Literature DB >> 25217221

Is it cost-effective to use a test to decide which individuals with an intermediate cardiovascular disease risk would benefit from statin treatment?

L T Burgers1, S T Nauta2, J W Deckers2, J L Severens3, W K Redekop3.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The 2012 European guidelines recommend statins for intermediate-risk individuals with elevated cholesterol levels. Improved discrimination of intermediate-risk individuals is needed to prevent both cardiovascular disease (CVD) and statin side-effects (e.g. myopathy) efficiently since only 3-15 in every 100 individuals actually experience a cardiovascular event in the next 10 years. We estimated the potential cost-effectiveness of a hypothetical test which helps to determine which individuals will benefit from statins. METHODS AND
RESULTS: Prognosis of different age- and gender-specific cohorts with an intermediate risk was simulated with a Markov model to estimate the potential costs and quality-adjusted life-years for four strategies: treat all with statins, treat none with statins, treat according to the European guidelines, or use a test to select individuals for statin treatment. The test-first strategy dominated the other strategies if the hypothetical test was 100% accurate and cost no more than €237. This strategy and the treat-all strategy were equally effective but the test generated lower costs by reducing statin usage and side-effects. The treat-none strategy was the least effective strategy. Threshold analyses show that the test must be highly accurate (especially sensitive) and inexpensive to be the most cost-effective strategy, since myopathy has a negligible impact on cost-effectiveness and statin costs are low.
CONCLUSION: Use of a highly accurate prognostic test could reduce overall CVD risk, frequency of drug side-effects and lifetime costs. However, no additional test would add usefully to risk prediction over SCORE when it does not satisfy the costs and accuracy requirements.
Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  cardiovascular disease; cost-effectiveness; decision modelling; prevention; statins; test

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25217221     DOI: 10.1016/j.ijcard.2014.08.134

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Cardiol        ISSN: 0167-5273            Impact factor:   4.164


  5 in total

1.  Prevention of statin-induced myopathy--do not stop physical activity.

Authors:  Fabian Sanchis-Gomar; Helios Pareja-Galeano; Alejandro Lucia
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  2015-04-15       Impact factor: 5.182

2.  Cost-effectiveness of empagliflozin versus weekly semaglutide as add-on therapy for Type 2 diabetes.

Authors:  Margaret F Zupa; Ronald A Codario; Kenneth J Smith
Journal:  J Comp Eff Res       Date:  2021-09-07       Impact factor: 2.040

3.  Estimating the cost-effectiveness of screening a general population for cardiovascular risk with high-sensitivity troponin-I.

Authors:  Paul Jülicher; Christos Varounis
Journal:  Eur Heart J Qual Care Clin Outcomes       Date:  2022-05-05

Review 4.  The Cost-Effectiveness and Cost-Utility of Statin Drug for the Treatment of Patients with Cardiovascular Disease, A Systematic Review.

Authors:  Mahmoud Eisavi; Elaheh Mazaheri; Aziz Rezapour; Sajad Vahedi; Marziye Hadian; Abdosaleh Jafari
Journal:  Int J Prev Med       Date:  2021-05-15

5.  Impact of China's Low Centralized Medicine Procurement Prices on the Cost-Effectiveness of Statins for the Primary Prevention of Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease.

Authors:  Miao Wang; Jing Liu; Brandon K Bellows; Yue Qi; Jiayi Sun; Jun Liu; Andrew E Moran; Dong Zhao
Journal:  Glob Heart       Date:  2020-06-25
  5 in total

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