• Gynecologic oncology · Sep 2013

    Cost-effectiveness of early palliative care intervention in recurrent platinum-resistant ovarian cancer.

    • William J Lowery, Ashlei W Lowery, Jason C Barnett, Micael Lopez-Acevedo, Paula S Lee, SecordAngeles AlvarezAA, and Laura Havrilesky.
    • Duke University Medical Center, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Division of Gynecologic Oncology, Durham, NC 27710, USA. william.lowery@duke.edu
    • Gynecol. Oncol. 2013 Sep 1; 130 (3): 426-30.

    ObjectiveTo determine if early palliative care intervention in patients with recurrent, platinum-resistant ovarian cancer is potentially cost saving or cost-effective.MethodsA decision model with a 6 month time horizon evaluated routine care versus routine care plus early referral to a palliative medicine specialist (EPC) for recurrent platinum-resistant ovarian cancer. Model parameters included rates of inpatient admissions, emergency department (ED) visits, chemotherapy administration, and quality of life (QOL). From published ovarian cancer data, we assumed baseline rates over the final 6 months: hospitalization 70%, chemotherapy 60%, and ED visit 30%. Published data from a randomized trial evaluating EPC in metastatic lung cancer were used to model odds ratios (ORs) for potential reductions in hospitalization (OR 0.69), chemotherapy (OR 0.77), and emergency department care (OR 0.74) and improvement in QOL (OR 1.07). The costs of hospitalization, ED visit, chemotherapy, and EPC were based on published data. Ranges were used for sensitivity analysis. Effectiveness was quantified in quality adjusted life years (QALYs); survival was assumed equivalent between strategies.ResultsEPC was associated with a cost savings of $1285 per patient over routine care. In sensitivity analysis incorporating QOL, EPC was either dominant or cost-effective, with an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) <$50,000/QALY, unless the cost of outpatient EPC exceeded $2400. Assuming no clinical benefit other than QOL (no change in chemotherapy administration, hospitalizations or ED visits), EPC remained highly cost-effective with ICER $37,440/QALY.ConclusionEarly palliative care intervention has the potential to reduce costs associated with end of life care in patients with ovarian cancer.Published by Elsevier Inc.

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