Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of Triptorelin, Goserelin, and Leuprolide in the Treatment of Patients With Metastatic Prostate Cancer: A Societal Perspective.
Rezaee. Mehdi M; Karimzadeh. Iman I; Hashemi-Meshkini. Amir A; Zeighami. Shahryar S; Bazyar. Mohammad M; Lotfi. Farhad F; Keshavarz. Khosro K
Key Findings
- Goserelin had the lowest total cost ($13,539) and a solid QALY (6.365) over 20 years
- Triptorelin was more expensive ($18,125) with a slightly higher QALY (6.658)
- Leuprolide was the most costly ($26,007) but gave the highest QALY (6.856)
- One‑way and probabilistic sensitivity analyses confirmed the results were robust
Practical Outcomes
- For people interested in using GnRH‑agonist peptides, goserelin appears to give the best bang for the buck in a healthcare‑system context. However, the study doesn’t change dosing or safety info, so it offers limited direct guidance for personal protocols.
Summary
A study in Iran looked at the long‑term cost and health benefits of three injectable hormones (triptorelin, goserelin, leuprolide) used to treat advanced prostate cancer. Over 20 years, goserelin cost about $13,500 and gave 6.37 quality‑adjusted life years, making it the cheapest and most cost‑effective option compared with the other two drugs.
Abstract
Metastatic prostate cancer is the most common malignant cancer and the second leading cause of death due to various types of cancer among men after lung cancer. This study aimed to analyze the cost-effectiveness of triptorelin, goserelin, and leuprolide in the treatment of the patients with metastatic prostate cancer from the societal perspective in Iran in 2020. This is a cost-effectiveness study in which a 20-year Markov transition modeling was applied. In this study, local cost and quality-of-life data of each health state were gathered from cohort of patients. The TreeAge pro 2020 and Microsoft Excel 2016 software were used to simulate cost-effectiveness of each treatment in the long term. The one-way and probabilistic sensitivity analyses were also performed to measure robustness of the model outputs. The findings indicated that the mean costs and utility gained over a 20-year horizon for goserelin, triptorelin, and leuprolide treatments were $ 13 539.13 and 6.365 quality-adjusted life-years (QALY), $ 18 124.75 and 6.658 QALY, and $ 26 006.92 and 6.856 QALY, respectively. Goserelin was considered as a superior treatment option, given the estimated incremental cost-effectiveness ratio. The one-way and probabilistic sensitivity analyses confirmed the robustness of the study outcomes. According to the results of the present study, goserelin was the most effective and cost-effective strategy versus 2 other options. It could be recommended to policy makers of the Iran healthcare system to prioritize it in clinical guidelines and reimbursement policies.
Study Information
pubmed
2024
2024-04-24T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.vhri.2024.01.004
4
46