decision tree, underwent leukapheresis, and subsequently progressed to one of three outcomes, informed by pooled ELIANA and ENSIGN trial data (Reference Maude, Laetsch and Buechner6;7) (Supplementary Figure 1):

For patients who did not proceed to infusion (i.e., N2 or N3), it was assumed that 50 percent received bridging chemotherapy and 50 percent received lymphodepleting chemotherapy (Reference Corbett, Duarte and Walker8).

Partitioned Survival Model

The partitioned survival model (Supplementary Figure 2) comprised three mutually exclusive health states: event-free survival, progressed disease, and death. Patients treated with blinatumomab entered the partitioned survival model directly. Patients in the tisagenlecleucel arm entered through the decision tree. Survival was measured from the time of treatment initiation in both arms. Most patients with R/R ALL are expected to relapse within 24 to 60 months post-treatment (Reference Locatelli, Schrappe, Bernardo and Rutella9;Reference Hettle, Corbett and Hinde10). It was assumed that patients who were alive after 60 months in either arm were long-term survivors. These were subject to age- and sex-matched general population mortality with a standardized mortality ratio (15.5) applied. This ratio was derived by Fidler et al., who examined mortality in pediatric and adolescent patients (less than 15 years) diagnosed (between 1940 and 2006) with ALL and survived 5 years postdiagnosis (n = 9,493; obtained from the British Childhood Cancer Survivor Study database) (Reference Fidler, Reulen and Winter11).

Cycle length was 1 month (30.4 days); a half-cycle correction was applied. A lifetime horizon of 88 years was employed. A discount rate of 4 percent was applied to costs and outcomes after the first year (12).

Population

The population was aligned with the EMA licensed population of tisagenlecleucel (Supplementary Material 1.2) (5). Starting age was 12 years, 44 percent were female, body surface area was 1.32 m2, and weight was 42.2 kg (7;1315).

Intervention

The intervention was tisagenlecleucel, administered at the EMA licensed dose and modeled as a single-dose intervention (5).

Comparator

Blinatumomab (routine care in Ireland) was the comparator. Blinatumomab may be administered to patients with the intent to receive subsequent alloSCT. It was assumed that 49 percent of patients receive alloSCT following blinatumomab, in line with clinical opinion (n = 5). Dosing was in line with the licensed indication (Supplementary Material 1.3) (16). Patients were assumed to receive up to two cycles (17;Reference von Stackelberg, Locatelli and Zugmaier18).

Perspective

The perspective was that of the healthcare payer, the Health Service Executive (HSE) in Ireland (12). Direct medical costs were included.

Model Inputs

Efficacy Data

Treatment effectiveness was based on the effect on overall survival (OS) and event-free survival (EFS). Efficacy data, identified by systematic literature review, were derived from the pooled ELIANA (Reference Maude, Laetsch and Buechner6) and ENSIGN (7) (tisagenlecleucel), and NCT01471782 (Reference von Stackelberg, Locatelli and Zugmaier18;19) (blinatumomab) trials. ELIANA (n = 75) and ENSIGN (n = 64) were single-arm, phase II trials, which evaluated the efficacy of tisagenlecleucel in the population of interest here. Median duration of follow-up was 13.1 months (ELIANA) and 32 months (ENSIGN) (Reference Maude, Laetsch and Buechner6;7). NCT01471782 (n = 70) was a single-arm, phase I/II trial, which evaluated the efficacy of blinatumomab in the population of interest. Median duration of follow-up was 24 months (Reference von Stackelberg, Locatelli and Zugmaier18;19). Further detail is provided in Supplementary Material 1.2.

Individual patient-level data (IPD) from published Kaplan–Meier curves of OS and EFS were reconstructed by digitizing the published curves and applying the algorithm by Guyot et al. (Reference Guyot, Ades, Ouwens and Welton20). Due to the single-arm nature of the trials, and lack of publicly available raw IPD, a naïve comparison was conducted.

Extrapolation of survival data was conducted in line with NICE Decision Support Unit Guidance (technical support document 14 (Reference Latimer21)). Standard parametric (Gompertz, exponential, Weibull, log-logistic, log-normal, generalized gamma) extrapolation models were explored (Reference Latimer21). Due to the innovative mechanism of tisagenlecleucel and the potential for complex hazard functions (Reference Hettle, Corbett and Hinde10), flexible cubic spline models (one-, two-, and three-knot spline models across all scales), and mixture cure models were also explored. Survival models were fitted individually to the treatment arms. The best fitting model was selected based on AIC (Akaike information criterion) and BIC (Bayesian information criterion) statistics (Supplementary Material 1.4), visual fit, and clinical plausibility (Reference Latimer21).

Overall Survival

The one-knot (odds) spline model was deemed the best fit to the OS data of tisagenlecleucel and blinatumomab. This model closely aligned with judgments, for both tisagenlecleucel and blinatumomab, elicited from clinical opinion (n = 5). Alternative models were explored in scenario analysis.

Event-Free Survival

EFS data for tisagenlecleucel were based on ELIANA only (Reference Maude, Laetsch and Buechner6); the Kaplan–Meier curve of EFS was not publicly available for ENSIGN (7). The generalized gamma model was deemed the best fit. EFS data were not reported for blinatumomab. EFS was therefore, estimated from the OS curve of blinatumomab by assuming that the cumulative hazard function for EFS was proportional to the cumulative hazard function for OS. This approach has been accepted by National HTA agencies (13;Reference Walton, Sharif and Hodgson22). The ratio between EFS and OS was based on the study by Kuhlen et al. (Reference Kuhlen, Willasch and Dalle23). This overall cumulative hazard was applied to the OS data of NCT01471782 (blinatumomab) to generate EFS data.

After month 60, the cumulative survival probabilities for EFS were assumed to flatten up to the point at which EFS met OS. Death due to progression was assumed to only occur within the first 60 months in both arms, as patients alive after 60 months were assumed to be long-term survivors. EFS could not exceed OS at any point.

Utility Inputs

Utility data were derived through systematic literature review. Heath-state utility data comprised data collected using the EQ-5D-3L in ELIANA, with the UK valuation set applied (13). Patients alive after 60 months were assumed to have utility equivalent to that of the event-free survival state. Disutility associated with pretreatment procedures, intensive care unit (ICU) admission, febrile neutropenia and pancytopenia were also included. The proportion of patients experiencing AEs, and their duration, were informed by relevant trials (Reference Maude, Laetsch and Buechner6;7;15;Reference von Stackelberg, Locatelli and Zugmaier18;19). An age adjustment was applied, using the multiplicative approach (Reference Ara and Brazier24). Time dependent post-alloSCT disutility was applied to reflect improvement in health over time (Reference Felder-Puig, di Gallo and Waldenmair25). Further detail is provided in Table 1 and Supplementary Material 1.5.

Table 1. Key Input Parameters of Cost-Utility Model of Tisagenlecleucel Versus Blinatumomab in Pediatric and Young Adult Patients with R/R ALL

a Patients who were alive at 61 months incurred the cost of EFS from month 61 onwards, regardless of health state (Reference Walton, Sharif and Hodgson22).

b Excluding the cost of intravenous immunoglobulin for the treatment of B-cell aplasia.

c 50 percent of patients receive dosing based on body surface area (used for patients weighing < 45 kg) and 50 percent of patients receive fixed-dosing regimen (used for patients weighing ≥ 45 kg). Dosing regimen presented in Supplementary Material 1.3.

d In the cost-utility model, these were converted to a per cycle cost and applied to the proportion of patients experiencing the event.

e Assumed equal to the EFS follow-up costs of blinatumomab in months 1–12 (13;Reference Walton, Sharif and Hodgson22).

ALL, acute lymphoblastic leukemia; AlloSCT, allogeneic stem cell transplant; EFS, event-free survival; OS, overall survival; PD, progressed disease; R/R, relapsed/refractory.

Cost Inputs

Irish cost data were used, where available. Where necessary, costs were inflated to 2020 using the Consumer Price Index for health (36), and converted to Euro using purchasing power parities (37). See Table 1.

Training

As per the EMA marketing authorization, healthcare professionals, who prescribe, dispense, or administer tisagenlecleucel, require training (15). An associated cost per patient was included in the tisagenlecleucel arm (Supplementary Material 1.6).

Tisagenlecleucel-Specific Pretreatment

In the tisagenlecleucel arm, all patients incurred the cost of leukapheresis and cryopreservation. Bridging chemotherapy (one cycle) and lymphodepleting chemotherapy (one cycle) were received by 88 and 95 percent of patients (who received infusion), respectively. This was informed by ELIANA and ENSIGN (Reference Maude, Laetsch and Buechner6;7).

Drug Acquisition

Total drug acquisition costs for tisagenlecleucel and blinatumomab are presented in Table 1. It was assumed that 100 percent of patients received one cycle and 33 percent received a second cycle of blinatumomab, as per NCT01471782 (19).

Administration and Hospitalization

Costs were obtained from the Irish Healthcare Pricing Office DRG List (28), tertiary teaching hospitals, the Irish HSE DRG List (33), and the literature (Reference Thielen, van Dongen-Leunis and Arons30) (Table 1). The cost of outpatient administration of bridging chemotherapy was included (28). In the absence of severe AEs, the duration of hospitalization (including lymphodepleting chemotherapy) for patients receiving tisagenlecleucel is expected to be 3–4 weeks. This was informed by clinical opinion from one consultant hematologist in a Tertiary Teaching Hospital in Ireland. The hospitalization cost represented a mean length of stay of 24.5 days (28). Patients are required to remain within 2 hr of travel of the hospital for at least 4 weeks following infusion (15). It was arbitrarily assumed that 50 percent of patients required hospital-associated patient apartments for 4 days and that the remaining patients lived nearby. A cost was included for patients who received lymphodepleting chemotherapy but did not proceed to tisagenlecleucel (28).

In line with clinical opinion in Ireland (n = 1), patients receiving blinatumomab were assumed to be hospitalized for 7 days, after which they were discharged with an infusion pump (16). Infusion durations were assumed to alternate between 72- and 96-hr (38) (avoiding the need to change the infusion bag at weekends). This results in a 7-day inpatient stay (cycle one), seven outpatient visits (cycle one) and nine outpatient visits (cycle two).

Initiation and Monitoring

All tisagenlecleucel initiation and monitoring costs were assumed to be accounted for in the cost of hospitalization. Outpatient monitoring costs were included in the blinatumomab arm.

Health-state specific follow-up costs were applied for the event-free survival and progressed disease states. Follow-up requirements were sourced from the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology (3). Additional tisagenlecleucel-specific requirements were sourced from Yakoub-Agha et al (Reference Yakoub-Agha, Chabannon and Bader39).

Adverse Events

Tisagenlecleucel-specific AEs included cytokine release syndrome (CRS), B-cell aplasia, febrile neutropenia, pancytopenia, and non-CRS ICU admission. Data were obtained from pooled ELIANA and ENSIGN data (Reference Maude, Laetsch and Buechner6;7). Other AEs, in the tisagenlecleucel arm, were assumed to be captured by the cost of hospitalization. Grade ≥ 3 AEs occurring in 5 percent or greater of the population in NCT01471782 were included for blinatumomab (Reference von Stackelberg, Locatelli and Zugmaier18). CRS was also included in the blinatumomab arm. Supplementary Material 1.6 provides further detail.

Allogeneic Stem Cell Transplant

AlloSCT procedure (28) and follow-up costs, accounting for 365-days postdischarge (34), were included for the 49 percent of patients in the blinatumomab arm who received alloSCT.

Terminal Care

A once-off per patient terminal care cost was applied to patients upon entering the death state (Reference Bourke, Burns and Gaynor35).

Key Input Parameters

Key input parameters are presented in Table 1.

Model Outputs

Deterministic ICER

The base case analysis considered the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER), calculated from deterministic costs and deterministic quality-adjusted life years (QALYs), using standard decision rules (12). In Ireland, most drugs that have been reimbursed to date have been considered under a willingness-to-pay threshold of EUR 45,000 per QALY (40;Reference McCullagh and Barry41). This threshold was considered here.

Probabilistic ICER and Scatterplot

Probabilistic sensitivity analysis (PSA) was conducted; parameters were varied according to appropriate distributions (Table 1). Results were generated using Monte Carlo Simulation (5,000 iterations).

A scatterplot of incremental costs and QALYs, generated from each iteration of the PSA, was constructed to illustrate the degree of uncertainty surrounding the estimates. The mean probabilistic ICER was estimated.

Cost-Effectiveness Acceptability Curve

For each iteration of the PSA, the expected net monetary benefit (NMB) for tisagenlecleucel and blinatumomab was estimated. From the NMB values, the probabilities of each treatment being cost effective over a range of thresholds (EUR 0.00 per QALY to EUR 350,000 per QALY) were plotted to produce the cost-effectiveness acceptability curve.

One-Way Sensitivity Analysis

One-way sensitivity analysis (OWSA) of all parameters was performed to determine the impact on the deterministic ICER of changes to individual parameters. Upper and lower bounds of the 95 percent confidence interval (CI) for point estimates were used where available. Otherwise, point estimates were varied ± 25 percent. A tornado plot was constructed, illustrating the impact of the ten most influential parameters.

Scenario Analysis

A number of scenario analyses were conducted to assess the impact on the deterministic ICER of employing alternative, plausible assumptions.

Price Analysis

An analysis was conducted (using the “Goal Seek” function in Microsoft Excel) to determine the decrease in the list price of tisagenlecleucel that would be required for the ICER to meet the EUR 45,000 per QALY threshold.

Expected Value of Perfect Information and Partial Expected Value of Perfect Information

EVPI represents the estimated value of eliminating uncertainty in the model. EVPPI identifies the parameters whose uncertainty drives decision uncertainty, allowing further research to be prioritized (Reference Brennan, Kharroubi, O’Hagan and Chilcott42). EVPI and EVPPI were calculated on 5,000 iterations of the PSA and over a range of thresholds. EVPPI was estimated using the Gaussian process regression approach (Reference Wood43;Reference Strong, Oakley and Brennan44). EVPPI was calculated for the parameter categories: utility values, survival analysis, hospitalization and monitoring costs, AE costs, and alloSCT. Estimates of EVPI and EVPPI were scaled up to population according to the incidence of the decision (six patients per year, as per clinical opinion [n = 1] in Ireland; total 51 patients over 10 years when discounting is applied) (12). A technology time horizon of 10 years was assumed (Reference Hettle, Corbett and Hinde10). A discount rate of 4 percent was applied. Population EVPI estimates were plotted over the range of thresholds.

Results

Deterministic Results

Deterministic model outcomes are presented in Table 2. At list prices, tisagenlecleucel was not cost effective, versus blinatumomab, at the EUR 45,000 per QALY threshold.

Table 2. Deterministic, Probabilistic, and Scenario Analysis Results of the Incremental Analysis of Cost-Effectiveness of Tisagenlecleucel versus Blinatumomab in Pediatric and Young Adult Patients with R/R ALL

a Scenario analyses were conducted on deterministic outcomes. Thus, they should be considered indicative only.

ALL, acute lymphoblastic leukemia; EFS, event-free survival; ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; OS, overall survival; QALY, quality-adjusted life year; R/R, relapsed/refractory.

Probabilistic Results

Expected incremental costs and incremental QALYs are presented in a scatterplot in Figure 1. Mean expected costs and QALYs are presented in Table 2.

Figure 1. Scatterplot of incremental costs and incremental QALYs from probabilistic analysis of tisagenlecleucel versus blinatumomab (with or without allogeneic stem cell transplant).

The cost-effectiveness acceptability curve is presented in Supplementary Material 1.7. At the EUR 45,000 per QALY threshold, there was a 16 percent probability that tisagenlecleucel was cost effective.

One-Way Sensitivity Analysis

Outcomes of OWSA are presented in Supplementary Figure 8. The main drivers in the model were the rate of alloSCT in the blinatumomab arm, discount rate on outcomes, and tisagenlecleucel infusion cost.

Scenario Analysis

Results of scenario analyses are presented in Table 2 and Supplementary Material 1.9.

Price Analysis

A 28 percent decrease (including 5.5 percent rebate) on the tisagenlecleucel list price was required to reduce the deterministic ICER to the EUR 45,000 per QALY threshold. The probability of cost-effectiveness here was 44 percent.

Expected Value of Perfect Information

At the EUR 45,000 per QALY threshold, the 10-year population EVPI was EUR 314,455. Population EVPI, over a range of thresholds, is depicted in Figure 2.

Figure 2. Population expected value of perfect information, over various willingness-to-pay thresholds, of tisagenlecleucel versus blinatumomab (with or without allogeneic stem cell transplant).

The population EVPI analysis was rerun at the price that reduced the ICER to EUR 45,000 per QALY (EUR 229,105; representing a 28 percent price decrease). At this threshold, the 10-year population EVPI was EUR 1,149,810 (Figure 3).

Figure 3. Population expected value of perfect information, over various willingness-to-pay thresholds, of tisagenlecleucel (price that reduced the ICER to EUR 45,000 per QALY) versus blinatumomab (with or without allogeneic stem cell transplant).

Partial EVPI

At the EUR 45,000 per QALY threshold, 10-year population EVPPI was below EUR 100,000 for each parameter category. Survival analysis had the highest population EVPPI (EUR 67,189), followed by alloSCT parameters (EUR 29,338), utility values (EUR 25,255), AE costs (EUR 18,649) and hospitalization and monitoring costs (EUR 1,215).

The population EVPPI analysis was rerun at the price of tisagenlecleucel that reduced the ICER to EUR 45,000 per QALY. At the EUR 45,000 per QALY threshold, population EVPPI was below EUR 500,000 for each category. Similar to the EVPPI at list price, survival analysis had the highest population EVPPI. Here, it was valued at EUR 371,813. This was followed by alloSCT (EUR 272,459), hospitalization and monitoring costs (EUR 211,894), utility values (EUR 133,375) and AE costs (EUR 50,222).

Supplementary Material 1.10 depicts the value of uncertainty associated with each parameter category.

Discussion

Deterministic and Probabilistic Results

At list prices, tisagenlecleucel is not cost effective, versus blinatumomab, at a EUR 45,000 per QALY willingness-to-pay threshold.

The high degree of uncertainty in the clinical evidence base of tisagenlecleucel translates to uncertainty in cost-effectiveness. Uncertainty associated with the naïve comparison is difficult to quantify. For immature survival data, such as that used in this analysis, the true uncertainty lies in extrapolation of the data and the appropriate choice of survival model. Such uncertainty is generally not captured in the PSA. Caution is therefore, warranted in the interpretation of results. The cost-effectiveness acceptability curve indicated that the probability of cost-effectiveness of tisagenlecleucel exceeds that of blinatumomab at thresholds of approximately EUR 80,000 per QALY and over. As some PSA iterations lie in the north-west quadrant (more costly, less effective), the probability of cost-effectiveness of tisagenlecleucel will not reach 100 percent at any threshold.

One-Way Sensitivity and Scenario Analyses

The model was sensitive to the discount rate on outcomes. Altering the discount rate on costs had less impact. Reducing the discount rate on outcomes to 0 percent (whilst maintaining a 4 percent discount on costs), decreased the ICER to less than EUR 45,000 per QALY. This sensitivity to the discount rate on outcomes is expected due to the time divergence between high upfront costs and long-term health outcomes.

Scenario analysis highlighted the impact of changing the time-point (post-treatment) at which patients are considered long-term survivors. A “worst case” (conservative) scenario, which removed the structural assumptions regarding the time-point of long-term survival, had a sizeable impact on the deterministic ICER (approximately EUR 56,000 per QALY increase). The associated probability of cost-effectiveness, at the EUR 45,000 per QALY threshold, was 3 percent. Although simple price reductions on tisagenlecleucel may reduce the ICER to a payer threshold, they do not address the decision uncertainty faced by clinicians, patients, and payers. Performance-linked reimbursement agreements may be valuable in managing the associated financial risk.

The paucity of long-term data was also reflected in uncertainty in the most appropriate survival model. Spline models were chosen (for OS), over standard parametric models, due to their enhanced flexibility. However, the log-normal model was also a reasonable option. Employing this model to extrapolate the OS data of tisagenlecleucel decreased the deterministic ICER by approximately EUR 16,500 per QALY. The associated probability of cost-effectiveness, at the EUR 45,000 per QALY threshold, was 27 percent.

EVPI and EVPPI

At list prices, EVPI indicated that the cost of further research should not exceed EUR 314,455. At the population EVPI peak (a threshold of approximately EUR 75,000 per QALY), the probability of cost-effectiveness of tisagenlecleucel was 48 percent. At higher thresholds, the corresponding consequences of decision uncertainty reduce, resulting in a reduction in population EVPI (Reference Hettle, Corbett and Hinde10). At list prices, parameters associated with survival analysis had the highest population EVPPI. Thus, if further research is conducted, this area should be prioritized.

Population EVPI and EVPPI analyses were rerun at the price of tisagenlecleucel that reduced the ICER to EUR 45,000 per QALY. The 10-year population EVPI, at a EUR 45,000 per QALY threshold, increased considerably. Parameters associated with survival analysis also had the highest population EVPPI in this scenario. There were some changes in the ranking of parameter categories compared to those described at the list price of tisagenlecleucel. Uncertainty associated with the model decision is driven by different categories depending on the cost of tisagenlecleucel and subsequent estimates of cost-effectiveness. The reasons for this change in ranking are not clear. Notably, the top two categories for research prioritization were consistent between the two analyses.

Modeled alloSCT costs, in the blinatumomab arm, were based on a higher rate of alloSCT than that observed in NCT01471782 (Reference von Stackelberg, Locatelli and Zugmaier18); efficacy was derived from the trial. This approach favors tisagenlecleucel. In NCT01471782, data were not presented separately for patients who did and did not proceed to alloSCT, precluding an analysis of survival benefit associated with alloSCT. In the absence of a structural link between alloSCT and survival benefit, it is likely that the EVPPI analysis overstates the impact of uncertainty on alloSCT. This is because stochastic variability on this parameter impacts costs only. Of note, the rate of alloSCT employed in the model is based on clinical opinion and is therefore, subject to uncertainty.

EVPI and EVPPI investigate parameter uncertainty. Structural uncertainties, such as that associated with the naïve comparison, are not investigated. The low EVPI and EVPPI estimates are likely a reflection, to some degree, of the low estimated incidence of the decision (six patients per year).

Comparison with the Literature

The National Centre for Pharmacoeconomics (NCPE Ireland) evaluated a Pharma-Applicant HTA of tisagenlecleucel for this indication (from the perspective of the HSE). Similar to our findings, tisagenlecleucel was not cost effective (vs. blinatumomab); ICERs ranged from EUR 75,748 per QALY (incremental costs EUR 321,755; incremental QALYs 4.25) to EUR 116,506 per QALY (incremental costs EUR 457,033; incremental QALYs 3.92) (29). Thielen et al. evaluated the cost-effectiveness of tisagenlecleucel (vs. blinatumomab) from a Dutch societal perspective, generating an ICER of EUR 31,682 per QALY. Of note, Thielen et al. employed a discount rate of 1.5 percent on outcomes (Reference Thielen, van Dongen-Leunis and Arons30). No EVPI analyses were identified in the literature.

Limitations

Patients in the progressed disease state after 60 months were assumed to survive long-term. This was based on clinical opinion. This approach has been accepted by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE UK) for reimbursement decision making (Reference Corbett, Duarte and Walker8) and has been employed in the literature (Reference Ribera Santasusana, de Andrés Saldaña and García-Muñoz14). Mixture cure models are an alternative approach to model long-term survival; this approach was not used here due to the high degree of censoring towards the end of the trial follow-up periods. Mixture cure models cannot reliably estimate a cure fraction under such conditions (Reference Rutherford, Lambert and Sweeting49).

Due to model complexity, PSA was conducted only for the base case analyses and key scenarios. Thus, results of OWSA and scenario analyses should be considered indicative only.

No population subgroups were considered due to paucity of published data. Without these data, it is not possible to predict how results might differ between patient subgroups.

Conclusion

At list prices, tisagenlecleucel is not cost effective, versus blinatumomab, for the treatment of pediatric and young adult patients with R/R ALL in Ireland. Although tisagenlecleucel was associated with an incremental QALY gain, the clinical evidence supporting the model was highly uncertain. Population EVPI and EVPPI analyses indicated that further research to decrease decision uncertainty (in parameters), at the defined willingness-to-pay threshold, may not be of value. However, uncertainty in the model may not be adequately captured by OWSA, PSA, and EVPI. Performance-linked reimbursement agreements may be a valuable approach to managing the financial risk associated with this uncertainty.

Medical Subject Headings

Hematologic Neoplasms; Leukemia; and Health Care Economics and Organizations.

Supplementary Material

To view supplementary material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/S0266462322000356.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.

References

Bonaventure, A, Harewood, R, Stiller, CA, et al (2017 ) Worldwide comparison of survival from childhood leukaemia for 1995-2009, by subtype, age, and sex (CONCORD-2): A population-based study of individual data for 89 828 children from 198 registries in 53 countries. Lancet Haematol. 4, e202e217.Google ScholarPubMed
National Cancer Registry Ireland (NCRI) (2019) Number of cases diagnosed, incidence rates, projected case counts and survival for acute lymphoblastic leukaemia.Google Scholar
National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) (2022) NCCN clinical practice guidelines in oncology: Pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia, Version 1.2022. (October 2021; Page 6465, 77–82).Google Scholar
Ko, RH, Ji, L, Barnette, P, et al (2010) Outcome of patients treated for relapsed or refractory acute lymphoblastic leukemia: A therapeutic advances in childhood leukemia consortium study. J Clin Oncol. 28, 648654.Google ScholarPubMed
Kymriah (2021) 1.2x106 - 6x108 cells dispersion for infusion: Summary of product characteristics. Available at: https://www.medicines.ie/medicines/kymriah-1-2-x-106-6-x-108-cells-dispersion-for-infusion-34945/spc. [Accessed 2021].Google Scholar
Maude, SL, Laetsch, TW, Buechner, J, et al (2018) Tisagenlecleucel in children and young adults with B-cell lymphoblastic leukemia. N Engl J Med. 378, 439448.Google Scholar
European Medicines Agency (EMA) (2020) Kymriah: EPAR public assessment report update.Google Scholar
Corbett, M, Duarte, A, Walker, S, et al (2018) Tisagenlecleucel for treating relapsed or refractory diffuse large B-cell lymphoma: A single technology appraisal. University of York Technology Assessment Group.Google Scholar
Locatelli, F, Schrappe, M, Bernardo, ME, Rutella, S (2012) How I treat relapsed childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Blood. 120, 28072816.Google Scholar
Hettle, R, Corbett, M, Hinde, S, et al (2017) The assessment and appraisal of regenerative medicines and cell therapy products: an exploration of methods for review, economic evaluation and appraisal. Health Technol Assess. 21, 1204.Google Scholar
Fidler, MM, Reulen, RC, Winter, DL, et al (2016) Long term cause specific mortality among 34 489 five year survivors of childhood cancer in Great Britain: Population based cohort study. BMJ. 354, i4351.Google ScholarPubMed
Health Information and Quality Authority (HIQA) (2020) Guidelines for the economic evaluation of health technologies in Ireland. Dublin: Health Information and Quality Authority.Google Scholar
Norwegian Medicines Agency (NoMA) (2018) Single technology assessent: Tisagenlecleucel (Kymriah) for the treatment of relapsed/refractory acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) in paediatric and young adult patients.Google Scholar
Ribera Santasusana, JM, de Andrés Saldaña, A, García-Muñoz, N, et al (2020) Cost-effectiveness analysis of tisagenlecleucel in the treatment of relapsed or refractory B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia in children and young adults in Spain. Clinicoecon Outcomes Res. 12, 253264.Google ScholarPubMed
European Medicines Agency (EMA) (2018) Kymriah: EPAR-Public assessment report.Google Scholar
Summary of Product Characteristics 2021 Blincyto 38.5 micrograms powder for concentrate and solution for solution for infusion. Available at: https://www.medicines.ie/medicines/blincyto-31448/spc. [Accessed 2021].Google Scholar
National Cancer Control Programme (NCCP) (2019) Blinatumomab paediatric therapy.Google Scholar
von Stackelberg, A, Locatelli, F, Zugmaier, G, et al (2016) Phase I/Phase II study of blinatumomab in pediatric patients with relapsed/refractory acute lymphoblastic leukemia. J Clin Oncol. 34, 43814389.Google ScholarPubMed
European Medicines Agency (EMA) (2018) Blincyto EPAR: Public assessment report (page 41).Google Scholar
Guyot, P, Ades, AE, Ouwens, MJNM, Welton, NJ (2012) Enhanced secondary analysis of survival data: Reconstructing the data from published Kaplan-Meier survival curves. BMC Med Res Methodol. 12, 9.Google ScholarPubMed
Latimer, N (2011) NICE DSU technical support document 14: Undertaking survival analysis for economic evaluations alongside clinical trials - extrapolation with patient-level data.Google Scholar
Walton, M, Sharif, S, Hodgson, R, et al (2018) Tisagenlecleucel-T for treating relapsed or refractory B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia in people ages up to 25 years: A single technology appraisal. CRD and CHE, University of York, Technology Assessment Group.Google Scholar
Kuhlen, M, Willasch, AM, Dalle, J-H, et al (2018) Outcome of relapse after allogeneic HSCT in children with ALL enrolled in the ALL-SCT 2003/2007 trial. Br J Haematol. 180, 8289.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ara, R, Brazier, JE (2010) Populating an economic model with health state utility values: Moving toward better practice. Value Health. 13, 509518. [Accessed 2022]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Felder-Puig, R, di Gallo, A, Waldenmair, M, et al (2006) Health-related quality of life of pediatric patients receiving allogeneic stem cell or bone marrow transplantation: Results of a longitudinal, multi-center study. Bone Marrow Transplant. 38, 119126.Google ScholarPubMed
Kwon, J, Kim, SW, Ungar, WJ, et al (2018) A systematic review and meta-analysis of childhood health utilities. Med Decis Making. 38, 277305.Google ScholarPubMed
Lloyd, A, Nafees, B, Narewska, J, Dewilde, S, Watkins, J (2006) Health state utilities for metastatic breast cancer. Br J Cancer. 95, 683690.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Healthcare Pricing Office (HPO) (2020) ABF 2020 admitted patient price list: DRG prices for inpatients and daycases 2020.Google Scholar
National Centre for Pharmacoeconomics (NCPE) (2019) Tisagenlecleucel (Kymriah) for the treatment of paediatric and young adult patients up to 25 years of age with B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) this is refractory, in relpase post-transplant, or in second or later relapse: Technical Summary Dublin. [Accessed 2022].Google Scholar
Thielen, FW, van Dongen-Leunis, A, Arons, AMM, et al (2020) Cost-effectiveness of Anti-CD19 chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy in pediatric relapsed/refractory B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. A societal view. Eur J Haematol. 105, 203215. [Accessed 2021].CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Forsythe, A, Brandt, PS, Dolph, M, et al (2018) Systematic review of health state utility values for acute myeloid leukemia. Clinicoecon Outcomes Res. 10, 8392.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Corporate Pharmaceutical Unit (CPU) (2020) IPHA price realignment file for implementation on 1 October 2020. Available at: https://www.hse.ie/eng/about/who/cpu/ipha-price-reduction-2020/.Google Scholar
Health Service Executive (HSE) (2013) Ready reckoner of acute hospital inpatient and daycase activity & costs (summarised by DRG) relating to 2011 costs and activity. [Accessed 2021].Google Scholar
Ernst & Young LLP (2021) Analysis of hospital activity and costs following allogeneic stem cell transplantation in England. London.Google Scholar
Bourke, S, Burns, RM, Gaynor, C (2014) Challenges in generating costs and utilisation rates associated with castration-resistant prostate cancer. J Mark Access Health Policy. 2. 10.3402/jmahp.v2.24072.Google ScholarPubMed
Central Statistics Office (CSO) (2020) Consumer price index. Available at: https://data.cso.ie/.Google Scholar
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) (2020) Purchasing power parities (PPP). Available at: https://data.oecd.org/conversion/purchasing-power-parities-ppp.htm.Google Scholar
National Health Service (NHS) 2017 Chemotherapy protocol: Acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) Blinatumomab (3,4 day). Available at: https://www.uhs.nhs.uk/Media/SUHTExtranet/Services/Chemotherapy-SOPs/ALL/Blinatumomab.pdf. [Accessed 2021].Google Scholar
Yakoub-Agha, I, Chabannon, C, Bader, P, et al (2020) Management of adults and children undergoing chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy: best practice recommendations of the European society for blood and marrow transplantation (EBMT) and the joint accreditation committee of ISCT and EBMT (JACIE). Haematologica. 105, 297316.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
National Centre for Pharmacoeconomics (NCPE) (2021) About US. Health technology assessment. Available at: https://www.ncpe.ie/about/.Google Scholar
McCullagh, L, Barry, M (2016) The pharmacoeconomic evaluation process in Ireland. Pharmacoeconomics. 34, 12671276.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Brennan, A, Kharroubi, S, O’Hagan, A, Chilcott, J (2007) Calculating partial expected value of perfect information via Monte Carlo sampling algorithms. Med Decis Making. 27, 448470.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wood, S (2021) mgcv: Mixed GAM computation vehicle with automatic smoothness estimation. Available at: https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/mgcv/index.html.Google Scholar
Strong, M, Oakley, JE, Brennan, A (2014) Estimating multiparameter partial expected value of perfect information from a probabilistic sensitivity analysis sample:A nonparametric regression approach. Med Decis Mak. 34, 311326.Google Scholar
MacArthur, AC, Spinelli, JJ, Rogers, PC, et al ( 2007) Mortality among 5-year survivors of cancer diagnosed during childhood or adolescence in British Columbia, Canada. Pediatr Blood Cancer. 48, 460467. [Accessed 2021].CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bhatia, S, Robison, LL, Francisco, L, et al (2005) Late mortality in survivors of autologous hematopoietic-cell transplantation: Report from the bone marrow transplant survivor study. Blood. 105, 42154222.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gravelle, H, Smith, D (2001) Discounting for health effects in cost-benefit and cost-effectiveness analysis. Health Econ. 10, 587599.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Department of Public Expenditure and Refrom (DEPR) (2019) Public spending code: Central technical references and economic appraisal parameters.Google Scholar
Rutherford, M, Lambert, P, Sweeting, M, et al (2020) NICE DSU technical support document 21. Flexible methods for survival analysis.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1. Key Input Parameters of Cost-Utility Model of Tisagenlecleucel Versus Blinatumomab in Pediatric and Young Adult Patients with R/R ALL

Figure 1

Table 2. Deterministic, Probabilistic, and Scenario Analysis Results of the Incremental Analysis of Cost-Effectiveness of Tisagenlecleucel versus Blinatumomab in Pediatric and Young Adult Patients with R/R ALL

Figure 2

Figure 1. Scatterplot of incremental costs and incremental QALYs from probabilistic analysis of tisagenlecleucel versus blinatumomab (with or without allogeneic stem cell transplant).

Figure 3

Figure 2. Population expected value of perfect information, over various willingness-to-pay thresholds, of tisagenlecleucel versus blinatumomab (with or without allogeneic stem cell transplant).

Figure 4

Figure 3. Population expected value of perfect information, over various willingness-to-pay thresholds, of tisagenlecleucel (price that reduced the ICER to EUR 45,000 per QALY) versus blinatumomab (with or without allogeneic stem cell transplant).

Supplementary material: File

Carey et al. supplementary material

Carey et al. supplementary material

Download Carey et al. supplementary material(File)
File 507.2 KB