Are there benefits to asymptomatic patients with diffuse large b-cell lymphoma in first remisssion to undergoing surveillance imaging such as CT or PET/CT? A new study says no.
Researchers compared three strategies in these older DLBCL patients:
Whether these patients actually get any benefit from undergoing imaging, and whether it's at all cost-effective, were examined using lifetime costs, quality-adjusted life years (QALYs), and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) .
Surveillance strategies utilizing 2 years of routine CT or PET/CT scans were associated with minimal survival benefit when compared with clinical follow-up without routine imaging. They further found that the benefit of imaging-based follow-up remained small after quality-of-life adjustments. And finally, costs associated with imaging-based surveillance strategies are considerable, especially when compared with simple clinical follow-up.
The team concluded that "Our cost-effectiveness analysis suggests surveillance imaging of asymptomatic DLBCL patients in remission offers little clinical benefit at substantial economic costs."
Source: JCO