In pharmacoeconomics, ICER (incremental costeffectiveness ratio) is a recognized parameter that quantifies the cost-effectiveness for the comparison between an innovative drug and the standard of care [McCabe et al. 2008]. An extensive literature has been published on how ICERs should be interpreted and how their values ultimately translate into pricing decisions (e.g. value-based pricing). Given that ICER algebraically is the ratio of incremental cost and incremental benefit (i.e. survival gain), we designed a study to assess the correlation between these two parameters in different developed countries. A strong correlation would indicate that drug prices are strictly related to the benefit, while a poor correlation would indicate that prices are unrelated to benefits. To our knowledge, while hundreds of papers have been focused on theoretical and practical implications of ICERs, only a few studies have assessed the above mentioned correlation, and no study at all has performed an international comparison. The present analysis was restricted to anticancer agents and was aimed at carrying out this specific international comparison.We first performed a literature search in PubMed (www.pubmed.org) and Google Scholar (www. scholar.google.it) covering the period from 1 January 2010 to the present time (the last query was on 17 February 2016). The keywords employed to select eligible papers were the following: survival AND gain AND cost AND (oncology OR 'anticancer drug'). The time interval from 1 January 2010 to present time was selected also to obtain the overall survival (OS) data of those drugs for which this information was unavailable from included studies. Eligible papers were included in our analyses if they met the following criteria for each innovative drug: reporting of clinical indication, standard of care, incremental OS and incremental cost. Papers were included even though the latter two parameters were not directly presented, but enough information was given to recalculate them. To include as many papers as possible, our search was extended to all citations reported in the references of included articles. We separately examined whether the inclusion criteria were met by individual studies. Differences in this assessment were resolved by consensus. Standard correlation analyses were carried out to generate our results.Our first extraction of eligible papers from PubMed selected a total of 258 citations. After inspection of the abstract or the full text of these articles, a total of eight studies [Martone et al. 2014a[Martone et al. , 2014bSchnipper et al. 2015;Ebara et al. 2013;Shiroiwa et al. 2011;Tsuchiya et al. 2011;Mouri et al. 2013;Österlund et al. 2014] were found to satisfy the inclusion criteria; these articles referred to the following four countries: Italy, US, Japan and Scandinavia. Figure 1 (panels a through d) illustrates the results of our analyses. The values of correlation coefficient showed a substantial association between incremental cost and incremental OS for Scandinavia (r = 0.767...