Background Recent clinical trials have demonstrated improved efficacy of combination regimens, including amivantamab plus lazertinib and osimertinib plus platinum-based chemotherapy, compared with standard therapy in patients with epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) –mutated non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). As these regimens enter routine clinical use, understanding the economic implications of treatment-related adverse event (AE) management, including proactive therapy management (PTM), is important. Objectives To estimate and compare grade 3 or 4 AE management costs associated with first-line amivantamab (intravenous IV or subcutaneous SC) plus lazertinib and osimertinib plus platinum-based chemotherapy in patients with EGFR-mutated locally advanced or metastatic NSCLC from a US Commercial and Medicare Advantage payer perspective. Methods A descriptive cost modeling analysis used grade 3/4 AE incidence data from pivotal clinical trials of amivantamab (IV and SC) plus lazertinib and osimertinib plus platinum-based chemotherapy. AEs occurring in ≥5% of patients or deemed clinically significant were included. PTM strategies for dermatologic events, venous thromboembolism, and infusion-related reactions were modeled for amivantamab-based regimens using guideline-concordant practices and clinical trial evidence. As a conservative assumption, PTM for osimertinib plus platinum-based chemotherapy was not included. AE management costs were derived from national inpatient and physician fee schedules and inflated to 2025 US dollars. Total per-patient AE management and PTM costs were estimated for each treatment regimen. Scenario analyses evaluated expanded PTM assumptions. Results Across both payer perspectives, total AE management costs were estimated to be lower for amivantamab-based regimens than for osimertinib plus platinum-based chemotherapy. Under the Commercial perspective, modeled AE management costs were 2345 for amivantamab (SC) plus lazertinib, 4321 for amivantamab (IV) plus lazertinib, and 8497 for osimertinib plus platinum-based chemotherapy. Corresponding Medicare Advantage estimates were 1166, 2425, and 4185, respectively. Inclusion of PTM costs did not alter the relative cost ranking calculated and findings were consistent across scenario analyses. Conclusions Results from this descriptive cross-trial analysis indicated that total AE management costs were consistently estimated to be lower in patients receiving amivantamab (SC or IV) plus lazertinib compared with osimertinib plus platinum-based chemotherapy across both a Commercial and Medicare Advantage payer perspective.
Spira et al. (Mon,) studied this question.