The positive recommendations follow an improved discount to the
price of apalutamide offered by the company.
The draft guidance looks at apalutamide plus ADT for treating
prostate cancer in adults which either:
- No longer responds to hormone therapy (hormone-relapsed
prostate cancer) in people who are at high risk of the cancer
spreading to other parts of their body, or
- Is still sensitive to hormone therapy (hormone-sensitive
prostate cancer) but has already spread.
Apalutamide is a type of drug called an androgen receptor
inhibitor which works by blocking the effect of testosterone on
prostate cancer cells.
Current treatment for hormone-relapsed non-metastatic prostate
cancer is ADT (treatments which stop testosterone from reaching
the cancer cells), alone or with darolutamide (another
androgen receptor inhibitor). Current treatment for
hormone-sensitive metastatic prostate cancer is docetaxel (a
chemotherapy drug) plus ADT or ADT alone for people who cannot
take docetaxel. NICE recently recommended the androgen receptor
inhibitor enzalutamide plus
ADT as an option as this stage of the treatment pathway.
For both types of prostate cancer the clinical trial results
suggest that, compared with placebo plus ADT, apalutamide plus
ADT increases the time until the disease gets worse and how
long people with these types of prostate cancer live.
As this appraisal considered 2 different types of prostate
cancer, 2 recommendations were made. For people with
hormone-relapsed prostate cancer at high risk of spreading, the
cost-effectiveness estimates are within what NICE considers to
be an effective use of NHS resources.
For people with hormone-sensitive metastatic prostate cancer,
apalutamide plus ADT is not cost effective compared with
docetaxel. However, many people cannot or should not take
docetaxel, because of its adverse effects, and for these people
the most appropriate comparator is ADT alone. Compared with ADT
alone, the cost-effectiveness estimates for apalutamide plus
ADT are within what NICE considers to be an effective us of NHS
resources. Therefore, apalutamide plus ADT is recommended for
people with hormone-sensitive metastatic prostate cancer, but
only if docetaxel is not suitable or cannot be tolerated.
It is estimated that around 8,000 people with hormone-sensitive
or hormone-relapsed prostate cancer will now be eligible for
treatment with apalutamide.
Meindert Boysen, NICE deputy chief executive and
director of the Centre for Health Technology Evaluation,
said: “We are very pleased that Janssen has been able
to work with us to address the uncertainties in the evidence
identified by the committee in the previous draft guidance.
This means that we are able to produce final draft guidance
recommending apalutamide as an effective and valuable
additional treatment option for people with these types of
prostate cancer.”
ENDS
1. The price for apalutamide is £2,735 per pack of 112 tablets,
each containing 60 mg of the active ingredient (excluding VAT;
BNF online, March 2021). The company has a commercial
arrangement (simple discount patient access scheme). This makes
apalutamide available to the NHS with a discount. The size of
the discount is commercial in confidence. It is the company’s
responsibility to let relevant NHS organisations know details
of the discount.
2. The draft guidance on apalutamide is available on the NICE
website (from 00:01, Wednesday 8 September 2021) at https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/indevelopment/gid-ta10423
Embargoed copies of the guidance are available via the Press Office.