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    Modelling the effectiveness of tepotinib in comparison to standard-of-care treatments in patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) harbouring METex14 skipping in the UK.

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    Author
    Batteson, Rachael
    Hook, Emma
    Wheat, Hollie
    Hatswell, Anthony J
    Vioix, Helene
    McLean, Thomas
    Alexopoulos, Stamatia Theodora
    Baijal, Shobhit
    Paik, Paul K
    Publication date
    2024-03-16
    Subject
    Oncology. Pathology.
    Respiratory medicine
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Abstract
    Background: Patients with non-small cell lung cancer harbouring mesenchymal-epithelial transition exon 14 (METex14) skipping typically demonstrate poorer prognosis than overall non-small cell lung cancer. Until recently, no targeted treatments were available for patients with non-small cell lung cancer harbouring METex14 skipping in the UK, with limited treatments available. Objective: This study estimates the long-term survival and quality-adjusted life-year benefit of MET inhibitor tepotinib versus current standard of care from a UK perspective. Methods: A partitioned-survival model assessed the survival and quality-adjusted life-year benefits of tepotinib versus immunotherapy ± chemotherapy and chemotherapy for untreated and previously treated patients, respectively, using evidence from the single-arm VISION trial (NCT02864992). Two approaches were used to inform an indirect treatment comparison: (1) published clinical trials in overall non-small cell lung cancer and (2) real-world evidence in the METex14 skipping population. Results are presented as median and total quality-adjusted life-year gain and survival for progression-free survival and overall survival. Survival curves were validated against the external literature and uncertainty assessed using a probabilistic sensitivity analysis. Results: Using the indirect treatment comparison against the published literature, tepotinib is estimated to have a median progression-free survival gain versus pembrolizumab ± chemotherapy (11.0 and 9.2 months) in untreated patients, and docetaxel ± nintedanib (5.1 and 6.4 months) in previously treated patients. Across the populations, tepotinib is estimated to have a median survival gain of 15.4 and 9.2 months versus pembrolizumab ± chemotherapy in untreated patients and 12.8 and 5.1 months versus docetaxel ± nintedanib in previously treated patients. The total quality-adjusted life-year gain ranges between 0.56 and 1.17 across the untreated and previously treated populations. Results from the real-world evidence of indirect treatment comparisons are consistent with these findings. Conclusions: Despite the limitations of the evidence base, the numerous analyses conducted have consistently indicated positive outcomes for tepotinib versus the current standard of care.
    Citation
    Batteson R, Hook E, Wheat H, Hatswell AJ, Vioix H, McLean T, Alexopoulos ST, Baijal S, Paik PK. Modelling the Effectiveness of Tepotinib in Comparison to Standard-of-Care Treatments in Patients with Advanced Non-small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) Harbouring METex14 Skipping in the UK. Target Oncol. 2024 Mar;19(2):191-201. doi: 10.1007/s11523-024-01038-z. Epub 2024 Mar 16.
    Type
    Article
    Handle
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14200/4421
    Additional Links
    https://link.springer.com/journal/11523
    DOI
    10.1007/s11523-024-01038-z
    PMID
    38492157
    Journal
    Targeted Oncology
    Publisher
    Springer-Verlag France
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.1007/s11523-024-01038-z
    Scopus Count
    Collections
    Oncology

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