The committee noted that the company had based its submission on a subgroup of patients with oral cavity cancer. It also noted that, in its earlier deliberations, it had not been persuaded that the estimate from the subgroup was sufficiently reliable for use in the economic model. The company argued that, in the EXTREME trial, these patients had a poorer prognosis and gained greater benefit from cetuximab than the overall population of the trial. It noted that at the 2‑year cut‑off in the trial, cetuximab increased median overall survival by 6.6 months in patients with tumours of the oral cavity compared with an increase of 2.7 months in the whole population of the trial. The results for median progression-free survival were also better in the oral cavity cancer subgroup than in the whole trial population (3.3 months compared with 2.3 months). However, the committee noted that the subgroup was small (n=88) compared with the whole trial population (n=442), adding to the uncertainty inherent when considering estimates of effectiveness based on subgroup data. The clinical experts at the meeting confirmed that, in the EXTREME trial, patients with tumours in the oral cavity had a poorer prognosis than people with tumours in other locations. They also confirmed that, before the EXTREME trial, no other treatments had been shown to be of benefit in clinical trials in this patient group. This suggested an unmet need in this patient group, who were often older and had comorbidities. However, the experts were not aware of a biological mechanism that could explain why cetuximab would differ in its relative effects between different tumour types. The committee also discussed the additional published evidence on epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) overexpression in SCCHN that the company had provided after consultation. The committee concluded that it was possible that cetuximab might have greater benefits in oral cavity tumours but that the evidence in support of this was limited.