Poster Presentation Clinical Oncology Society of Australia Annual Scientific Meeting 2022

Cost-benefit of pre-treatment dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase genotyping to individualise fluoropyrimidine-based chemotherapy in a contemporary Australian setting. (#358)

Hansoo Kim 1 , Tivya Kulasegaran 2 , Melissa Eastgate 2 3 , David Wyld 2 , Matthew Burge 2 , Mark Nalder 2 4
  1. Griffith University, Nathan, QLD, Australia
  2. Cancer Care Services, Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, Brisbane, QLD, Australia
  3. School of Medicine, University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia
  4. Centre for Health Services Research, University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia

Background

Adverse events (AEs) due to fluoropyrimidine-based anticancer treatment are strongly influenced by interindividual variability in the enzyme dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (DPD). A major cause of DPD deficiency is the presence of certain variants of the encoding gene DPYD. International studies have found that pre-treatment DPYD genotype guided dose reductions is cost-effective in reducing severe AEs, however data in the Australian setting is limited. 

The objective of this study is to assess the cost-benefit of pre-treatment DPYD genotyping for patients receiving fluoropyrimidines in an Australian clinical setting.

Methods

A cost-benefit model was developed to compare costs and number of grade 3-4 AEs for patients tested for the DPYD genotype versus a historical cohort. The proportion of patients with grade 3-4 AEs was informed by a DPYD trial conducted in Queensland. Costs of AEs were estimated using Australian Refined Diagnosis-Related Groups (AR-DRG) data. A cohort of 1000 patients was simulated. One-way sensitivity analyses were performed.

Results

The model estimated that there would be an additional 80 grade 3-4 AEs in the historical cohort compared to the DPYD cohort. This came at a cost of $85,294 equal to $1,075 paid per AE avoided. The breakeven cost for the test is estimated to be $175/patient and there would be a cost saving of $85/patient if the cost of the test was $90. The sensitivity analyses showed that costs of gastrointestinal AEs were the main driver of the cost-benefit analysis with a break-even price of between $111 to $238. All the sensitivity analyses resulted in cost-savings if the cost of the test was $90.

Conclusion

DPYD testing is projected to help avoid 80 grade 3-4 AEs per 1000 patients treated with fluoropyrimidine-based anticancer therapy. DPYD genotyping is likely to result in costs saving if the cost of testing is less than $175 per patient.