3 The manufacturer's submission
The appraisal committee considered evidence submitted by the manufacturer of rituximab and reviews of this evidence by the evidence review group (ERG).
Clinical effectiveness
Manufacturer's original submission
3.1
The manufacturer's systematic review identified 2 relevant randomised controlled trials for inclusion in its submission: RAVE and RITUXVAS. Seven non-randomised controlled trials were identified but the manufacturer judged that they contained insufficient data to be useful to the decision problem. The manufacturer explained that its submission focused on efficacy data from RAVE, complemented by the RITUXVAS results. Both RAVE and RITUXVAS compared rituximab with cyclophosphamide in patients with anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA)-associated vasculitis (granulomatosis with polyangiitis or microscopic polyangiitis). RAVE recruited both newly diagnosed and relapsed patients, whereas RITUXVAS recruited newly diagnosed patients with renal involvement.
RAVE study
3.2
RAVE was a randomised, multicentre, double-blind, double-dummy, placebo-controlled trial conducted in the USA and the Netherlands, which compared rituximab with conventional therapy (cyclophosphamide and azathioprine) in patients with severe ANCA-associated vasculitis. The study tested the hypothesis that rituximab was not inferior to (that is, was no worse than) conventional therapy in its ability to induce disease remission in ANCA-associated vasculitis at 6 months. Eligible patients had either granulomatosis with polyangiitis or microscopic polyangiitis, had tested positive for ANCA at screening, and had evidence of severe disease and a Birmingham Vasculitis Activity Score for Wegener's Granulomatosis (BVAS/WG) of 3 or more. BVAS/WG scores range from 0 to 68, with higher scores indicating more active disease. A 6-month remission induction phase was followed by a 12-month remission maintenance phase. In both groups, patients who went into remission before 6 months of treatment were eligible to switch to maintenance treatment from month 4 onwards.
3.3
At the start of the study, all patients received an intravenous glucocorticoid pulse (methylprednisolone 1 g, or an equivalent dose of an alternative drug) followed by an oral prednisone taper (dosage starting at 1 mg/kg/day and not exceeding 80 mg/day). Patients in the rituximab group (n=99) received remission induction treatment consisting of once-weekly infusions of rituximab 375 mg/m2 for 4 weeks plus daily oral placebo and daily oral prednisone for 3–6 months. For the remission maintenance treatment, patients then switched to oral placebo as maintenance treatment until 18 months. Patients in the cyclophosphamide group (n=98) received remission induction treatment consisting of daily oral prednisone, oral cyclophosphamide 2 mg/kg/day plus placebo infusions for 3–6 months to induce remission. Remission maintenance treatment consisted of oral azathioprine 2 mg/kg/day until 18 months. Patients who had a severe flare (BVAS/WG of 3 or more, or a major BVAS/WG item that needed cyclophosphamide after remission [BVAS/WG of 0]) in the first 6 months could cross over to the other treatment group and receive the other induction regimen in full. Limited flares (new occurrence or worsening of 1 or more minor BVAS/WG items) were managed by restarting or increasing the glucocorticoid dose. Patients whose BVAS/WG had not decreased by at least 1 point at 1 month or who had a new manifestation of disease were considered as having early treatment failure. These patients discontinued their assigned treatments and were treated according to best medical judgement.
3.4
RAVE's primary end point was the induction of complete remission at 6 months, defined as a BVAS/WG of 0 and successful completion of the prednisone taper (that is, prednisone dose was reduced to 0 mg). A secondary analysis of the primary end point assessed the superiority of rituximab to cyclophosphamide in patients who had complete remission at 6 months. Tertiary end points included the number of severe flares at 6 months, the number of limited flares at 6 months, and quality of life using Short Form (SF‑36) physical component and mental component summary scores. End points for the assessment of efficacy up to 18 months included duration of complete remission and time to limited and/or severe flare after complete remission. Efficacy data were analysed on an intention-to-treat basis.
3.5
Baseline demographic and disease characteristics in RAVE were generally similar between the treatment groups except for creatinine clearance, which was lower in the rituximab group. At the time of screening, 96 (48.7%) patients were newly diagnosed. There were 82 (83%) of the 98 patients remaining in the rituximab group and 79 (81%) of the 95 patients remaining in the cyclophosphamide group who completed the 6-month remission induction phase without crossover or change to treatment by best medical judgement. A similar proportion of patients in the 2 groups completed 18 months on randomised treatment (62% in the rituximab group and 63% in the cyclophosphamide group).
3.6
Sixty-three (64.3%) patients in the rituximab group were in complete remission at 6 months, compared with 52 (54.7%) patients in the cyclophosphamide group. The absolute difference in rate of remission between the 2 groups was 9.5% (95% confidence interval [CI] −4.30% to 23.40%). This showed that rituximab was not inferior to cyclophosphamide in inducing complete remission because the lower limit of the 95% CI (−4.30%) was higher than the predetermined non-inferiority margin (−20%). After estimating missing data by worst case imputation, 63.6% of the 99 patients in the rituximab group achieved complete remission at 6 months compared with 53.1% of the 98 patients in the cyclophosphamide group (absolute treatment difference 10.6% [95% CI −3.18% to 24.33%]).
3.7
The complete remission rate at 6 months in the rituximab group was not statistically significantly superior to the cyclophosphamide group (95% CI for the between-group difference −4.30% to 23.40%; p=0.177). The outcome was similar using worst case imputation (95% CI for the between-group difference −3.2% to 24.3%; p=0.132).
3.8
There was no statistically significant difference between the treatment groups in the number of severe or limited flares during the first 6 months. Quality-of-life scores improved in both groups; there was no significant difference between treatment groups in the change in quality-of-life scores or their rate of change from baseline to 6 months.
3.9
The manufacturer explored the effects of various baseline characteristics in relation to the primary end point, including relapsed disease. In patients who had relapsed disease at baseline, a statistically significantly higher proportion in the rituximab group went into complete remission at 6 months than in the cyclophosphamide group (66.7% compared with 42.0%, p=0.013). Complete remission rates in patients with new disease were similar in the 2 treatment groups (60.4% compared with 64.6%, p=0.673).
RITUXVAS study
3.10
RITUXVAS was a phase II, open-label, randomised controlled trial conducted in Europe and Australia. It compared the efficacy and safety of rituximab plus cyclophosphamide as induction therapy with cyclophosphamide plus azathioprine in 44 patients with newly diagnosed, severe ANCA-associated vasculitis and renal involvement. Patients were randomised to rituximab plus cyclophosphamide (n=33) or cyclophosphamide (n=11) and both groups received intravenous methylprednisolone (1 g) and an oral glucocorticoid (1 mg/kg/day initially, reducing to 5 mg/day at the end of 6 months). Patients in the rituximab group received infusions of rituximab (375 mg/m2 weekly, for 4 weeks), and intravenous cyclophosphamide (15 mg/kg with the first and third rituximab infusions). A further dose of intravenous cyclophosphamide (15 mg/kg) was permitted for patients who had progressive disease within the first 6 months. Patients in the rituximab group received no maintenance treatment. Patients in the control group received intravenous cyclophosphamide (15 mg/kg for 3–6 months; 6‑10 doses in total), followed by azathioprine maintenance (2 mg/kg/day). Further treatment with rituximab or cyclophosphamide was permitted if patients in either group relapsed. The primary end points for RITUXVAS were sustained remission at 12 months (defined as BVAS of 0 maintained for at least 6 months) and severe adverse events. Secondary end points included quality of life, assessed by the SF‑36 questionnaire between 0 and 12 months. Analyses were performed on an intention-to-treat basis.
3.11
There were no major imbalances in baseline characteristics between the 2 groups, except for a greater proportion of patients with renal-limited vasculitis in the cyclophosphamide group and a greater proportion of patients needing dialysis in the rituximab plus cyclophosphamide group. No patients were lost to follow-up.
3.12
Sustained remission occurred in 76% of patients in the rituximab plus cyclophosphamide group and 82% of patients in the cyclophosphamide group. The absolute difference in sustained remission with rituximab plus cyclophosphamide compared with cyclophosphamide was −6% (95% CI −33 to 21). Among patients who were still in the study at 12 months, 93% of patients in the rituximab plus cyclophosphamide group and 90% of patients in the cyclophosphamide group were in sustained remission.
3.13
There was no statistically significant difference between treatment groups in median change in the physical component SF‑36 score (p=0.36). Patients in the cyclophosphamide group had a statistically significantly better mental component SF‑36 score compared with the rituximab plus cyclophosphamide group (p=0.04), but excluding outlying data for 2 patients eliminated the statistical significance (p=0.32).
3.14
The manufacturer did not do any indirect comparisons or meta-analyses and advised that the economic evaluation was based solely on the RAVE results. It stated that RAVE reflected the marketing authorisation and scope of the appraisal, whereas the way rituximab was given in RITUXVAS was fundamentally different.
3.15
The manufacturer's submission described rituximab's safety profile using the Summary of Clinical Safety provided to the European Medicines Agency to support the marketing authorisation application for rituximab for treating severe ANCA-associated vasculitis. The Summary of Clinical Safety summarised exposure to rituximab in the rituximab group of RAVE (n=99) after 18 months' follow-up. In addition, the rituximab plus cyclophosphamide group in RITUXVAS (n=33) was followed for up to 24 months, and 162 patients in other investigator-initiated studies were followed for between 3 and 55 months.
3.16
The manufacturer reported that overall safety at 6 and 18 months was comparable between the rituximab and cyclophosphamide groups in RAVE, including the incidences and rates per patient-year of any adverse event, selected adverse events, adverse events that were grade 3 or higher, serious adverse events, and serious infections. The manufacturer stated that although the data are limited, safety in the other published studies was consistent with RAVE. Overall death rates and causes of death in RAVE and RITUXVAS were similar in the rituximab and cyclophosphamide groups. The most commonly reported type of serious adverse event in all studies was infection, with similar incidences between rituximab and cyclophosphamide groups in the controlled studies. The incidences and rates of serious adverse events were comparable between the rituximab and cyclophosphamide groups in RAVE at 6 months (33.3% compared with 33.7%) and 18 months (46.5% compared with 41.8%), and in RITUXVAS at 12 months (42% compared with 36%). There was no statistically significant difference between treatment groups in RITUXVAS in incidence rates of severe adverse events (p=0.77).
Manufacturer's response to consultation
3.17
In response to consultation, the manufacturer clarified the definition of severe disease. In RAVE, severe ANCA-associated vasculitis was defined as disease activity that threatened the function of the affected organ and had the potential to cause permanent organ damage or to threaten the patient's life unless effective therapy was implemented quickly. Severe disease had previously been referred to as 'generalised', 'generalised organ-threatening' or 'organ-threatening' disease. The manufacturer stated that when RAVE began, the standard of care for inducing remission in people with severe disease was cyclophosphamide and glucocorticoids.
3.18
The manufacturer summarised the 18-month follow-up results from RAVE. The proportion of patients who achieved complete remission (BVAS/WG of 0 on a prednisone dose of 0 mg) at 6 months and who maintained complete remission at 12 and 18 months was similar in the rituximab group and the cyclophosphamide group. The rates of severe and limited flares at 6, 12, and 18 months did not differ significantly between the rituximab group and the cyclophosphamide group. Slightly more flares occurred after 6 months in the rituximab group.
3.19
The manufacturer provided remission rates after re-treatment with rituximab. In RAVE, 16 patients received a second course of rituximab, of whom 7 (44%) entered complete remission.
3.20
The manufacturer provided information about the maximum cumulative dose of cyclophosphamide and its mode of administration in UK clinical practice. The manufacturer advised that the maximum cumulative dose of cyclophosphamide is 25 g and that intravenous therapy is preferred to oral administration. These statements are consistent with the 2013 draft guidelines from the British Society for Rheumatology on the management of ANCA-associated vasculitis. The manufacturer indicated that 2 courses of intravenous therapy would equate to approximately 23 g of cyclophosphamide, based on a body weight of 78.89 kg.
3.21
The manufacturer defined a subgroup of people for whom it is desirable to avoid cyclophosphamide:
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Women who wish to preserve their fertility.
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People at a higher risk of severe infection, tuberculosis, or chronic infection such as bronchiectasis.
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People with uroepithelial malignancy or dysplasia.
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People with cytopenia or bone marrow insufficiency.
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People with cyclophosphamide allergy or intolerance.
3.22
The manufacturer provided evidence about the long-term safety of rituximab when used as a treatment for rheumatoid arthritis. A global clinical trial programme studied 3595 patients for over 11 years. The patients received up to 20 courses of rituximab. The manufacturer reported there was no evidence of an increased safety risk, an increased risk of malignancy, or increased rates of adverse events after prolonged exposure to rituximab.
3.23
The manufacturer provided evidence that rituximab does not prevent women from conceiving children. A retrospective audit in the USA identified 157 women who received rituximab for ANCA-associated vasculitis. The audit identified 7 women who wanted to have children, of whom 6 became pregnant.
Cost effectiveness
Manufacturer's original submission
3.31
The manufacturer's systematic review did not identify any studies that reported on the cost effectiveness of treatment for ANCA-associated vasculitis. The manufacturer therefore submitted a de novo model, which it subsequently revised in its clarification response, evaluating the cost effectiveness of rituximab compared with cyclophosphamide in people with ANCA-associated vasculitis. In line with its marketing authorisation, the manufacturer restricted its analysis to inducing remission only and did not look at treating flares or maintenance therapy. The original base case included the population from RAVE, and subgroup analyses investigated people with newly diagnosed disease and with relapsed disease. A separate subgroup analysis estimated the cost effectiveness of rituximab in people for whom cyclophosphamide was not considered to be the standard of care (because this group was not represented in RAVE). The analysis was conducted from an NHS and personal and social services perspective. A lifetime time horizon was used and a 3.5% discount rate was adopted for health benefits and costs.
3.32
The manufacturer developed a Markov model with a similar design to that used in NICE's technology appraisal guidance on tocilizumab for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis. It consisted of 4 different health states: non-remission, complete remission, uncontrolled disease and death. 'Complete remission' reflected treatment success as assessed in RAVE, 'non-remission' reflected non-attainment of remission and 'uncontrolled disease' reflected a state of worse health that patients enter after the simulated treatment options have been exhausted.
3.33
Patients entered the model in the non-remission health state, received induction therapy and either moved to the complete remission health state (if they went into remission) or remained in the non-remission health state (if they did not go into remission). During each 6-month cycle, moving from 1 treatment to the next in each arm's sequence was triggered either by failing to attain complete remission or by the patient eventually relapsing. After receiving all possible treatment options, patients entered the uncontrolled disease health state. The original base-case analysis was designed to compare 2 sequences of treatments:
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In the 'standard of care' sequence, patients received cyclophosphamide as induction therapy. Patients who went into remission with cyclophosphamide switched to azathioprine during remission. Patients who did not go into remission, or who relapsed, received another course of cyclophosphamide. Clinical specialist advice to the manufacturer was that a maximum of 2 courses of cyclophosphamide would be used in standard clinical practice. The manufacturer assumed that 72% of patients received cyclophosphamide intravenously, with the remainder receiving it orally.
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In the 'intervention' sequence, patients received rituximab as a first-line induction treatment. Patients who went into remission did not receive any further treatment until relapse. Patients who did not go into complete remission received a further course of rituximab (this is based on expert opinion, because RAVE did not investigate the effects of re‑treatment). Patients whose disease responded to rituximab could not have re‑treatment on relapse because this is outside the scope of the marketing authorisation. After relapse following 1 or 2 cycles of rituximab, patients received 1 course of cyclophosphamide (it was assumed that 72% of patients received cyclophosphamide intravenously, with the remainder receiving it orally).
If patients received all available induction treatments in the treatment sequence and relapsed, they entered the 'uncontrolled disease' health state and received best supportive care.
3.34
The transition probabilities in the manufacturer's original base-case model were based on the primary endpoints from RAVE. A constant rate of relapse was applied in the model and it was assumed that the second course of treatment was associated with a lower probability of achieving remission than the first course. The manufacturer estimated the probability of achieving remission with the second course of treatment using RAVE results from the subgroup of patients with relapsed disease. The same probability of remission was used for re‑treatment with rituximab and with cyclophosphamide. Transition probabilities for adverse events were also based on RAVE data. Disease-specific mortality risks in the manufacturer's economic model were derived from a retrospective cohort study of UK patients with ANCA-associated vasculitis.
3.35
The costs used in the manufacturer's original economic model comprised treatment-associated costs plus health-state costs. Cost data (excluding drug costs) were largely derived from National reference costs. Drug costs were derived from the British national formulary (BNF) edition 64. Average drug costs per cycle were £4689.78 for rituximab, £99.15 for oral cyclophosphamide, £110.84 for intravenous cyclophosphamide, £44.17 for azathioprine, £28.01 for methylprednisone, £1497.96 for prednisone and £21.38 for trimethoprim. Treatment administration costs per cycle were £721.16 for rituximab and £1802.89 for intravenous cyclophosphamide, and it was assumed that these included monitoring costs. Monitoring costs for oral cyclophosphamide and azathioprine were £108. The per-cycle cost of best supportive care for patients with uncontrolled disease was £4415.73. Health-state costs were £778.10 for the remission health state and £6309.01 for the non-remission and uncontrolled disease health states.
3.36
The manufacturer's systematic review did not identify any relevant studies that reported usable utility values. Health-related quality of life data were collected in RAVE using the SF‑36 questionnaire, which was administered at baseline and at 6 months. The SF‑36 scores were converted from the non-remission and remission health states to the EQ‑5D in a post-hoc analysis using a published model (Ara and Brazier 2008) and adjusted for age. Disutility adjustments were applied for adverse events.
3.37
The manufacturer's original base-case results, provided after the request for clarification, showed that treating ANCA-associated vasculitis with rituximab increased the cost of treatment but was associated with more quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) than cyclophosphamide. The manufacturer's incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) for the comparison of rituximab with cyclophosphamide in patients with ANCA-associated vasculitis was £8544 per QALY gained (incremental costs £1391; incremental QALYs 0.1628). In its response to clarification, the manufacturer provided the results of scenario analyses, one-way deterministic sensitivity analyses, and probabilistic sensitivity analyses. These original analyses have been superseded by the manufacturer's response to consultation (see sections 3.54 to 3.62).
Evidence review group's exploratory analyses using the manufacturer's original model
3.45
The ERG corrected several apparent technical errors in the manufacturer's economic model, which included using costs of prednisolone instead of prednisone in line with UK clinical practice. Other cost changes were for cyclophosphamide, trimethoprim and blood tests. The ERG also adjusted the utility value for pneumonia, adjusted the numbers at risk of relapse, used normal distributions for cost parameters, included distributions for standardised mortality rates and outpatient appointments in the probabilistic sensitivity analyses, and adjusted the mortality risk for patients aged 91 years and older in the uncontrolled disease health state. Cumulatively, these changes decreased the ICER for the comparison of rituximab with cyclophosphamide for all patients with ANCA-associated vasculitis. The ERG's corrected ICER was £6006 per QALY gained (incremental costs £986; incremental QALYs 0.1642) compared with the manufacturer's base-case ICER of £8544 per QALY gained (incremental costs £1391; incremental QALYs 0.1628). Replacing the cost of prednisone with the cost of prednisolone had the greatest impact.
3.46
In further exploratory analyses, the ERG altered several parameter values in the manufacturer's economic model:
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Body surface area and weight were increased to better reflect patients in RAVE.
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It was assumed that patients who went into remission after receiving rituximab would receive azathioprine maintenance treatment at the same dosage as patients who went into remission after receiving cyclophosphamide.
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Relapse rates were re‑estimated based on data from patients who had severe flares after receiving cyclophosphamide in RAVE, to reflect the assumption that only severe flares would lead to renewed induction treatment. Given the assumption that patients receiving rituximab induction treatment also received azathioprine maintenance, the same relapse rate was applied to patients in the rituximab group and patients in the cyclophosphamide group.
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Costs and utility values in the uncontrolled disease state were amended to reflect that patients in this state are likely to have some disease control.
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The number and costs of routine tests were amended to reflect recommendations in published guidelines.
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Methylprednisolone administration costs were increased.
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The costs of X-rays and CT scans were taken from NHS reference costs.
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Wastage costs were included.
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The number of outpatient appointments was reduced.
When these changes in the manufacturer's economic model were added to those described in section 3.45, the ERG's cumulative ICER increased to £26,347 per QALY gained (incremental costs £5704; incremental QALYs 0.2165) for the comparison of rituximab with cyclophosphamide for the full population of patients with ANCA-associated vasculitis. The ERG noted that reducing the number of outpatient appointments (especially in the uncontrolled disease health state) substantially decreased the benefits associated with the rituximab treatment sequence.
3.47
The ERG modelled several treatment sequences that it considered to be more appropriate than those in the manufacturer's submission for the different populations (described in sections 3.48–3.52):
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the full population in the manufacturer's economic model
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patients with newly diagnosed ANCA-associated vasculitis
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patients with relapsed ANCA-associated vasculitis who could have further treatment with cyclophosphamide
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patients with relapsed ANCA-associated vasculitis who could not have further cyclophosphamide treatment
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patients who are unable to tolerate cyclophosphamide.
3.48
The ERG investigated how different treatment sequences could impact on the cost-effectiveness estimates for the full patient population with ANCA-associated vasculitis in the manufacturer's economic model:
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Adding rituximab to the treatment sequence after 2 courses of cyclophosphamide gave an ICER of £12,075 per QALY gained (incremental costs £3894; incremental QALYs 0.32).
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Using rituximab after 1 course of cyclophosphamide increased the ICER to £69,710 per QALY gained (incremental costs £355; incremental QALYs 0.0051) compared with using it after 2 courses.
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Using rituximab as first-line treatment further increased the ICER to £127,456 per QALY gained (incremental costs £579; incremental QALYs 0.0045) compared with using rituximab as second-line treatment.
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At £30,000 per QALY gained, the probability of rituximab being cost effective after 2 courses of cyclophosphamide was 58.3%. The probability that excluding rituximab from the treatment sequence was cost effective was 11.7%.
3.49
The ERG did exploratory analyses for the population with newly diagnosed ANCA-associated vasculitis:
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Adding rituximab to the treatment sequence after 2 courses of cyclophosphamide gave an ICER of £12,851 per QALY gained (incremental costs £3783; incremental QALYs 0.29).
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Using rituximab after 1 course of cyclophosphamide increased the ICER to £81,604 per QALY gained (incremental costs £364; incremental QALYs 0.0045) compared with using rituximab after 2 courses of cyclophosphamide.
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The ICER for using rituximab as a first-line treatment further increased the ICER to £317,038 per QALY gained (incremental costs £843; incremental QALYs 0.0027) compared with using rituximab as second-line treatment.
At £30,000 per QALY gained, the probability that using rituximab after 2 courses of cyclophosphamide was cost effective in patients with newly diagnosed disease was 59.7%. The probability that excluding rituximab from the treatment sequence was cost effective was 13.9%.
3.50
The ERG did exploratory analyses on the population of patients with relapsed ANCA-associated vasculitis who could have further treatment with cyclophosphamide:
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Adding rituximab to the treatment sequence after 1 course of cyclophosphamide gave an ICER of £11,129 per QALY gained (incremental costs £4702; incremental QALYs 0.4225).
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The ICER for rituximab as first-line treatment was £51,842 per QALY gained (incremental costs £325; incremental QALYs 0.0063) compared with rituximab as second-line treatment.
The probability of rituximab being cost effective after 1 course of cyclophosphamide was 51.3% at £30,000 per QALY gained. The probability that excluding rituximab from the treatment sequence was cost effective was 10.4%.
3.51
The ERG did exploratory analyses on the population of patients with relapsed ANCA-associated vasculitis who could not have further cyclophosphamide treatment. Using rituximab instead of best supportive care gave an ICER of £10,699 per QALY gained (incremental costs £5385; incremental QALYs 0.5033). The ERG assumed that patients who could not tolerate further cyclophosphamide treatment and were receiving best supportive care moved directly to a low-grade disease health state (with partial disease control), and explained that this assumption limited the analysis because active comparators were excluded. At £30,000 per QALY gained, the probability of rituximab being cost effective was 90.4%. The probability that excluding rituximab from the treatment sequence was cost effective was 9.6%.
3.52
The ERG did an exploratory subgroup analysis on patients who were unable to tolerate cyclophosphamide. This subgroup did not necessarily have relapsed disease, but could not take cyclophosphamide for a reason other than exceeding the maximum recommended lifetime cumulative dose. Model parameter inputs were based on the full patient population in RAVE. Using rituximab instead of best supportive care gave an ICER of £11,277 per QALY gained (incremental costs £5437; incremental QALYs 0.48). The ERG assumed that patients who could not tolerate further cyclophosphamide treatment and were receiving best supportive care moved directly to a low-grade disease health state (with partial disease control), and explained that this assumption limited the analysis because active comparators were excluded. At £30,000 per QALY gained, the probability of rituximab being cost effective in patients who cannot tolerate cyclophosphamide was 90.5%. The probability that excluding rituximab from the treatment sequence was cost effective was 9.5%.
3.53
After receiving feedback from clinical specialists on its exploratory analyses, the ERG did other scenario analyses on the data from the full patient population to further explore uncertainty associated with some parameters used in the economic model. The parameters tested were: reduced administration costs for methylprednisone and cyclophosphamide (because of shorter infusion time); substituting co-trimoxazole for trimethoprim; fewer cyclophosphamide infusions (6 instead of 10); and increased weight and body surface (to reflect the UK population with ANCA-associated vasculitis). These amendments had little cumulative impact on the ICER associated with adding rituximab to the treatment sequence after 2 courses of cyclophosphamide treatment compared with best supportive care after 2 courses of cyclophosphamide treatment, which increased slightly from £12,075 per QALY gained (ERG's base-case ICER) to £12,670 per QALY gained. However, the cumulative ICERs for using rituximab earlier in the treatment sequence increased more markedly because of reduced costs for intravenous cyclophosphamide and increased costs for rituximab (owing to higher body surface area). The ICER for using rituximab after 1 course of cyclophosphamide was £117,545 per QALY gained compared with after 2 courses of cyclophosphamide, and the ICER for using rituximab as first-line treatment was £191,013 per QALY gained compared with using it as second-line treatment. The ERG anticipated that these findings using the full patient population would be mirrored in the subgroups of patients who were newly diagnosed or had relapsed disease.
Manufacturer's response to consultation
3.54
In response to consultation, the manufacturer provided 2 updated economic models; one for patients who can have cyclophosphamide and one for patients who cannot have cyclophosphamide. Both models incorporated the following changes:
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The minor technical changes proposed in section 3.45.
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The mean body surface area of patients was increased to 1.90 m2 and the mean weight of patients was increased to 78.89 kg, based on data from 30 patients with vasculitis treated at Manchester Royal Infirmary.
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The model assumed that only severe relapses would be treated with induction therapy.
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The utility value in the uncontrolled disease health state was increased from 0.671 to 0.710.
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The cost of administering methylprednisolone was included. The cost was assumed to be equivalent to the cost of delivering rituximab and cyclophosphamide.
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The cost of an X-ray was updated to £18.56 and the cost of a CT scan was increased to £100.00. It was assumed that 80% of scans received in the modelled population would be X-rays and 20% would be CT scans.
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The model included wastage costs associated with drug delivery.
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There were 4 outpatient visits every 6 months in the uncontrolled disease health state.
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The model included only intravenous administration of cyclophosphamide (whereas the original model assumed 28% of patients would receive oral cyclophosphamide).
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In the uncontrolled disease health state, patients were assumed to receive the recommended dosage of mycophenolate mofetil, methotrexate, or azathioprine. The average cost of the 3 therapies was used in the model. The model assumed no difference in efficacy between treatment arms once patients entered the uncontrolled disease heath state.
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The models did not include any maintenance therapy after induction treatment with rituximab.
3.55
In the manufacturer's updated model for patients who can have cyclophosphamide, the base-case analysis was designed to compare 2 sequences of treatments:
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In the 'standard of care' sequence, patients received intravenous cyclophosphamide as induction therapy. Patients who went into remission with cyclophosphamide received azathioprine as maintenance therapy during remission. Patients who did not go into remission, or who relapsed, received a second course of intravenous cyclophosphamide.
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In the 'intervention' sequence, patients received 1 course of intravenous cyclophosphamide as induction therapy. Patients who went into remission with cyclophosphamide received azathioprine as maintenance therapy during remission. Patients who did not go into remission, or who relapsed, received 2 courses of rituximab. Patients who went into remission with rituximab did not receive any maintenance therapy.
3.56
In the manufacturer's updated model, the base-case transition probabilities were based on data from RAVE. In both the 'standard of care' sequence and the 'intervention' sequence, the probability of achieving remission with the first course of cyclophosphamide was estimated using data from the subgroup of patients in RAVE who had newly-diagnosed disease and were treated with cyclophosphamide.
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In the 'standard of care' sequence, the probability of achieving remission with the second course of cyclophosphamide was estimated using data from the subgroup of patients in RAVE who had relapsed disease and were treated with cyclophosphamide.
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In the 'intervention' sequence, the probability of achieving remission with rituximab following a course of cyclophosphamide was estimated using data from the subgroup of patients in RAVE who had relapsed disease and were treated with rituximab. The probability of achieving remission with the subsequent course of rituximab was estimated using data from the subgroup of patients in RAVE who were re-treated with rituximab.
3.57
In the manufacturer's updated base-case model, the estimate of relapse rates was based on data from patients who had severe flares after receiving cyclophosphamide in RAVE. The same relapse rate was applied to patients in the rituximab group and patients in the cyclophosphamide group. The relapse rate was assumed to be identical after subsequent lines of therapy.
3.58
The manufacturer's updated model for people with ANCA-associated vasculitis who can have cyclophosphamide produced an ICER for the comparison of rituximab with cyclophosphamide of £18,556 per QALY gained (incremental costs £6117; incremental QALYs 0.330).
3.59
The model for people with ANCA-associated vasculitis who cannot have cyclophosphamide was the same as the updated base-case model for patients who can have cyclophosphamide, except that it compared the following 2 sequences of treatments:
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In the 'standard of care' sequence, patients received a 6-month course of either mycophenolate mofetil or methotrexate. These treatments were assumed to have the same complete remission rates as cyclophosphamide. Patients who went into remission with mycophenolate mofetil or methotrexate received azathioprine as maintenance therapy during remission. The probability of relapse was assumed to be higher than that with cyclophosphamide or rituximab and was set at 0.103.
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In the 'intervention' sequence, patients received 2 courses of rituximab. Patients who went into remission with rituximab did not receive any maintenance therapy. The probability of relapse was 0.086, based on data from RAVE.
3.60
The manufacturer's updated model for people with ANCA-associated vasculitis who cannot have cyclophosphamide produced an ICER for the comparison of rituximab with mycophenolate mofetil or methotrexate of £35,003 per QALY gained (incremental costs £10,186; incremental QALYs 0.291).
3.61
The manufacturer conducted one-way sensitivity analyses to explore the effect of assumptions about key parameters on the results of the base-case model. The following changes, when implemented independently, gave ICERs that were higher than the base case: a higher relapse rate in the rituximab arm, treating both minor and severe relapses with induction therapy, reducing the number of outpatient appointments in the uncontrolled disease health state, and assuming that no patients received a second course of rituximab. When it was assumed that there was less wastage of rituximab, the ICERs were lower than the base case.
3.62
The committee had requested analyses that incorporated the costs and disutility of the cumulative long-term toxicity of cyclophosphamide. The committee had also requested analyses that incorporated the inpatient costs associated with non-remission, and separate analyses of the benefit of rituximab for patients who wished to have children. The manufacturer stated that they did not provide these analyses because of time constraints and a lack of data.
Evidence review group's exploratory analyses after consultation
3.71
The ERG made the following changes to the manufacturer's model:
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The apparent errors listed in section 3.63 were amended.
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The ERG incorporated uncertainty around the remission rate after re-treatment with rituximab.
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Only patients who entered remission with rituximab were given a second course of rituximab.
3.72
The ERG ran probabilistic sensitivity analyses. The ERG also ran the following scenario analyses for the subgroups who can and cannot have cyclophosphamide:
3.73
The ERG's exploratory analyses examined the cost effectiveness of rituximab for patients who can have cyclophosphamide.
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Assuming only patients who entered remission with rituximab would be given a second course of rituximab and no maintenance treatment after rituximab, the ICER for the comparison of rituximab with cyclophosphamide was £20,879 per QALY gained (incremental costs £5075; incremental QALYs 0.24). The probability of rituximab being cost effective compared with cyclophosphamide was 40.7% at £20,000 per QALY gained and 56.7% at £30,000 per QALY gained.
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Assuming only patients who entered remission with rituximab would be given a second course of rituximab and azathioprine as maintenance treatment after rituximab, the ICER for the comparison of rituximab with cyclophosphamide was £23,444 per QALY gained (incremental costs £5698; incremental QALYs 0.24). The probability of rituximab being cost effective compared with cyclophosphamide was 34.8% at £20,000 per QALY gained and 52.8% at £30,000 per QALY gained.
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Assuming no re-treatment with rituximab and no maintenance treatment after rituximab, the ICER for the comparison of rituximab with cyclophosphamide was £20,080 per QALY gained (incremental costs £2790; incremental QALYs 0.14). The probability of rituximab being cost effective compared with cyclophosphamide was 42.0% at £20,000 per QALY gained and 53.7% at £30,000 per QALY gained.
3.74
The ERG's exploratory analyses also examined the cost effectiveness of rituximab for patients who cannot have cyclophosphamide.
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Assuming that only patients who entered remission with rituximab would be given a second course of rituximab and no maintenance treatment after rituximab, the ICER for the comparison of rituximab with mycophenolate mofetil or methotrexate was £60,569 per QALY gained (incremental costs £8345; incremental QALYs 0.14). The probability of rituximab being cost effective compared with mycophenolate mofetil or methotrexate was 13.8% at £20,000 per QALY gained and 25.3% at £30,000 per QALY gained.
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Assuming only patients who entered remission with rituximab would be given a second course of rituximab and azathioprine as maintenance treatment after rituximab, the ICER for the comparison of rituximab with mycophenolate mofetil or methotrexate was £65,700 per QALY gained (incremental costs £9052; incremental QALYs 0.14). The probability of rituximab being cost effective compared with mycophenolate mofetil or methotrexate was 10.9% at £20,000 per QALY gained and 22.4% at £30,000 per QALY gained.
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Assuming no re-treatment with rituximab and no maintenance treatment after rituximab, the ICER for the comparison of rituximab with mycophenolate mofetil or methotrexate was £118,154 per QALY gained (incremental costs £5463; incremental QALYs 0.05). The probability of rituximab being cost effective compared with mycophenolate mofetil or methotrexate was 14.7% at £20,000 per QALY gained and 23.1% at £30,000 per QALY gained.
Manufacturer's response to second consultation
3.75
In response to the second consultation, the manufacturer provided a weighted-average threshold analysis. The aim was to calculate an ICER for rituximab for treating the entire population of people with severely active granulomatosis with polyangiitis and microscopic polyangiitis (including both people who can and people who cannot have cyclophosphamide). For the subgroup of people who can have cyclophosphamide, the manufacturer used an ICER of £12,100 per QALY gained (see section 3.48). Based on the opinion of clinical specialists, the manufacturer assumed that 10% of patients cannot have cyclophosphamide. For the subgroup of people who cannot have cyclophosphamide, the manufacturer used a range of ICERs from £80,000 to £200,000 per QALY gained. The weighted-average ICERs for the entire population of people with severely active granulomatosis with polyangiitis and microscopic polyangiitis ranged from £18,890 to £30,890 per QALY gained.
ERG's response to second consultation
3.76
In response to the second consultation, the ERG provided illustrative analyses based on the manufacturer's updated model for people who cannot have cyclophosphamide; this model compared 2 courses of rituximab with 1 course of mycophenolate mofetil or methotrexate (see section 3.74). The following changes were made to the 'standard of care' sequence in the model:
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The utility in the remission health state was decreased from 0.84 to 0.79.
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The cost of glucocorticoids in the remission health state was increased from £293 to £439 per 6-month treatment cycle.
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The remission rate was decreased from 0.65 to 0.52.
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Mycophenolate mofetil was the only active treatment in the 'standard of care' sequence.
The changes resulted in an ICER for rituximab compared with mycophenolate mofetil of £26,406 per QALY gained.