News Release

A research advocates making cost-effectiveness analyses to improve healthcare management

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Elhuyar Fundazioa

This is one of the conclusions of the PhD thesis, read at the NUP/UPNA-Public University of Navarre by the medical doctor Patricia Serra-Arbeloa, who conducted a cost-effectiveness study on a diagnostic test carried out on patients with cutaneous melanoma: the selective biopsy of the sentinel ganglion.

Lymphatic ganglions, small glands spread throughout the body, are an important part of the immune system and help to determine whether the cancer cells have acquired the capacity to spread to other parts of the body. A sentinel lymph gland is defined as the first to which cancer cells are more likely to spread from a primary tumour (the first that appears in the body). The biopsy of the sentinel lymph ganglion is a procedure in which one or more ganglions are located, removed and examined to see whether there are any cancer cells. This biopsy is normally used to help to determine the status of two types of cancer: breast cancer and cutaneous melanoma.

Conflicting results

Patricia Serra's PhD thesis focussed on evaluating the selective biopsy of the sentinel ganglion in skin cancer, "a technique widely used in managing cutaneous melanoma and whose effectiveness and costs have not been assessed despite the fact that the results of the clinical trials published are conflicting," said the researcher.

"Following a systematic review in which nearly 3,000 scientific articles on this subject were studied, it was found that countless works had been published but only a fraction presented a high level of scientific evidence," pointed out the new PhD holder.

Particia Serra also confirmed that the use of this biopsy "does not offer significant differences in global survival in cases of cutaneous melanoma with thicknesses in the intermediate and thick ranges with respect to the other strategy: the mere monitoring of the patient after the removal of the initial lesion, which appears 'ex novo' and which is regarded as a minimum treatment". "In thin melanomas it is not possible to establish conclusions with respect to survival, although the tendency is similar to that described for other thicknesses," she added.

In the cost-effectiveness analysis, this biopsy "does not show an improvement in health outcomes in terms of years of life gained and years of life gained adjusted to quality in these patients, except for a slight benefit in cutaneous melanoma with an intermediate thickness". "To this is added the fact that the high costs in diagnosing cutaneous melanoma at an advanced stage point to the need to promote primary prevention and early detection programmes," pointed out Patricia Serra.

For all these reasons the author of the research concluded that selective biopsy of the sentinel ganglion in cutaneous melanoma "does not have a positive cost-effectiveness ratio with respect to the technique of removing the primary tumour followed by the monitoring of the patient, irrespective of the thickness of the tumour and timeframe".

###


Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert system.