HST1
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Evaluation title: Eculizumab for treating atypical haemolytic uraemic syndrome
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Section
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Key conclusion
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The Committee agreed that eculizumab represents an important treatment option of significant value to patients with atypical haemolytic uraemic syndrome (aHUS). However, it was concerned about the substantial impact eculizumab is expected to have on the budget for highly specialised services. The Committee considered that it had not been presented with enough justification for the high cost per patient of eculizumab, or for the overall cost of eculizumab with reference to what could be expected to be reasonable in the context of a highly specialised service.
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5.9, 5.18
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The Committee concluded that there is a need to further investigate possible dose adjustment and the option of stopping treatment when clinicians consider it appropriate, under a research programme with robust methodology.
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5.4, 5.5
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The Committee considered that the budget impact of recommending eculizumab for aHUS in relation to the substantial benefits it offered to patients, families and carers would be lower if the potential for dose adjustment and stopping treatment is taken into account.
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5.19
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Eculizumab, within its marketing authorisation, is recommended for funding for treating aHUS, only if all the following arrangements are in place:
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coordination of eculizumab use through an expert centre
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monitoring systems to record the number of people with a diagnosis of aHUS and the number who have eculizumab, and the dose and duration of treatment
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a national protocol for starting and stopping eculizumab for clinical reasons
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a research programme with robust methods to evaluate when stopping treatment or dose adjustment might occur.
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1.1
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The long‑term budget impact of eculizumab for treating aHUS is uncertain but will be considerable. NHS England and the company (Alexion Pharma UK) should consider what opportunities might exist to reduce the cost of eculizumab to the NHS.
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1.2
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Current practice
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Nature of the condition, including availability of other treatment options
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aHUS is a very rare condition; 20–30 new patients are diagnosed with aHUS each year in England. The Committee agreed that patients with aHUS have a greatly impaired quality of life, from both the severe symptoms they experience and the burden of treatment with dialysis and plasma therapy, and that the families and carers of patients with aHUS also experience substantial burden.
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5.1
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Until eculizumab became available, plasma therapy and dialysis were the main treatment options for aHUS, both of which have limited impact on disease morbidity and mortality but a substantial negative effect on a patient's quality of life.
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5.2
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The technology
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Proposed benefits of the technology
How innovative is the technology in its potential to make a significant and substantial impact on health‑related benefits?
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The Committee accepted that eculizumab represents a step change in the treatment of patients with aHUS and could be considered a significant innovation for a disease with a high unmet clinical need.
For patients with aHUS who have kidney failure, eculizumab offers them the potential for a kidney transplant and an opportunity to restore their health and have a life free from the restrictions of dialysis and the need for frequent plasma therapy. For patients with active disease, eculizumab offers them the possibility of avoiding end‑stage renal failure, dialysis and kidney transplantation, as well as other organ damage. It also offers patients the chance to have restored kidney function or to keep their residual kidney function without the need for further dialysis treatment.
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5.2, 5.14
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Adverse reactions
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The Committee noted from the clinical trials that eculizumab was generally well tolerated, and that, although most patients reported adverse reactions, only a few were considered to be specifically related to eculizumab use. The Committee also recognised that eculizumab is associated with an increased risk of meningococcal infection. The Committee understood that details on adverse reactions and risks associated with eculizumab are stated in the summary of products characteristics and the European public assessment report.
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5.6
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Clinical evidence
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Availability, nature and quality of evidence
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No randomised controlled trials were identified. The key clinical evidence came from 2 published (C08‑002A/B and C08‑003A/B) and 2 unpublished (interim data from C10‑003 and C10‑004) prospective studies, and 1 retrospective observational study (C09‑001r).
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4.3
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Uncertainties generated by the evidence
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There were limitations in the evidence base, particularly because of the lack of randomised trial evidence.
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5.3
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Long-term data on the optimal dose and duration of treatment with eculizumab are lacking. However, the Committee considered that investigating this was not contrary to the specifications in the summary of product characteristics of eculizumab for aHUS, and was also supported by the accumulation of experience in clinical practice. The Committee concluded that there is a need to further investigate possible dose adjustment and the option of stopping treatment when clinicians consider it appropriate.
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5.3, 5.4
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The Committee acknowledged that there are limited data available on the effectiveness of eculizumab in children and adolescents, but concluded that there was no reason to expect a different effect in this group compared with the adult population.
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5.3
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Impact of the technology
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In all of the studies, treatment with eculizumab led to a substantial reduction in thrombotic microangiopathy activity, and improvement in kidney function and quality of life in most patients. The clinical experts remarked that, since they began prescribing eculizumab, the benefits seen in their patients have been better than originally anticipated. Many patients were able to stop dialysis after starting treatment with eculizumab, and there were also non‑renal benefits such as improvements in gastrointestinal symptoms.
Overall, the Committee concluded that eculizumab is a very effective treatment option for patients with aHUS.
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5.3
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Cost evidence
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Availability and nature of evidence
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The company submitted a budget impact analysis and a de novo cost–consequence model.
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4.18, 4.21
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Uncertainties around and plausibility of assumptions and inputs in the economic model and budget impact analysis
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Considering the substantial health gains associated with eculizumab treatment compared with standard care, the Committee considered that the company's budget impact analyses may have underestimated the true rate of uptake of eculizumab. The Committee considered that there was uncertainty around the range of budget impact estimates it had been presented with and acknowledged that the Institute's illustration represented the upper end of the impact on the budget for highly specialised services. The Committee concluded that, taking into account all the evidence, including the various budget impact analyses presented and the estimates of the size of the population, the budget impact of eculizumab for aHUS was very high and likely to increase with the onset of new cases.
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5.9
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The Committee noted the concerns of the Evidence Review Group (ERG) about uncertainties in the company's model, and considered the exploratory analyses conducted by the ERG. The Committee was also aware that the company considered the modifications made by the ERG to the model were unreliable
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5.15
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Incorporation of health‑related quality‑of‑life benefits and utility values
Have any potential significant and substantial health‑related benefits been identified that were not included in the economic model, and how have they been considered?
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The Committee acknowledged that the company had attempted to capture the benefits of treatment on extra‑renal manifestations in the higher utility value assigned to the health states for those having eculizumab compared with standard care. Even with this, the Committee felt that it was likely that other benefits of a substantial nature had not been adequately captured in the model, and therefore may have led to the underestimation of the effectiveness of eculizumab.
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5.14
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Cost to the NHS and PSS
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Despite multiple requests from NICE, the company refused to make its budget impact information publically available. To allow consultees and commentators to properly engage in the consultation process, the Institute has prepared an illustration of the possible budget impact of eculizumab for aHUS using information that is available in the public domain. This illustration showed the budget impact could range from £57.8 million in the first year to £82 million by year 5. The Committee was clear that this analysis was not the sole basis for its decision‑making and was only used to illustrate the potential upper range of the budget impact.
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5.8
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After consultation, a patient organisation had provided alternative estimates of the possible budget impact of eculizumab for aHUS, indicating a budget impact ranging from £36 million in the first year to £68 million in year 5. After consultation on the second evaluation consultation document, the patient organisation stated that, taking into account the actual number of people having eculizumab, their estimation for year 5 would be £30 million lower. The Committee was made aware of the annual costs of a range of other treatments that are available through nationally commissioned specialised and highly specialised services. The Committee concluded that, taking into account all the evidence, including the various budget impact analyses presented and the estimates of the size of the population, the budget impact of eculizumab for aHUS was very high and likely to increase with the onset of new cases.
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5.9
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The Committee noted that the company's justification of costs were not exclusive to eculizumab and would apply to all highly specialised technologies for very rare diseases. Therefore, the Committee concluded that it had not been presented with a justification of why the overall cost of eculizumab was materially higher than the overall cost of other highly specialised technologies.
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5.11
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Value for money
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Although the incremental quality‑adjusted life years (QALYs) estimated in the ERG's analysis were markedly lower than those calculated by the company (10.14 QALYs compared with 25.22 QALYs), both analyses produced substantial QALY gains of a magnitude that is rarely seen for any new drug treatment. The Committee acknowledged that the company's estimate of the incremental cost of eculizumab compared with standard care was considerable and that incremental costs estimated by the ERG were even higher (results are designated confidential by the company).
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5.15
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The Committee noted the response to consultation from NHS England stating that if all patients with aHUS were treated with eculizumab, the cost associated with commissioning eculizumab would add considerable pressure to the budget available for specialised commissioning. The Committee heard that so far commissioning had not been stopped for any highly specialised services, but the approach was to incorporate very clear start and stop criteria developed in collaboration with a small group of clinicians. The Committee considered that the budget impact of recommending eculizumab for aHUS in relation to the substantial benefits it offered to patients, families and carers would be lower if the potential for dose adjustment and stopping treatment was taken into account.
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5.16, 5.19
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Impact beyond direct health benefits and on the delivery of the specialised service
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The Committee was persuaded that the non‑health effects were likely to be substantial but proportionate to the health effects.
The Committee was satisfied that no significant additional staffing and infrastructure requirements will be needed in specialist centres where patients with aHUS are currently treated.
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5.17
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Additional factors taken into account
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Access agreements
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Not applicable
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-
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Equalities considerations and social value judgements
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The Committee noted the potential equality issue raised by a patient organisation stating that, although the recommendations do not exclude anyone from having rescue therapy with eculizumab if needed, there was a concern for people who risk disease recurrence through pregnancy. The Committee heard from the clinical expert that more research is being done on the underlying risk of pregnancy and aHUS and on the use of eculizumab during pregnancy, and the Committee supported this. The Committee concluded that because its recommendations do not restrict access to eculizumab during pregnancy, there was no need to alter them.
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5.21
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