PUBLICATION:
European Journal of Cancer

AUTHORS:
Valesca P. Retel, Danalyn Byng, Sabine C. Linn, Katarzyna Jozwiak, Hendrik Koffijberg, Emiel J. Rutgers, Fatima Cardoso, Martine J. Piccart, Coralie Poncet, Laura J. van โ€™t Veer, Wim H. van Harten.

Abstract:

The clinical utility of the 70-gene signature (MammaPrintยฎ) to guide chemotherapy use in T1-3N0-1M0 breast cancer was demonstrated in the Microarray in Node-Negative and 1 to 3 Positive Lymph Node Disease May Avoid Chemotherapy (MINDACT) study. One thousand four ninety seven of 3356 (46.2%) enrolled patients with high clinical risk (in accordance with the modified Adjuvant! Online clinical-pathological assessment) had a low-risk 70-gene signature. Using patient-level data from the MINDACT trial, the cost-effectiveness of using the 70-gene signature to guide adjuvant chemotherapy selection for clinical high risk, estrogen receptor positive (ER+), human epidermal growth factor 2 negative (HER2-) patients was analysed.

Patients and methods

A hybrid decision tree-Markov model simulated treatment strategies in accordance with the 70-gene signature with clinical assessment versus clinical assessment alone, over a 10-year time horizon. Primary outcomes were quality-adjusted life years (QALYs), country-specific costs and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) for six countries: Belgium, France, Germany, Netherlands, UK and the US.

Results

Treatment strategies guided by the 70-gene signature result in more QALYs compared with clinical assessment alone. Costs of the 70-gene signature strategy were lower in five of six countries. This led to dominance of the 70-gene signature in Belgium, France, Germany, Netherlands and the US and to a cost-effective situation in the UK (ICER ยฃ22,910/QALY). Annual national cost savings were โ‚ฌ4.2M (Belgium), โ‚ฌ24.7M (France), โ‚ฌ45.1M (Germany), โ‚ฌ12.7M (Netherlands) and $244M (US). UK budget increase was ยฃ8.4M.

Conclusion

Using the 70-gene signature to safely guide chemotherapy de-escalation in clinical high risk patients with ER+/HER2- tumours is cost-effective compared with using clinical assessment alone. Long-term follow-up and outcomes from the MINDACT trial are necessary to address uncertainties in model inputs.

Read more: Cost-effectiveness analysis of the 70-gene signature compared with clinical assessment in breast cancer based on a randomised controlled trial