| Literature DB >> 24158271 |
Simon Eggington1, Francesc Valldeoriola, K Ray Chaudhuri, Keyoumars Ashkan, Elena Annoni, Günther Deuschl.
Abstract
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a complex progressive movement disorder leading to motor and non-motor symptoms that become increasingly debilitating as the disease advances, considerably reducing quality of life. Advanced treatment options include deep brain stimulation (DBS). While clinical effectiveness of DBS has been demonstrated in a number of randomised controlled trials (RCT), evidence on cost-effectiveness is limited. The cost-effectiveness of DBS combined with BMT, versus BMT alone, was evaluated from a UK payer perspective. Individual patient-level data on the effect of DBS on PD symptom progression from a large 6-month RCT were used to develop a Markov model representing clinical progression and capture treatment effect and costs. A 5-year time horizon was used, and an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) was calculated in terms of cost per quality-adjusted life-years (QALY) and uncertainty assessed in deterministic sensitivity analyses. Total discounted costs in the DBS and BMT groups over 5 years were £68,970 and £48,243, respectively, with QALYs of 2.21 and 1.21, giving an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of £20,678 per QALY gained. Utility weights in each health state and costs of on-going medication appear to be the key drivers of uncertainty in the model. The results suggest that DBS is a cost-effective intervention in patients with advanced PD who are eligible for surgery, providing good value for money to health care payers.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24158271 PMCID: PMC3895185 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-013-7148-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol ISSN: 0340-5354 Impact factor: 4.849
Fig. 1Model health states (H&Y and ‘OFF’ time). The H&Y scale focuses on motor symptoms and classifies patients into one of six categories (ranging from 0 to 5) according to disease severity, with 0 representing a patient free of PD symptoms and stage 5 representing a wheelchair-bound patient requiring constant nursing care. The amount of time a patient spends in the ‘OFF’ state per day is an aspect of the UPDRS, which assesses various aspects of the disease, including mental status, motor function and complications of therapy, and assigns a total score to each patient reflecting an overall estimate of the degree of disability
Model input parameters and values
| Parameters | Value | Source/comment |
|---|---|---|
| 6-month probability of progression | ||
| H&Y 1 to 2 | 0.188 | Zhao et al. [ |
| H&Y 2 to 3 | 0.04 | Zhao et al. [ |
| H&Y 3 to 4 | 0.159 | Zhao et al. [ |
| H&Y 4 to 5 | 0.148 | Zhao et al. [ |
| 6-month probability of progression | ||
| 0–25 to 26–50 % ‘OFF’ time | 0.127 | Palmer et al. [ |
| 26–50 to 51–75 % ‘OFF’ time | 0.074 | Palmer et al. [ |
| 51–75 to 76–100 % ‘OFF’ time | 0.043 | Palmer et al. [ |
| Utilities in H&Y 1 | ||
| 0–25 % OFF time | 0.74 | Palmer et al. [ |
| 26–50 % OFF time | 0.68 | Palmer et al. [ |
| 51–75 % OFF time | 0.64 | Palmer et al. [ |
| 76–100 % OFF time | 0.52 | Palmer et al. [ |
| Utilities in H&Y 2 | ||
| 0–25 % OFF time | 0.72 | Palmer et al. [ |
| 26–50 % OFF time | 0.72 | Palmer et al. [ |
| 51–75 % OFF time | 0.66 | Palmer et al. [ |
| 76–100 % OFF time | 0.49 | Palmer et al. [ |
| Utilities in H&Y 3 | ||
| 0–25 % OFF time | 0.643 | Lowin et al. [ |
| 26–50 % OFF time | 0.555 | Lowin et al. [ |
| 51–75 % OFF time | 0.467 | Lowin et al. [ |
| 76–100 % OFF time | 0.379 | Lowin et al. [ |
| Utilities in H&Y 4 | ||
| 0–25 % OFF time | 0.387 | Lowin et al. [ |
| 26–50 % OFF time | 0.299 | Lowin et al. [ |
| 51–75 % OFF time | 0.211 | Lowin et al. [ |
| 76–100 % OFF time | 0.123 | Lowin et al. [ |
| Utilities in H&Y 5 | ||
| 0–25 % OFF time | 0.131 | Lowin et al. [ |
| 26–50 % OFF time | 0.043 | Lowin et al. [ |
| 51–75 % OFF time | −0.045 | Lowin et al. [ |
| 76–100 % OFF time | −0.133 | Lowin et al. [ |
| Relative risks of mortality | ||
| H&Y 2 (vs. H&Y 1) | 2.03 | Liou et al. [ |
| H&Y 3 (vs. H&Y 1) | 2.16 | Liou et al. [ |
| H&Y 4 (vs. H&Y 1) | 4.99 | Liou et al. [ |
| H&Y 5 (vs. H&Y 1) | 4.99 | Liou et al. [ |
| Drug dosing | ||
| Daily levodopa dose (mg) in BMT arm (first cycle) | 220 | Deuschl et al. [ |
| Daily levodopa dose (mg) in BMT arm (subsequent cycles) | 205 | Deuschl et al. [ |
| Daily levodopa dose (mg) in DBS arm (first cycle) | 213 | Deuschl et al. [ |
| Daily levodopa dose (mg) in DBS arm (subsequent cycles) | 188 | Deuschl et al. [ |
| Adverse events—DBS (per cycle) | ||
| System infections per patient during first cycle (12 out of 121 patients had a total of 16 infections) | 0.132 | Weaver et al. [ |
| Probability of DBS infection in subsequent cycles | 0.026 | Deuschl et al. [ |
| Probability per cycle of lead dislodgement | 0.066 | Weaver et al. [ |
| Probability of withdrawal from DBS during first cycle | 0.1 | Deuschl et al. [ |
| Probability of withdrawal from DBS during each subsequent cycle | 0.02 | Assumption |
| Adverse events—both treatment arms | ||
| Number of falls per cycle for patients with H&Y 3 | 3.15 | Pickering et al. [ |
| Relative risk of fall for patient with H&Y 4 or 5 (vs. H&Y 3) | 1.72 | Pickering et al. [ |
| Probability of hospitalisation per fall | 0.62 | Bloem et al. [ |
| Treatment withdrawal rates | ||
| Probability of withdrawal from DBS during first cycle | 0.1 | Deuschl et al. [ |
| Probability of withdrawal from DBS during each subsequent cycle | 0.02 | Assumption |
| Cost parameters—drug acquisition | ||
| Cost per cycle of drugs in BMT arm (excluding levodopa) or for DBS patients who’ve withdrawn | £3,725 | McIntosh et al. [ |
| Cost per cycle of drugs in DBS arm (excluding levodopa) | £2,109 | McIntosh et al. [ |
| Cost per levodopa tablet (100 mg levodopa/10 mg Carbidopa) | £0.07 | British National Formulary No. 62 (2011) [ |
| Cost parameters—treatment initiation, materials and implantation | ||
| Pre-operative assessment/work-up | £641 | Payment by results tariffs (2011–2012) code: AA25Z [ |
| DBS device | £8,326 | Medtronic UK price list. Activa IPG, model number 37,601 [ |
| DBS extensions (cost of 2 extensions) | £1,530 | Medtronic UK price list. Stretch coil extension, model numbers 3,708,540, 3,708,560, 3,708,595 [ |
| DBS leads (cost of 2 leads) | £1,786 | Medtronic UK price list. Lead kit, model numbers 338,728, 338,740 [ |
| DBS patient programmer | £560 | Medtronic UK price list. Activa patient programmer, model numbers 37,642 [ |
| DBS implantation procedure | £7,131 | Payment by results tariffs (2011–2012) Code: AA072Z [ |
| Cost parameters—adverse event management | ||
| Infection (DBS) | £10,690 | Payment by results tariffs (2011–2012) codes: AA04Z and PA18B [ |
| Lead dislodgement (DBS) | £8,789 | Repeat implantation procedure, new leads, new extensions |
| System explantation (DBS) | £6,976 | Payment by results tariffs (2011–2012) code: AA07Z [ |
| Battery replacement procedure (DBS) | £616 | Payment by results tariffs (2011–2012) code: DZ06Z [ |
| Withdrawal from DBS (device switched off) | £217 | Payment by results tariffs (2011–2012) code: 400 (non-mandatory) [ |
| Hospitalisation due to fall (all arms) | £294 | Payment by results tariffs (2011–2012) code: WA23X [ |
| Cost parameters—follow-up | ||
| Cost per neurosurgery follow-up visit (1 visit in first cycle post-implantation of DBS) | £283 | Payment by results tariffs (2011–2012) code: 150 (non-mandatory) [ |
| Cost per outpatient neurology appointment (3 visits per 6 months assumed in all arms) | £217 | Payment by results tariffs (2011–2012) code: 400 (non-mandatory) [ |
| Cost per PD nurse visit (3 home visits assumed per 6 months in all arms) | £114 | Curtis [ |
DBS deep brain stimulation, H&Y Hoehn and Yahr, PD Parkinson’s disease
Fig. 2Hoehn and Yahr stage at baseline and 6 months [31]
Fig. 3‘OFF’ time at baseline and 6 months [31]
Base-case cost-effectiveness results
| Treatment | Costs | QALYs |
|---|---|---|
| BMT | £48,243 | 1.21 |
| DBS + BMT | £68,970 | 2.21 |
| Incremental | £20,727 | 1.002 |
BMT best medical treatment, DBS deep brain stimulation, QALY quality adjusted life year
Fig. 4* Schrag et al. [60] reported utilities by H&Y class: 0.96 (H&Y 1); 0.65 (H&Y 2); 0.26 (H&Y 3); 0.19 (H&Y 4); −0.21 (H&Y 5). There is a greater discrepancy between the H&Y stages in this study than in the base-case analysis. ** Shimbo et al. [59] utilities: 0.708 (H&Y 1); 0.678 (H&Y 2); 0.622 (H&Y 3); 0.547 (H&Y 4); 0.451 (H&Y 5). There is less discrepancy between the H&Y stages in this study than in the base-case analysis. In both of these scenarios, the H&Y utilities were applied across all levels of ‘OFF’ time. The most influential parameters are shown at the top of the chart