| Literature DB >> 23342679 |
Phil Shackley1, Lisa Shaw, Christopher Price, Frederike van Wijck, Michael Barnes, Laura Graham, Gary A Ford, Nick Steen, Helen Rodgers.
Abstract
Stroke imposes significant burdens on health services and society, and as such there is a growing need to assess the cost-effectiveness of stroke treatment to ensure maximum benefit is derived from limited resources. This study compared the cost-effectiveness of treating post-stroke upper limb spasticity with botulinum toxin type A plus an upper limb therapy programme against the therapy programme alone. Data on resource use and health outcomes were prospectively collected for 333 patients with post-stroke upper limb spasticity taking part in a randomized trial and combined to estimate the incremental cost per quality adjusted life year (QALY) gained of botulinum toxin type A plus therapy relative to therapy alone. The base case incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of botulinum toxin type A plus therapy was £93,500 per QALY gained. The probability of botulinum toxin type A plus therapy being cost-effective at the England and Wales cost-effectiveness threshold value of £20,000 per QALY was 0.36. The point estimates of the ICER remained above £20,000 per QALY for a range of sensitivity analyses, and the probability of botulinum toxin type A plus therapy being cost-effective at the threshold value did not exceed 0.39, regardless of the assumptions made.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23342679 PMCID: PMC3528253 DOI: 10.3390/toxins4121415
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Breakdown of resource use and corresponding unit cost data.
| Resource | Unit cost (2007 prices) | Source of unit cost data |
|---|---|---|
| Upper limb therapy and botulinum toxin type A | ||
| therapist | £40 per session a | Reference14 |
| botulinum toxin type A | £153.21 per 500 unit vial | Reference 15 |
| Other antispasticity medication | ||
| gabapentin | £96.73 per month | Reference 15 |
| baclofen | £9.13 per month | Reference 15 |
| tizanidine | £74.83 per month | Reference 15 |
| dantrolene | 33.76 per month | Reference 15 |
| methocarbamol | 7.60 per month | Reference 15 |
| Other health care & social services | ||
| day hospital | £83 per place per day | Reference 14 |
| home care services | £19 per contact b | Reference 14 |
| private home help | £11.33 per contact b | Reference 14 |
| day centre | £147 per attendance | Reference 14 |
| meals on wheels | £3.63 per meal | Reference 14 |
| laundry service | £3 per wash | Assumption c |
| GP | £36 per consultation | Reference 14 |
| practice nurse | £9 per consultation | Reference 14 |
| district nurse | £24 per home visit | Reference 14 |
| health visitor | £36 per home visit | Reference 14 |
| physiotherapist | £40 per contact b | Reference 14 |
| occupational therapist | £40 per contact b | Reference 14 |
| speech and language therapist | £40 per contact b | Reference 14 |
| dietician | £32 per contact b | Reference 14 |
| chiropodist | £18 per contact b | Reference 14 |
| social worker | £34 per contact b | Reference 14 |
| clinical psychologist | £67 per contact b | Reference 14 |
| continence advisor | £24 per home visit | Reference 14 |
| bath attendant | £11.33 per contact b | Assumption d |
| orthotist | £40.00 per contact b | Assumption e |
a Assumes therapist administers injection; bAssumes one hour per contact; c Based on local council fees of £3 per wash; d Assumed same rate as private home help; e Assumed Agenda for Change Band 5.
Breakdown of other health care and social services resource use.
| Item of resource use | Mean (SD) number of contacts among patients reporting a contact (n) | Mean difference in number of contacts (95% CI of difference) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Therapy alone | Therapy plus botulinum toxin | ||||
| Mean (SD) |
| Mean (SD) |
| ||
| day hospital | 9.4 (9.0) | 25 | 3.1 (2.7) | 21 | 6.3 (2.4 to 10.2) |
| home care services | 87.5 (75.7) | 45 | 114.6 (76.5) | 56 | −27.1 (−57.3 to 3.2) |
| private home help | 32.7 (53.5) | 17 | 38.9 (60.1) | 16 | −6.2 (−46.6 to 34.1) |
| day centre | 16.3 (8.3) | 25 | 14.1 (10.3) | 24 | 2.2 (−3.1 to 7.6) |
| meals on wheels | 6.0 | 1 | 56.0 (38.6) | 3 | −50.0 (−241.7 to 141.7) |
| laundry service | 14.7 (18.5) | 3 | 18.0 (11.1) | 3 | −3.3 (−38.0 to 31.3) |
| GP | 2.8 (1.4) | 60 | 2.8 (1.9) | 86 | 0.0 (−0.6 to 0.6) |
| practice nurse | 2.6 (1.8) | 24 | 2.9 (2.9) | 44 | −0.3 (−1.6 to 1.0) |
| district nurse | 8.3 (14.6) | 27 | 4.0 (5.0) | 30 | 4.3 (−1.8 to 10.2) |
| health visitor * | - | 1 | 1.0 | 1 | - |
| physiotherapist | 13.3 (12.7) | 74 | 12.0 (10.5) | 87 | 1.3 (−2.46 to 4.8) |
| occupational therapist | 8.2 (8.8) | 26 | 8.5 (9.1) | 38 | −0.3 (−4.9 to 4.2) |
| speech and language therapist | 4.6 (5.3) | 28 | 8.9 (9.7) | 20 | −4.3 (−9.2 to 0.6) |
| dietician | 2.2 (1.2) | 6 | 13.0 (15.6) | 2 | −10.8 (−149.5 to 127.8) |
| chiropodist | 2.0 (1.2) | 24 | 2.3 (1.1) | 40 | −0.3 (−0.9 to 0.3) |
| social worker | 2.8 (1.7) | 17 | 2.5 (2.0) | 35 | 0.3 (−0.8 to 1.5) |
| clinical psychologist | 3.1 (2.5) | 8 | 2.5 (1.3) | 4 | 0.6 (−2.4 to 3.7) |
| continence advisor | 1.8 (1.0) | 4 | 1.0 | 1 | 0.8 (−2.7 to 4.2) |
| bath attendant | 19.5 (18.9) | 13 | 18.2 (11.4) | 13 | 1.3 (−11.3 to 14.0) |
| orthotist | 1.00 | 1 | 2.7 (1.2) | 3 | −1.7 (−7.4 to 4.1) |
* The one patient in the therapy alone group who reported a health visitor contact did not indicate the number of contacts.
The contribution of botulinum toxin type A costs, upper limb therapy costs, other antispasticity medication costs, and other health care and social services costs to overall mean cost per participant.
| Breakdown of overall mean cost per participant | Mean (SD) cost per participant (£) | Mean difference in costs (£) (95% CI of difference) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Therapy alone | Therapy plus botulinum toxin | ||
| Overall | 1796 (1944) | 2170 (2007) | −374 (−837 to 90) |
| Botulinum toxin | 3 a (23) | 154 (28) | −151 (−157 to −145) |
| Upper limb therapy | 300 (45) | 303 (41) | −3 (−13 to 7) |
| Antispasticity medication | 37 (93) | 38 (90) | −1 (−22 to 21) |
| Other b | 1456 (1923) | 1675 (2001) | −219 (−679 to 242) |
a EQ-5D data were complete for 3 of 4 participants in the control group who received botulinum toxin; b Other health care and social services costs.
Summary of cost-effectiveness results for botulinum toxin type A plus therapy for alternative scenarios.
| Cost-effectiveness analysis scenario | IC (£) | IQ (QALYs) | ICER (£) | Probability botulinum toxin type A plus therapy is cost-effective at threshold ratio | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| £10 k | £20 k | £50 k | £100 k | ||||
| Base case data a | 374 | 0.004 | 93,500 | 0.29 | 0.36 | 0.41 | 0.42 |
| Complete EQ-5D data b | 482 | 0.007 | 68,857 | 0.29 | 0.34 | 0.40 | 0.43 |
| Base case data and zero cost for botulinum toxin | 223 | 0.004 | 55,750 | 0.31 | 0.39 | 0.42 | 0.43 |
| Base case data and best-worst QALY assumptions | 374 | 0.006 | 62,333 | 0.29 | 0.35 | 0.43 | 0.45 |
| Missing data imputed using multiple imputation | 430 | 0.005 | 86,000 | 0.34 | 0.39 | 0.42 | 0.46 |
IC = Incremental cost; IQ = Incremental QALYs; ICER = Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; a EQ-5D responses at baseline and 3 months; b EQ-5D responses at baseline, 1 month and 3 months.
Figure 1CEAC for botulinum toxin type A plus therapy relative to therapy alone.
Figure 2Cost-effectiveness acceptability curve (CEAC) for botulinum toxin type A plus therapy relative to therapy alone following multiple imputation of missing data.