A targeted drug has been accepted for routine use on the NHS in England for some adults with untreated, advanced lung cancer. But another precision drug, for the same group of patients, has been rejected due to questions over its cost-effectiveness.
The two drugs—dacomitinib (Vizimpro) and osimertinib (Tagrisso)—were each being considered as initial treatments for patients whose non small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) had begun to spread to other parts of the body. Patients’ cancer cells would also need to test positive for a faulty version of a molecule called EGFR.
Both drugs, along with several others already used in the NHS to treat lung cancer, target growth signals fueled by the EGFR molecule inside cells. By switching off these signals, the drugs are designed to stall cell growth.
In April, the National Institute for health and Care Excellence (NICE) rejected both drugs for use on the NHS in England. The committee decided neither drug offered enough extra benefit to patients when compared with existing treatments to be value for money.
But based on a new price offered by the manufacturer, NICE has reversed its decision on dacomitinib. This means the drug is now available for use on the NHS in England. Health services in Wales and Northern Ireland usually follow NICE recommendations too, so the drug will likely be available there as well.
But osimertinib remains not recommended, and so will not be available on the NHS.
Professor Charles Swanton, Cancer Research UK’s chief clinician, called the decision on osimertinib “disappointing.”
Clinical trial results show it’s more effective than some other treatments currently available, he added, particularly for patients whose cancer has spread to the brain.
But “more evidence for long term survival improvement is needed,” he said.
Price cut for dacomitinib sways NICE
In a clinical trial involving 452 patients with NSCLC, those taking dacomitinib lived for an average of 14.7 months without their cancer getting worse, compared with 9.2 months for those taking an existing drug, gefitinib (Iressa).
But serious side-effects were more common in the group taking dacomitinib. And the trial didn’t compare dacomitinib with another drug called afatinib (Giotrif), which NICE felt was the most suitable and widely-used alternative at the time of the initial rejection.
NICE concluded in April that, based on the results from the trial, it wouldn’t be a good use of NHS budgets to pay for dacomitinib at its initial price. This meant it couldn’t be recommended for routine use on the NHS.
But a further price discount has now been offered and the company has worked with NICE to adjust its estimates of the drug’s benefits to NHS patients who are receiving other treatments.
This led to the recommendation, which Swanton said was “good news for people affected by this type of lung cancer.”
It is estimated that around 1,400 people will be eligible for dacomitinib annually in England.
It’s still ‘no’ for front line osimertinib
Osimertinib is already available on the NHS via the Cancer Drugs Fund, which allows early patient access to innovative drugs on the NHS, to treat some patients with NSCLC. But only if initial treatments have failed, and if their cancer carries a specific fault in the EGFR molecule. NICE will be making a final decision on whether it should continue to be available for this group of patients next year.
But the latest decision looked at whether all patients whose disease tests positive for the faulty EGFR molecule should be able to have osimertinib as the first treatment they receive.
In a clinical trial of 556 patients with previously untreated NSCLC, those taking osimertinib lived for an average of 18.9 months without their cancer getting worse, compared with 10.2 months for those taking existing treatments.
But the committee has stuck with its initial decision that the trial didn’t provide enough evidence to be confident the drug offers value for money to the NHS.
“In recent years we’ve had more cancer drugs available on the NHS in England because of changes in the way NICE assesses new drugs and how companies and the NHS agree price deals,” said Swanton.
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