Background: It has been shown that irinotecan is superior to infusional 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) in patients with advanced colorectal cancer after 5-FU failure. In a recent trial, median survival was 10.8 months for patients treated with irinotecan, compared to 8.5 months in patients receiving infusional 5-FU. Considering the statistically significant but clinically relatively small advantage of irinotecan over 5-FU, cost effectiveness should also be part of treatment decision.
Purpose: To relate the costs of each management approach to overall survival in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer.
Patients and methods: The healthcare costs and medical benefits (treatment-added survival) of second-line chemotherapy in patients (infusional 5-FU: 129, irinotecan: 127) were compared. Data on overall survival were drawn from a multicenter randomised trial that compared infusional 5-FU (continuous infusion, AIO, or LV5-FU2 regimens) to irinotecan alone. Costs were derived from the accounting system in two university hospitals in Paris, France.
Results: The range in total healthcare costs was 14,135 to 12,192 US$ patient between management approaches, with irinotecan chemotherapy costing most and 5-FU-continuous infusion least. If survival was included as a treatment benefit, the cost-effectiveness ratio of irinotecan over 5-FU ranged from 9,344 to 10,137 US$ per year of added survival.
Conclusions: The least expensive management for metastatic colorectal was 5-FU infusion but the additional cost of irinotecan was balanced by the added months of survival, with a cost-effectiveness ratio close to that of other cancer treatments.