1. Do cancer treatments have option value? Real-world evidence from metastatic melanoma.
- Author
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Li M, Basu A, Bennette CS, Veenstra DL, and Garrison LP
- Subjects
- Clinical Trials, Phase II as Topic, Clinical Trials, Phase III as Topic, Female, Humans, Interrupted Time Series Analysis, Life Expectancy, Male, Melanoma pathology, Melanoma surgery, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Metastasis, Quality of Life, United States, Antineoplastic Agents, Immunological therapeutic use, Decision Making, Ipilimumab therapeutic use, Melanoma drug therapy, Patient Preference
- Abstract
A change in the expectations about future treatments may change the option value of a current treatment, thereby affecting its utilization. We conducted an interrupted time series analysis using a large administrative claims database to test whether the utilization of existing cancer treatments changed after the disclosures of the then-investigational drug ipilimumab's Phase II and Phase III results among metastatic melanoma patients from 2008 to 2011. We used a multinomial logistic regression to analyze the temporal probability of receiving antineoplastic systemic therapy, surgical resection of metastasis, or both, relative to no treatment, in the first 3 months following the first metastasis diagnosis. One thousand eight hundred forty-six metastatic melanoma patients were included. After adjusting for clinical and sociodemographic variables and the underlying time trend, the disclosure of ipilimumab's Phase II result was associated with a nearly twofold immediate increase in the probability of receiving surgical resection of metastasis relative to no treatment, which was significant at 5% level. No significant effect was observed for the time trend. No significant effects were found for the announcement of the Phase III result. Our findings in metastatic melanoma provide the first empirical evidence of the impact of option value in cancer treatment decision making., (© 2019 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)
- Published
- 2019
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