| Literature DB >> 21599928 |
Salvador Arlandis-Guzman1, Carlos Errando-Smet, Jeffrey Trocio, Daniel Arumi, Javier Rejas.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Fesoterodine, a new once daily antimuscarinic, has proven to be an effective, safe, and well-tolerated treatment in patients with overactive bladder (OAB). To date, no analysis has evaluated the economic costs and benefits associated with fesoterodine, compared to antimuscarinics in Spain. The purpose of this analysis was to assess the economic value of OAB treatment with fesoterodine relative to extended release tolterodine and solifenacin, from the societal perspective.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21599928 PMCID: PMC3126790 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2490-11-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Urol ISSN: 1471-2490 Impact factor: 2.264
Figure 1Decision tree model.
Efficacy (% resolution of incontinence) and discontinuation data included into the economic model
| % Resolution of incontinence (<1 episode/24 hrs) | W2 | W8 | W12 | W12|W8 | W12|~W8 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Placebo | 20,99% | 34,66% | 27,84% | 80,33% | 14,16% | |
| Fesoterodine 4 mg | 30,41% | 50,00% | 43,67% | 87,34% | 21,05% | |
| Fesoterodine 8 mg | 40,59%a | 55,38%a | 50,21% | 90,65% | 24,20% | |
| Tolterodine | 29,23% | 49,47% | 38,18% | 77,17% | 13,04% | |
| Solifenacin 5 mgc | 31,49% | 51,99% | 41,76% | 80,33%d | 21,24% | |
| Solifenacin 10 mge | 32,11%a | 53,01%a | 42,58% | 80,33%d | 21,66%b | |
| Placebo | 54,34% | 1,99% | ||||
| Fesoterodine 4 mg | 55,56% | 4,15% | ||||
| Fesoterodine 8 mg | 55,90% | 6,01% | ||||
| Tolterodine | 57,69% | 2,76% | ||||
| Solifenacin 5 mg | 54,34%i | 3,53%j | ||||
| Solifenacin 10 mg | 88,72%j | 7,72%j | ||||
| Placebo | 100% | 92,84% | 90,64% | 79,32% | 59,27% | |
| Fesoterodine 4 mg | 100% | 92,67%g | equal to placebo data h | |||
| Fesoterodine 8 mg | -- | -- | equal to placebo data h | |||
| Tolterodine | 100% | 95,76% | equal to placebo data h | |||
| Solifenacin 5 mg | 100% | 94,06% | equal to placebo data h | |||
| Solifenacin 10 mg | -- | -- | equal to placebo data h | |||
The symbol "|" denotes conditional response rates; the response at week 12 given response at week 8. The symbol "~" denotes non-response; no-response at week 12 given no-response at week 8
Source: Fesoterodine phase III trials, except when a different source is described [17,18].
a - values not used in the decision tree; only used to calculate conditional response rates
b - conditional response rates estimated by applying the W8 low dose: high dose response ratio to the W12|~W2(~W8) non-titrating response rate
c - equal to 1,5 times the placebo rates [29]
d - conditional response equal to placebo rate
e - equal to 1,5294 times the placebo rates [29]
f - W24 and W52 values were extrapolated from clinical trial data using an exponential decay curve fitted to W2, W8, and W12 discontinuation values
g - discontinuation rate of fesoterodine 4 mg at W8 in the trial data was greater than that of placebo at W12, therefore this value was set equal to the W12 rate.
h - discontinuation rates at week 12 were found to be not statistically significant for any treatment [30], therefore the values are equal to placebo discontinuation
i - relative rates from published literature [42]; solifenacin 5 mg not found to be significantly different than placebo; solifenacin 10 mg 63.28% higher than placebo
j - relative rates from published literature [29]; solifenacin 5 mg 1,778 times placebo; solifenacin 10 mg 3,889 times higher than placebo
Direct medical and productivity costs included into the fesoterodine economic model
| Resource costs | Costs | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Cost per incontinence pad | 0.58 € | [ |
| Cost of general practitioner visit | 26.78 € | [ |
| Cost of specialist visit | 58.60 € | [ |
| Cost of laboratory tests (urinalysis) | 2.56 € | [ |
| Constipation cost/daya | 0.16 € | [ |
| Fesoterodine 4 mg (cost/day, with taxes) | 1.70 € | [ |
| Fesoterodine 8 mg (cost/day, with taxes) | 2.72 € | [ |
| Tolterodine ER (cost/day, with taxes) | 1.70 € | [ |
| Solifenacin 5 mg (cost/day, with taxes) | 1.67 € | [ |
| Solifenacin 10 mg (cost/day, with taxes) | 2.67 € | [ |
| Fracture | 5,742.8 € | [ |
| Skin Infection episode | 53.1 € | [ |
| Urinary Tract Infection episode | 53.1 € | [ |
| Depression (€/patient/year) | 2,699 € | [ |
| Nursing Home | 14,831.4 | [ |
| Average hourly wage | 13.51 € | [ |
| Average number of hours worked per week | 40 | [ |
| % Employed in population | 59.83% | [ |
| Decrease in hours worked due to incontinence b | 21.1% | [ |
| Reduced daytime productivity due to nocturia c | 9.2% | [ |
aThe mean cost/day per patient of managing constipation includes a daily dose of oral laxative. bWomen without incontinence report working 38 hours/week vs. 30 hours for women with incontinence. c 13.8% work impairment for patients with nocturia vs. 4.61% impairment for controls.
Healthcare resource utilization and other data included into the fesoterodine economic model
| Input | Controlled (continent) | Uncontrolled (incontinent) | Untreated (incontinent) | Source | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proportion using incontinence pads | 0% | 67% | 67% | [ | |
| Number of incontinence pads/day | 0 | 4.23 | 4.23 | [ | |
| Number of general practitioner visits/month | 0.133* | 0.2 | 0.2 | [ | |
| Number of specialist visits/month | 0.117* | 0.15* | 0.15 | [ | |
| Number of laboratory tests/month | 0.033* | 0.078* | 0.078 | [ | |
| OAB-related Co morbidities: rate per year | |||||
| Fracture: 6-month probability of a fall with fractures (4% decrease in utility values [ | 2.5% | 5.3% | 5.3% | [ | |
| Skin infection: 6-month probability | 10.7% (0.3 infections per person in entire population) (2.8 events/affected patient) | 9.3% (0.6 infections per person in entire population) (6.5 events/affected patient) | 9.3% | [ | |
| UTI: 6-month probability | 19% (0.3 infections per person in entire population) (1.6 events/affected patient) | 30.7% (0.7 infections per person in entire population) (2.3 events/affected patient) | 30.7% | [ | |
| Depression (48% decrease in utility values [ | % female in clinical trial data | - | 80.87% OAB w/UUI**** | - | [ |
| Women | 9.10% | 18.90% | - | [ | |
| Men | 4.30% | 18.60% | - | [ | |
| Overall | 8.08% | 18.84% | - | [ | |
| Nursing home: Admission rate per 1000 patient-years | Women | 31 | 73 | 73 | [ |
| Men | 24 | 98 | 98 | [ | |
| (% decrease in utility values [ | Overall | 29.5 | 78.3 | 78.3 | [ |
| Utility values [ | 0.9569 | 0.9412 | 0.9332 (baseline value) | ||
*Bolge et al. 2006, showed that successfully-treated patients saw a GP 25% fewer times than unsuccessfully-treated patients. Additionally, the mean number of non-GP visits in past 6 months was 0.9 and 0.7, respectively for incontinent and continent patients. Bolge et al 2006 also showed the following number of urinary test: 0.47 and 0.2 urine tests/patient over last 6 months, respectively for incontinent and continent patients. **Reported wrist fracture utility was 0.96. Assumed 0.7 utility for 7 weeks, referenced from National Osteoporosis Foundation review. ***Women with urinary incontinence with major depression have utility of 0.45. Women with urinary incontinence without major depression have utility of 0.86. 0.45 represents a 48% reduction from 0.86. This means a patient experiencing depression would have 48% reduction in QALY gain than a comparable patient experiencing no co morbidities. ****By using the proportion of women and men in the trial data (80.87% women, 19.13% men), we calculated the weighted average of the above data for inclusion into the model. *****There are no published data to provide the difference in utility of OAB patients in and out of nursing homes. One estimate is to use the utility value of nursing home admission due to hip fracture provided in the UK HTA (0.4), but this value would be an overestimation of the utility decrement for our OAB population since patients who enter the nursing home due to a hip fracture are in much worse physical condition (and, it follows, utility) than patients entering a nursing home due to OAB and/or incontinence. For this reasons, no decrease in utility value is considered.
Outcomes of the OAB economic model for the base-case scenario
| Treatment | Continent at Week 12 | Continent at Week 52 | QALY gain | ICER | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 50.6% | 33.08% | 0.01014 | 1,937 | - | |
| 40.6% | 26.53% | 0.00846 | 2,089 | Cost-saving | |
| 47.2% | 30.85% | 0.00957 | 1,960 | Cost-saving | |
ICER = Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio
Figure 2Cost outcomes of the OAB economic model by drug (base case scenario).
Univariate sensitivity analyses of fesoterodine versus tolterodine ER or solifenacin
| Assumption changed | ||
|---|---|---|
| Tolterodine | Solifenacin | |
| Cost-savings | Cost-savings | |
| Weeks 52, health system perspective | Cost-savings | Cost-savings |
| Weeks 12, health system perspective | €574 | €14,568 |
| Weeks 12, societal perspective | €9,106 | €216,316 |
| +/- 25% in OAB-related co morbidities costs | Cost-savings | Cost-savings |
| +/- 25% in OAB-related co morbidities rate per year in continent patients | Cost-savings | Cost-savings |
| +/- 25% in OAB-related co morbidities rate per year in incontinent patients | Cost-savings | Cost-savings |
| +/- 25% in utility estimates | Cost-savings | Cost-savings |
| +/- 25% in % of responders to fesoterodine 4 mg and solifenacin 5 mg that titrate to the higher dose at week 4 | Cost-savings | Cost-savings |
| +/- 25% in % of non-responders to fesoterodine 4 mg and solifenacin 5 mg that do not to titrate to the higher dose at week 4 | Cost-savings | Cost-savings |
| +25% in % continent patients at week 12 | Cost-savings | Cost-savings |
| - 25% in % continent patients at week 12 | €39,447 | €17,814 |
| +/- 25% in % continent patients at week 52 | Cost-savings | Cost-savings |
| +/- 25% in medical services costs* | Cost-savings | Cost-savings |
| Medical services utilization | Cost-savings | Cost-savings |
| +/- 25% % of incontinent patients using pads | Cost-savings | Cost-savings |
| +/- 25% No. pads/day for incontinent patients | Cost-savings | Cost-savings |
| +/- 25% in # GP visits/month | Cost-savings | Cost-savings |
| +/- 25% in # specialist visits/month | Cost-savings | Cost-savings |
| +/- 25% in # lab tests/month | Cost-savings | Cost-savings |
| Productivity data | Cost-savings | Cost-savings |
| +/- 25% in decrease in hours worked due to incontinence | Cost-savings | Cost-savings |
| +/- 25% in reduced daytime productivity due to nocturia | Cost-savings | Cost-savings |
| +/- 25% in % employed in population | Cost-savings | Cost-savings |
| +/- 25% in average hourly wage | Cost-savings | Cost-savings |
ICER = Incremental Cost-effectiveness Ratio. *Costs of incontinence pads, general practitioners visits, specialist visits, laboratory tests and constipation cost/day.