| Literature DB >> 22876296 |
Joakim Ramsberg1, Christian Asseburg, Martin Henriksson.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine effectiveness and cost-effectiveness over a one-year time horizon of pharmacological first line treatment in primary care for patients with moderate to severe depression.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22876296 PMCID: PMC3410906 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0042003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Decision tree structure.
Pharmaceutical costs and other model parameters.
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| Mirtazapine (30 mg) | 1.60 € | Deterministic |
| Escitalopram (10 mg) | 21.80 € | Deterministic |
| Sertraline (50 mg) | 0.60 € | Deterministic |
| Paroxetine (20 mg) | 2.20 € | Deterministic |
| Duloxetine (60 mg) | 36.70 € | Deterministic |
| Reboxetine (8 mg) | 30.30 € | Deterministic |
| Venlafaxine (150 mg) | 3.10 € | Deterministic |
| Citalopram (20 mg) | 1.70 € | Deterministic |
| Fluoxetine (20 mg) | 2.20 € | Deterministic |
| Fluvoxamine (100 mg) | 23.10 € | Deterministic |
| Second line treatment | 3.10 € | Deterministic |
| (Venlafaxine) | ||
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| Depression in primary care | 374 € | Gamma(91.96, 0.2459) |
| Remission in primary care | 273 € | Gamma(105.29, 0.4461) |
| Depression in specialist care | 784 € | Normal(2, 0.25) |
| Remission in specialist care | 546 € | Normal(2, 0.25) |
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| Depression in primary care | 1 185 € | Gamma(208.84, 0.1762) |
| Remission in primary care | 715 € | Gamma(151.97, 0.2125) |
| Depression in specialist care | 2 370 € | Normal(2, 0.25) |
| Remission in specialist care | 1 430 € | Normal(2, 0.25) |
| Loss of production deceased | 3 548 € | Deterministic |
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| Dying of suicide attempt | 3 495 € | Gamma(12.22, 0.0035) |
| Treatment switch | 150 € | Deterministic |
| Suicide attempt | 11 753€ | Gamma(5.52, 0.0005) |
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| QALY-weight remission | 0.81 | Beta(312, 72) |
| Decrement QALY-weight in depression | 0.24 | Gamma(144, 600) |
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| Remission after switch | 0.248 | Beta(24.8, 75.2) |
| Relapse | 0.110 | Beta(11, 89) |
| Suicide attempt in depression | 0.031 | Beta(3.1, 96.9) |
| Die of suicide attempt | 0.110 | Beta(11, 89) |
| Remission after specialist care | 0.248 | Beta(24.8, 75.2) |
All costs are in Euro (€) in 2009 prices. Exchange rate used to convert Swedish prices to Euros was €1 = SEK 10.
Uncertainty in this estimate is incorporated as a normal distribution around the estimated increase in costs in specialist care compared with primary care.
Figure 2Flow diagram of literature search.
Figure 3Evidence structure and estimated odds ratios.
Figures above the diagonal show the number of studies with corresponding comparison. Figures below the diagonal show the odds ratio (left vs top), mean and 95% credibility intervals. Grey boxes indicate if direct comparisons were available; white boxes indicate odds ratios are based only on indirect comparison. Numbers in bold indicate at least 95% probability that estimate is different from 1.
Odds ratios on remission using standard DerSimonian and Laird random-effects pair-wise meta-analysis and Bayesian MTC.
| Standard pair-wise meta-analysis | Bayesian multiple treatment comparison | |||
| Odds ratio | 95 per cent CI | Odds ratio | 95 per cent CrI | |
| Venlafaxine vs. Fluoxetine | 1.24 | (1.09, 1.41) | 1.29 | (1.16, 1.44) |
| Paroxetine vs. Fluoxetine | 1.14 | (0.78, 1.67) | 1.18 | (1.02, 1.36) |
| Mirtazapine vs. Fluoxetine | 1.07 | (0.75,1.51) | 1.25 | (1.01, 1.51) |
| Paroxetine vs. Venlafaxine | 0.83 | (0.65, 1.05) | 0.91 | (0.80, 1.04) |
| Sertraline vs. Venlafaxine | 0.83 | (0.63, 1.09) | 0.87 | (0.75, 1.02) |
| Duloxetine vs. Paroxetine | 1.07 | (0.83, 1.38) | 1.07 | (0.92, 1.26) |
| Duloxetine vs. Escitalopram | 0.95 | (0.75, 1.20) | 0.88 | (0.76, 1.05) |
| Mirtazapine vs. Paroxetine | 1.35 | (0.98, 1.87) | 1.05 | (0.86, 1.30) |
| Citalopram vs. Escitalopram | 0.66 | (0.51, 0.85) | 0.73 | (0.60, 0.88) |
| Escitalopram vs.Venlafaxine | 1.10 | (0.75, 1.61) | 1.10 | (0.94, 1.28) |
| Escitalopram vs. Paroxetine | 1.15 | (0.59, 2.26) | 1.21 | (1.03, 1.41) |
CI = confidence interval.
CrI = credibility interval.
Estimated probability of remission in different scenarios.
| All studies | 8–12 week | Outpatient 8–12 | Studies with | |
| studies | week studies | flexible dose | ||
| Amitriptyline | 0.362 (0.293–0.436) | 0.421 (0.331–0.514) | 0.435 (0.342–0.533) | n.a. |
| Citalopram | 0.380 (0.332–0.430) | 0.404 (0.352–0.456) | 0.424 (0.364–0.485) | 0.439 (0.364–0.517) |
| Dosulepine | 0.401 (0.249–0.569) | n.a. | n.a. | 0.434 (0.274–0.603) |
| Duloxetine | 0.427 (0.384–0.471) | 0.445 (0.397–0.493) | 0.452 (0.401–0.504) | 0.468 (0.413–0.526) |
| Escitalopram | 0.456 (0.416–0.497) | 0.471 (0.429–0.513) | 0.487 (0.439–0.535) | 0.509 (0.450–0.569) |
| Fluoxetine | 0.371 (0.338–0.405) | 0.390 (0.352–0.431) | 0.400 (0.355–0.447) | 0.404 (0.343–0.468) |
| Fluvoxamine | 0.326 (0.242–0.420) | n.a. | n.a. | 0.481 (0.319–0.640) |
| Imipramine | 0.396 (0.332–0.464) | 0.387 (0.312–0.465) | 0.399 (0.305–0.500) | n.a. |
| Lofepramine | 0.408 (0.257–0.575) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Maprotiline | 0.378 (0.183–0.604) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Milnacipran | 0.395 (0.293–0.503) | 0.358 (0.245–0.481) | n.a. | n.a. |
| Mirtazapine | 0.423 (0.371–0.476) | 0.434 (0.374–0.496) | 0.458 (0.356–0.565) | 0.470 (0.212–0.741) |
| Nortriptyline | 0.441 (0.275–0.617) | 0.450 (0.284–0.628) | 0.455 (0.287–0.633) | n.a. |
| Paroxetine | 0.410 (0.374–0.445) | 0.416 (0.377–0.455) | 0.414 (0.370–0.459) | 0.443 (0.388–0.499) |
| Reboxetine | 0.404 (0.252–0.566) | 0.399 (0.252–0.561) | n.a. | n.a. |
| Sertraline | 0.400 (0.359–0.443) | 0.409 (0.366–0.453) | 0.418 (0.358–0.479) | 0.383 (0.193–0.594) |
| Venlafaxine | 0.433 (0.401–0.465) | 0.439 (0.404–0.474) | 0.451 (0.409–0.493) | 0.499 (0.439–0.560) |
N.a = not available. 95% credibility intervals in brackets.
Results cost-effectiveness analysis with societal perspective.
| Drug | Cost (€) | QALY | ICER |
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| 14 755(12 646–17 086) | 0.6978(0.6512–0.7411) | base |
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| 14 878(12 713–17 268) | 0.6942(0.6477–0.7378) | dom |
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| 15 082(12 886–17 496) | 0.6933(0.6463–0.7372) | dom |
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| 14 961(12 756–17 428) | 0.6926(0.6457–0.7368) | dom |
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| 15 080(12 857–17 545) | 0.6906(0.6438–0.7348) | dom |
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| 15 159(12 908–17 657) | 0.6892(0.6422–0.7333) | dom |
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| 15 343(13 033–17 906) | 0.6861(0.6386–0.7308) | dom |
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| 15 428(13 104–17 998) | 0.6847(0.6373–0.7293) | dom |
QALY = quality-adjusted life year; ICER = incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; base = cheapest alternative; dom = dominated. Results are shown as means and 95% credibility intervals.
Results cost-effectiveness analysis with health-care perspective.
| Drug | Cost | QALY | ICER |
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| 5 088(4 250–6 054) | 0.6978(0.6512–0.7411) | ICER 3 732 to venlafaxine |
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| 5 074(4 217–6 072) | 0.6942(0.6477–0.7378) | base |
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| 5 247(4 383–6 247) | 0.6933(0.6463–0.7372) | dom |
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| 5 099(4 225–6 117) | 0.6926(0.6457–0.7368) | dom |
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| 5 143(4 262–6 166) | 0.6906(0.6438–0.7348) | dom |
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| 5 167(4 276–6 202) | 0.6892(0.6422–0.7333) | dom |
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| 5 235(4 323–6 297) | 0.6861(0.6386–0.7308) | dom |
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| 5 267(4 350–6 331) | 0.6847(0.6373–0.7293) | dom |
QALY = quality-adjusted life year; ICER = incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; base = cheapest alternative; dom = dominated. Means and 95% credibility intervals.
Figure 4Cost-effectiveness acceptability curves.
Note: All treatments except escitalopram, mirtazapine, venlafaxine and duloxetine have a low probability of being cost effective at all willingness-to-pay values of a health outcome, hence the curves for these treatments virtually lie on the abscissa.