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Economic Analysis of Filgrastim Use for Patients with Acute Myeloid Leukaemia in the UK

A Comparison of Collection Methods of Resource Use Data

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Abstract

Background: A clinical trial of patients with de novo acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) showed that haematopoietic support with filgrastim (granulocyte colony-stimulating factor, G-CSF) following induction and consolidation chemotherapy accelerated recovery from neutropenia. The clinical benefits included reductions in infections, anti-infective therapy and length of hospital stay.

Objective: The objective of this economic analysis is 2-fold. First, it aims to determine if the observed clinical benefits from the use of filgrastim would lead to cost savings from the perspective of a healthcare institution in the UK. Second, the analysis compares the results of two methods on collection of resource use data.

Design: A retrospective cost-minimisation analysis was undertaken based on the clinical results of all UK patients enrolled in the trial. Two cost models were developed: a model based only on the medical resource use collected in the case report forms (the CRF model); and a model based on all medical resources collected from patient medical files (the PF Model). Treatment costs of AML between filgrastim and the placebo arm were compared for the first induction cycle as well as the first induction and the first consolidation cycles combined. Results from the two models were compared.

Setting and Patients: The CRF model was applied to two samples of patients: all UK patients (n = 82) and patients enrolled at one centre [the Manchester Royal Infirmary (MRI) (n = 30)], whereas the PF model was applied to the MRI patient sample only.

Results: For all UK patients, using the CRF model, the filgrastim-treated arm produced cost savings of £747 (9.0%) and £2135 (14.4%) [1998 values] per patient in the first induction cycle and in the induction and consolidation cycles combined, respectively. For the patients at MRI the CRF model resulted in cost savings with filgrastim of £177 (2.2%) and £414 (3.2%) per patient respectively. Using the PF model the savings at MRI were £910 (8.6%) and £1285 (8.0%) per patient, respectively.

Conclusion: Use of filgrastim in the treatment of AML in the UK may result in net cost savings. A retrospective analysis using total resources obtained through patient files produced higher cost savings estimates than that obtained by resources noted in the CRFs. The models based on PF resource data may be more reliable because they are more comprehensive. However, the cost estimates in this study may have been impacted by sample size, site characteristics, disease and treatment settings. Therefore, further evaluation on the methods for collecting resource use data in larger, multicentred studies is warranted.

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Acknowledgements

Dr John Liu Yin, with his assistant Jannet Goldstone at MRI, participated in an AMGEN-sponsored, phase III clinical trial comparing filgrastim versus placebo in AML. The clinical results of this study were published in reference 11. There was no extra funding from AMGEN for conducting this economic analysis. Bo Standaert, Z. John Lu and Moshe Haim Erder are from the Health Economics Department at AMGEN.

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Standaert, B., Goldstone, J., Lu, Z.J. et al. Economic Analysis of Filgrastim Use for Patients with Acute Myeloid Leukaemia in the UK. Pharmacoeconomics 20, 665–674 (2002). https://doi.org/10.2165/00019053-200220100-00003

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