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1.
Data Brief ; 41: 107891, 2022 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35198672

ABSTRACT

The recent marketing approval of several durable gene and cell therapies (2017-2020), together with observations that 7,000 monogenic indications and many cancers were potential targets, led to concern about the potential economic impact of such therapies on the US healthcare system. Using a Markov chain Monte Carlo simulation model, driven stochastically by our estimates of the time in phase of clinical trials and each clinical trial phase probability of success, we forecast the pattern of future US regulatory approvals for such therapies currently undergoing clinical trials. Using parameters of those trials, such as inclusion and exclusion criteria, and other epidemiological data we estimate potential treatable patient populations and use these together with pricing estimates to forecast a range for the potential future list price product revenues associated with these therapies.

2.
Drug Discov Today ; 27(1): 17-30, 2022 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34537333

ABSTRACT

Durable cell and gene therapies potentially transform patient lives, but payers fear unsustainable costs arising from the more than 1000 therapies in the development pipeline. A novel multi-module Markov chain Monte Carlo-based model projects product-indication approvals, treated patients, and product revenues. We estimate a mean 63.5 (54-74 5th to 95th percentile range) cumulative US product-indication approvals through 2030, with a mean 93000 patients treated in 2030 generating a mean US$24.4 billion (US$17.0B-35.0B, US$73.0B extreme) list price product revenues not including ancillary medical costs or cost offsets. Thus, the likely dozens of durable cell and gene therapies developed through 2030 are unlikely to threaten US health system financial sustainability.


Subject(s)
Biological Products , Drug Costs/trends , Genetic Therapy , Molecular Targeted Therapy , Biological Products/economics , Biological Products/pharmacology , Drug Approval , Forecasting , Genetic Therapy/methods , Genetic Therapy/trends , Humans , Molecular Targeted Therapy/methods , Molecular Targeted Therapy/trends , United States
3.
Healthcare (Basel) ; 9(8)2021 Aug 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34442199

ABSTRACT

Chimeric antigen receptor and T-cell receptor (CAR-T/TCR-T) cellular immunotherapies have shown remarkable success in the treatment of some refractory B-cell malignancies, with potential to provide durable clinical response for other types of cancer. In this paper, we look at all available FDA CAR-T/TCR-T clinical trials for the treatment of cancer, and analyze them with respect to different disease tissues, targeted antigens, products, and originator locations. We found that 627 of 1007 registered are currently active and of those 273 (44%) originated in China and 280 (45%) in the US. Our analysis suggests that the rapid increase in the number of clinical trials is driven by the development of different CAR-T products that use a similar therapeutic approach. We coin the term bioparallels to describe such products. Our results suggest that one feature of the CAR-T/TCR-T industry may be a robust response to success and failure of competitor products.

4.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 10838, 2021 05 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34035408

ABSTRACT

Sickle cell disease (SCD) is a group of inherited genetic conditions associated with lifelong complications and increased healthcare resource utilization. Standard treatment for SCD in the US varies based on stage of the disease and observed clinical severity. In this study, we aim to evaluate the potential cost-effectiveness of a durable cell or gene therapy cure for sickle cell disease from the US healthcare sector perspective. We developed a lifetime Markov model to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of a hypothetical single-administration durable treatment (DT) for SCD provided at birth, relative to standard of care (SOC). We informed model inputs including direct healthcare costs, health state utility weights, transition probabilities, and mortality rates using a retrospective database analysis of commercially insured individuals and the medical literature. Our primary outcome of interest was the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of DT versus SOC evaluated at a base case willingness-to-pay (WTP) threshold of $150,000 per quality-adjusted life year (QALY). We tested the robustness of our base case findings through scenario, deterministic sensitivity (DSA), and probabilistic sensitivity analyses (PSA). In the base case analysis, treatment with DT was cost-effective with an ICER of $140,877/QALY relative to SOC for a hypothetical cohort involving 47% females. Both males (ICER of $135,574/QALY) and females (ICER of $146,511/QALY) were similarly cost-effective to treat. In univariate DSA the base case ICER was most sensitive to the costs of treating males, DT treatment cost, and the discount rate. In PSA, DT was cost-effective in 32.7%, 66.0%, and 92.6% of 10,000 simulations at WTP values of $100,000, $150,000, and $200,000 per QALY, respectively. A scenario analysis showed cost-effectiveness of DT is highly contingent on assumed lifetime durability of the cure. A hypothetical cell or gene therapy cure for SCD is likely to be cost-effective from the US healthcare sector perspective. Large upfront costs of a single administration cure are offset by significant downstream gains in health for patients treated early in life. We find cost-effectiveness outcomes do not vary substantially by gender; however, several model parameters including assumed durability and upfront cost of DT are likely to influence cost-effectiveness findings.


Subject(s)
Anemia, Sickle Cell/therapy , Genetic Therapy/economics , Computer Simulation , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Decision Making, Computer-Assisted , Female , Health Care Costs , Humans , Male , Markov Chains , Quality-Adjusted Life Years , Retrospective Studies
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