OBJECTIVE: To calculate the economic consequences of using alfuzosin 10 mg once daily for managing acute urinary retention (AUR) related to benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). METHODS: We examined whether alfuzosin use during hospitalization for AUR and for 6 months after a successful trial without catheter (TWOC) is cost effective compared to placebo and immediate prostatectomy, from the perspective of patients managed in the National Health Service (NHS) in the UK. A decision-analysis model was developed to estimate the costs of various treatment options within the first 6 months after a first episode of AUR. Clinical data were obtained from a large randomized clinical trial comparing alfuzosin 10 mg with placebo, and from published reports. Cost data were obtained from both NHS and resource-use data gathered during the clinical trial. A Monte Carlo analysis, allowing variability in all uncertain variables of the model, was used to calculate the uncertainty surrounding the results. RESULTS: Treating patients with alfuzosin during initial hospitalization for AUR and in the first 6 months after a successful TWOC generates a cost-saving of pounds 349 relative to placebo. Savings related to immediate prostatectomy were pounds 892; both savings were significant (P < 0.05). Alfuzosin treatment was associated with a lower rate of prostatectomy after discharge from hospital after a successful TWOC. CONCLUSION: Treatment with alfuzosin 10 mg once daily before and after a successful TWOC has both clinical and economic benefits. It decreases the need for emergency surgery for BPH and reduces treatment costs in the first 6 months.
RCT Entities:
OBJECTIVE: To calculate the economic consequences of using alfuzosin 10 mg once daily for managing acute urinary retention (AUR) related to benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). METHODS: We examined whether alfuzosin use during hospitalization for AUR and for 6 months after a successful trial without catheter (TWOC) is cost effective compared to placebo and immediate prostatectomy, from the perspective of patients managed in the National Health Service (NHS) in the UK. A decision-analysis model was developed to estimate the costs of various treatment options within the first 6 months after a first episode of AUR. Clinical data were obtained from a large randomized clinical trial comparing alfuzosin 10 mg with placebo, and from published reports. Cost data were obtained from both NHS and resource-use data gathered during the clinical trial. A Monte Carlo analysis, allowing variability in all uncertain variables of the model, was used to calculate the uncertainty surrounding the results. RESULTS: Treating patients with alfuzosin during initial hospitalization for AUR and in the first 6 months after a successful TWOC generates a cost-saving of pounds 349 relative to placebo. Savings related to immediate prostatectomy were pounds 892; both savings were significant (P < 0.05). Alfuzosin treatment was associated with a lower rate of prostatectomy after discharge from hospital after a successful TWOC. CONCLUSION: Treatment with alfuzosin 10 mg once daily before and after a successful TWOC has both clinical and economic benefits. It decreases the need for emergency surgery for BPH and reduces treatment costs in the first 6 months.