A Little Below the Belt magazine - Summer 2020

Page 25

Where are we in demonstrating economic value in prostate cancer trials: An update on the ICECaP Project by Associate Professor Richard De Abreu Lourenço, Research Fellow with CHERE and the Project Manager for the Cancer Research Economics Support Team (CREST). Previously, we reported on research being undertaken at the Centre for Health Economics Research and Evaluation (CHERE) in collaboration with ANZUP to address one of the central questions of the Intermediate Clinical Endpoints in Cancer of the Prostate (ICECaP) project; can intermediate outcome measures be used to assess value for treatments in prostate cancer?

quality of life, whether they represent value for money and how much evidence we have about the way they work. The findings from that research are currently being finalised and will be an important input into understanding the potential trade-offs that we as a society might consider when deciding between making a treatment available on the basis of intermediate outcomes.

This research is focusing on how we can use intermediate measures of outcomes, like five-year metastasis free survival, to demonstrate to governments that new treatments represent value for money – that they are cost-effective.

In all, the research that Rafael is undertaking acknowledges that often, rather than waiting for long-term evidence of survival or quality of life, governments and their advisory bodies make decisions about value for money on the basis of intermediate measures. One of the key considerations for these decision-making bodies is how much confidence they can have that those intermediate measures reflect what can be expected in terms of longer-term outcomes (e.g. survival). The work is well on the way to being able to demonstrate the accuracy of the links between intermediate and long-term outcomes, giving governments and decision makers greater confidence in their use for making decisions about which medicines to fund. This is critical as we see new medicines emerging, often on the basis of early trial evidence, with a desire to have those made available through our publicly funded health care system. Ultimately, providing decision makers with greater confidence that we can use that early trial evidence to make important funding decisions has the potential to make new treatments available sooner.

What has happened since our last update on this project? Perhaps the most significant update is that Rafael de Feria Cardet joined the PhD program at CHERE UTS where he is working on RAFAEL the ICECaP project. Rafael has a degree in DE FERLA pharmacy, industry experience working in how medicines are regulated and public sector experience in applying health economics to medicine funding. He started his career as a health economist at the Health Technology Assessment department in the Ministry of Health, Chile. Since joining CHERE at the beginning of 2019 he has made important inroads into the ICECaP health economics project. With input from local clinical, industry and patient advisors he has looked into how the relationships between intermediate outcomes-like metastases free survival – and overall survival can be used to develop economic analyses that can be used by governments when making decisions about drug funding. That analysis is currently in the testing phase and the next few months will see it tested and honed further to address whether decision makers can have confidence in the use of those intermediate data to inform funding decisions.

This work is supported by untied funding received from Astellas Pharma Singapore Pty Ltd and Janssen Global, and is coordinated by the ANZUP Cancer Trials Group.

He has also led important research to understand how we, as members of society – and therefore as taxpayers – would advise governments thinking about funding medicines for prostate cancer. This considered how individuals value differences in how those medicines might affect disease, RICHARD DE ABREU LOURENÇO PRESENTS HIS CONCEPT

A LITTLE BELOW THE BELT 25


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Articles inside

Below the Belt #YourWay

14min
pages 64-75

Good2Give

1min
page 62

ANZUP Trials - Kidney

3min
pages 50-51

ANZUP Trials - Testicular

4min
pages 44-45

ANZUP trials - bladder

2min
pages 37-38

Fiona Stanley Hospital urological surgeon puts songwriting talent to the test for Below the Belt campaign

2min
page 34

Spotlight on bladder and urothelian cancer

1min
page 32

ANZUP Trials - Prostate

1min
page 28

Contents

1min
page 4

How can you get involved?

3min
page 61

2020 Below the Belt Research Fund Recipients

6min
pages 59-60

Trials in follow up

11min
pages 56-58

What are the barriers and facilitators to interdisciplinary models of person-centred supportive care in the context of penile cancer? A mixed methods study

4min
pages 54-55

Spotlight on penile cancer

3min
pages 52-53

A pilot study for Kidney Cancer

4min
pages 49-51

Kidney Cancer and Immunotherapy

2min
page 48

Spotlight on kidney cancer

4min
pages 46-47

Testicular Cancer Research Highlights

9min
pages 42-45

Spotlight on testicular cancer

4min
pages 40-41

The role of the Prostate Cancer Subcommittee

11min
pages 26-31

The importance of data to improve patient outcomes with bladder cancer

4min
pages 36-38

Where are we in demonstrating economic value in prostate cancer trials

3min
page 25

Recruitment nearing completion for world first trial for bladder cancer

1min
page 39

Worldwide prostate cancer trial continues to strongly recruit

2min
page 24

Advanced Prostate Cancer Consensus Conference (APCCC): Asia-Pacific (APAC) Satellite Symposium

2min
page 23

ANZUP’s ENZAMET trial is awarded all three of ACTA’s Trial of the Year Awards

4min
pages 21-22

Finding a clinical pathway during a pandemic

4min
pages 14-16

Spotlight on prostate cancer

4min
pages 19-20

Friends of ANZUP

0
page 13

Consumer Advisory Panel (CAP) Update

6min
pages 9-10

Kev’s Crew

3min
pages 11-12

CEO Update

6min
pages 7-8

Meet Associate Professor Arun Azad

3min
pages 17-18

Message from the Chair, Professor Ian Davis

9min
pages 5-6
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