Literature DB >> 19582491

Hospital costs for treatment of acute heart failure: economic analysis of the REVIVE II study.

Greg de Lissovoy1, Kathy Fraeman, John R Teerlink, John Mullahy, Jeff Salon, Raimund Sterz, Amy Durtschi, Robert J Padley.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Acute heart failure (AHF) is the leading cause of hospital admission among older Americans. The Randomized EValuation of Intravenous Levosimendan Efficacy (REVIVE II) trial compared patients randomly assigned to a single infusion of levosimendan (levo) or placebo (SOC), each in addition to local standard treatments for AHF. We report an economic analysis of REVIVE II from the hospital perspective.
METHODS: REVIVE II enrolled patients (N = 600) hospitalized for treatment of acute decompensated heart failure (ADHF) who remained dyspneic at rest despite treatment with intravenous diuretics. Case report forms documented index hospital treatment (drug administration, procedures, days of treatment by care unit), as well as subsequent hospital and emergency department admissions during follow-up ending 90 days from date of randomization. These data were used to impute cost of admission based on an econometric cost function derived from >100,000 ADHF hospital billing records selected per REVIVE II inclusion criteria.
RESULTS: Index admission mean length of stay (LOS) was shorter for the levo group compared with standard of care (SOC) (7.03 vs 8.96 days, P = 0.008) although intensive care unit (ICU)/cardiac care unit (CCU) days were similar (levo 2.88, SOC 3.22, P = 0.63). Excluding cost for levo, predicted mean (median) cost for the index admission was levo US $13,590 (9,458), SOC $19,021 (10,692) with a difference of $5,431 (1,234) favoring levo (P = 0.04). During follow-up through end of study day 90, no significant differences were observed in numbers of hospital admissions (P = 0.67), inpatient days (P = 0.81) or emergency department visits (P = 0.41). Cost-effectiveness was performed with a REVIVE-II sub-set conforming to current labeling, which excluded patients with low baseline blood pressure. Assuming an average price for levo in countries where currently approved, there was better than 50% likelihood that levo was both cost-saving and improved survival. Likelihood that levo would be cost-effective for willingness-to-pay below $50,000 per year of life gained was about 65%.
CONCLUSIONS: In the REVIVE II trial, patients treated with levo had shorter LOS and lower cost for the initial hospital admission relative to patients treated with SOC. Based on sub-group analysis of patients administered per the current label, levo appears cost-effective relative to SOC.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19582491     DOI: 10.1007/s10198-009-0165-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Health Econ        ISSN: 1618-7598


  10 in total

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6.  Disproportionate Mitral Regurgitation Determines Survival in Acute Heart Failure.

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Review 7.  Bedside-to-Bench Translational Research for Chronic Heart Failure: Creating an Agenda for Clients Who Do Not Meet Trial Enrollment Criteria.

Authors:  P Iyngkaran; M Thomas
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8.  Use of levosimendan in patients with heart failure in different settings: case reports and treatment guidance.

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Review 9.  Levosimendan: current data, clinical use and future development.

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Journal:  Heart Lung Vessel       Date:  2013

10.  Evaluating Cost-Effectiveness Models for Pharmacologic Interventions in Adults with Heart Failure: A Systematic Literature Review.

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  10 in total

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