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Author(s):
Hans-Christian Kolberg, MD, doctor of Medicine, Marien Hospital Bottrop in Bottrop, Germany, discusses the cost-effectiveness of pertuzumab as a treatment for patients with HER2-positive breast cancer, based off of findings from a study published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.
Hans-Christian Kolberg, MD, doctor of Medicine, Marien Hospital Bottrop in Bottrop, Germany, discusses the cost-effectiveness of pertuzumab as a treatment for patients with HER2-positive breast cancer, based off of findings from a study published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.
In the study, the authors suggest that pertuzumab is not a cost-effective therapy for patients. However, Kolberg explains, the agent does demonstrate improved survival by 1.8 years, which the authors equated to totalling $100,000.
Kolberg says that targeted therapies, especially anti-angiogenic agents, are becoming more expensive. The question of how much money society is willing to spend on medication for longer survival and improved quality of life, however, should be a societal, ethical question—not a medical question.