Objective: To calculate the total cost per patient of prostate cancer treatment and the economic cost burden by stage, in the first year after diagnosis, for five European countries.
Methods: Data from the Information Management Systems, Inc. database, survival data, expert opinion, published data and unit costs from various published official sources were used to calculate total costs per patient by stage for each country, from a payer's perspective. Diagnostic costs, first surgery, radio-, chemo- and hormonal therapy costs were included. Costs were aggregated for incident cases.
Results: The mean direct costs per patient for initial treatment were euro3698 in Germany, euro3256 in Spain, euro3682 in the UK, euro5226 in Italy and euro5851 in France. The total costs for all diagnosed patients in the first year from diagnosis were (million euro) 116.7 (UK), 244 (Germany), 385 (France), 202 (Italy) and 114.6 (Spain).
Conclusions: The direct initial healthcare cost burden of the most common non-skin-related male cancer, prostate cancer, in France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the UK is considerable. Given the high and increasing prevalence of prostate cancer due to ageing populations in Europe, and the significant cost burden of the disease, national health policy makers should be aware of prostate cancer as a priority disease area.