1.1 Pembrolizumab is recommended as an option for untreated PD‑L1-positive metastatic non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) in adults whose tumours express PD‑L1 (with at least a 50% tumour proportion score) and have no epidermal growth factor receptor- or anaplastic lymphoma kinase-positive mutations, only if:
pembrolizumab is stopped at 2 years of uninterrupted treatment or earlier in the event of disease progression and
the company provides pembrolizumab according to the commercial access agreement.
Why the committee made this recommendation
People with untreated metastatic PD‑L1-positive NSCLC are usually offered platinum-based chemotherapy (docetaxel, gemcitabine, paclitaxel, vinorelbine or pemetrexed, with a platinum-based drug).
Clinical trial evidence shows that pembrolizumab increases the length of time people live by nearly 16 months compared with chemotherapy. Although there is uncertainty about the long-term treatment benefit of pembrolizumab after treatment is stopped, there was sufficient evidence of an important extension-to-life benefit in people with untreated stage 4 metastatic PD‑L1-positive NSCLC compared with standard care.
The most plausible cost-effectiveness estimate for pembrolizumab compared with chemotherapy is within the range NICE normally considers acceptable for an end-of-life treatment. Therefore it can be recommended as an option for untreated metastatic PD‑L1-positive (with at least a 50% tumour proportion score) NSCLC if treatment is stopped after 2 years.
https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/ta531