Health-state utilities in long-term advanced melanoma survivors comparable with the general population

Qual Life Res. 2023 Sep;32(9):2517-2525. doi: 10.1007/s11136-023-03427-9. Epub 2023 Apr 20.

Abstract

Background: Checkpoint inhibitors have been shown to substantially improve the survival of patients with advanced melanoma. With this growing group of survivors treated with immunotherapies, assessing their health-state utilities is essential and can be used for the calculation of quality-adjusted life years and for cost-effectiveness analyses. Therefore, we evaluated the health-state utilities in long-term advanced melanoma survivors.

Methods: Health-state utilities were evaluated in a cohort of advanced melanoma survivors 24-36 months (N = 37) and 36-plus months (N = 47) post-ipilimumab monotherapy. In addition, the health-state utilities of the 24-36 months survivor group were assessed longitudinally, and utilities of the combined survival groups (N = 84) were compared with a matched control population (N = 168). The EQ-5D was used to generate health-state utility values, and quality-of-life questionnaires were used to establish correlations and influencing factors of utility scores.

Results: Health-state utility scores were similar between the 24-36 months'- and the 36-plus months' survival group (0.81 vs 0.86; p = .22). In survivors, lower utility scores were associated with symptoms of depression (β = - .82, p = .022) and fatigue burden (β = - .29, p = .007). Utility scores did not significantly change after 24-36 months of survival, and the utilities of survivors were comparable to the matched control population (0.84 vs 0.87; p = .07).

Discussion: Our results show that long-term advanced melanoma survivors treated with ipilimumab monotherapy experience relatively stable and high health-state utility scores.

Keywords: Advanced melanoma survivors; EQ-5D; Health-state utilities; Quality-of-life.

MeSH terms

  • Cancer Survivors*
  • Humans
  • Ipilimumab
  • Melanoma* / drug therapy
  • Quality of Life / psychology
  • Surveys and Questionnaires

Substances

  • Ipilimumab