Does Biosimilar Bevacizumab Offer Affordable Treatment Options for Cancer Patients in the USA? A Budget Impact Analysis from US Commercial and Medicare Payer Perspectives
Autor: | Rongzhe Liu, Jingyan Yang, Ahmed Shelbaya, Jennifer Stephens, V. Ektare |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
Budgets
Economics and Econometrics medicine.medical_specialty Bevacizumab Medicare Health administration Neoplasms medicine Humans Original Research Article Biosimilar Pharmaceuticals health care economics and organizations Reimbursement Aged Health economics business.industry Health Policy Treatment options Cancer Biosimilar General Medicine Budget impact medicine.disease United States Emergency medicine business medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | Applied Health Economics and Health Policy |
ISSN: | 1179-1896 1175-5652 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s40258-021-00637-5 |
Popis: | Background Bevacizumab remains the most widely used and most thoroughly characterized angiogenesis inhibitor for a range of advanced cancers. Bevacizumab-bvzr (Zirabev®), a biosimilar of bevacizumab, was recently approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), which provides a less costly option. This study aimed to evaluate the financial impact of introducing bevacizumab-bvzr from US commercial and Medicare payer perspectives. Methods A Microsoft Excel-based budget impact model was developed over a 5-year time horizon. Target population was patients to be treated with bevacizumab for FDA-approved indications. Drug costs (2020 US$) were based on average sales price and wholesale acquisition cost, accounting for payer-specific reimbursement models and provider settings. Drug dosing and duration were based on prescribing information and pivotal trial publications. Results In a hypothetical 10-million-member health plan, 503 and 723 patients were estimated to be treated with bevacizumab in year 1 and year 5, respectively. Assuming an annual market shift of 1.7%, 3.6%, 6.7%, 9.4%, and 11.9% to bevacizumab-bvzr, an annual cost saving of $313,363 ($0.003 per member per month [PMPM]) was estimated for a commercial payer and $92,880 ($0.001 PMPM) for Medicare in year 1. Cumulative 5-year cost savings were $7,030,924 ($0.012 PMPM) for a commercial payer and $4,059,257 ($0.007 PMPM) for Medicare. More than half of the cost savings was attributed to patients with metastatic colorectal cancer. Conclusions The introduction of biosimilar bevacizumab-bvzr was estimated to provide substantial cost savings for US payers, which would allow additional patients access to bevacizumab treatment. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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