• Lutte contre les cancers

  • Analyses économiques et systèmes de soins

Cost implications of early treatment discontinuation in cancer: a real-world data analysis

Menée aux Pays-Bas dans un contexte de vie réelle, cette étude rétrospective analyse les coûts associés à l'abandon prématuré du traitement chez les patients atteints d'un cancer

Background: Health care costs are rising due to increasing cancer incidence and the expanding use of high-cost anticancer medicines. Early treatment discontinuation (ETD) may signal inefficiencies in medicine use or reflect appropriate or inevitable clinical decisions. Despite its clinical and economic relevance, national-level data on ETD remains limited. This study aims to quantify ETD rates and associated costs for the highest budget anticancer medicines in the Netherlands and assess trends from 2018 to 2022.

Methods: We performed a retrospective analysis using real-world data from the Dutch national claims database. ETD was defined as treatment discontinued within 90 days. The study focused on the thirty highest-budget impact anticancer medicines in 2022, assessing ETD rates, related medicine costs, and trends over five years (2018–2022).

Results: In 2022, these medicines accounted for €783 million in expenditures, with ETD representing 9·9% (€77 million). Among 30,343 treatments, 29·7% (9,025) were discontinued within 90 days. From 2018 to 2022, total medication costs increased by 27·1%, while ETD costs rose by 9·6%. ETDs increased from 7,287 to 9,025 (+23.9%), with substantial variation among medicines. For most medicines, survivors accounted for most ETD spending, while ETD followed by death remained 9%.

Conclusions: Approximately thirty percent of anticancer treatments are discontinued early, accounting for nearly ten percent of medicine costs. While ETD highlights opportunities to improve efficiency, it also includes clinically justified and unavoidable discontinuations. Efforts to reduce avoidable ETD through improved patient selection, toxicity prediction, and treatment optimization are essential for more rational and equitable use of high-cost anticancer therapies.

The Oncologist , article en libre accès, 2026

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