| Literature DB >> 26074735 |
Luke Bamber1, Dominic Muston2, Euan McLeod3, Anne Guillermin3, Julia Lowin3, Raj Patel4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Venous thromboembolism (VTE) is a burden on healthcare systems. Standard treatment involves parenteral anticoagulation overlapping with a vitamin K antagonist, an approach that is effective but associated with limitations including the need for frequent coagulation monitoring. The direct oral anticoagulant rivaroxaban is similarly effective to standard therapy as a single-drug treatment for VTE and does not require routine coagulation monitoring. The objective of this economic evaluation was to estimate the cost-effectiveness of rivaroxaban compared with standard VTE treatment from a UK perspective.Entities:
Keywords: Cost-effectiveness; Rivaroxaban; Venous thromboembolism treatment
Year: 2015 PMID: 26074735 PMCID: PMC4464718 DOI: 10.1186/s12959-015-0051-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Thromb J ISSN: 1477-9560
Descriptions of the health states in the DVT and PE models
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| On Tx | Patients who have just experienced an acute VTE, and are receiving one of the acute treatments being evaluated (either 3, 6 or 12 months or lifetime treatment with rivaroxaban or dual LMWH/VKA therapy) |
| rVTE – DVT | Patients who have just experienced a recurrent DVT. Assigned therapy was discontinued and all patients assumed to receive 6 months of dual LMWH/VKA. The duration of utility impact was assumed to be 1 month in the base case. DVT events were not associated with excess mortality |
| rVTE – PE | Patients who have just experienced a recurrent PE (± DVT). Patients with coincident DVT transit to a post-DVT state to capture PTS risk. Assigned therapy was discontinued and all patients assumed to receive 6 months of dual LMWH/VKA. The duration of utility impact was assumed to be 1 month in the base case. PE events were associated with excess mortality |
| Major bleed – IC | Patients on assigned therapy who have just experienced an IC bleeding event. Therapy was temporarily withheld during the cycle in which the IC bleeding event took place. IC bleeding events were associated with excess mortality |
| Major bleed – EC | Patients on assigned therapy who have just experienced a major EC bleeding event (e.g. gastrointestinal bleeding). Therapy was temporarily withheld for 1 month during the cycle in which the bleeding event took place. The duration of utility impact was assumed to be 1 month in the base case |
| NMCR bleed | Patients on assigned therapy who have just experienced a NMCR bleeding event. Defined as overt bleeding that did not meet the criteria for major bleeding but was associated with medical intervention, unscheduled contact with a physician, interruption or discontinuation of a study drug, or discomfort or impairment of activities of daily life. Therapy was temporarily withheld for 1 month during the cycle in which the bleeding event took place. An example of this would be spontaneous bleeding from gums which requires acute medical intervention. NMCR bleeding was assumed not to impact on utility |
| Post-IC bleed | Patients who previously experienced an IC bleeding event. Any assigned therapy is assumed to stop. IC bleeding events are associated with major risks of residual disability stemming from their impact on the central nervous system. The health-related quality of life and costs associated with this are included |
| Off Tx-post index PE* | Patients currently off treatment after index PE. These patients are not at ongoing risk of PTS |
| Off Tx-post DVT | Patients who have experienced an incident DVT within the time frame of the model and who are currently off treatment. These patients are at risk of PTS |
| On Tx-post DVT | This state is only applicable to analyses of lifelong treatment duration. Patients who have experienced an incident DVT within the time frame of the model and who are currently on treatment. These patients are at risk of PTS |
| PE post DVT* | Patients with recurrent PE and a history of DVT within the model. Survivors return to relevant post-DVT states so as to continue exposure to a risk of PTS conferred by their DVT history |
| CTEPH | Patients diagnosed with CTEPH who are exposed to management costs, health-related quality of life loss and excess mortality |
| Long-term CTEPH | State to which patients with CTEPH transition in the long term |
| Death | Terminal state. Patients could die because of either events captured in the model, such as PE or IC bleed, or from other causes |
*PE model-specific health states.
CTEPH, chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension; DVT, deep vein thrombosis; EC, extracranial; IC, intracranial; LMWH, low molecular weight heparin; NMCR, non-major clinically relevant; PE, pulmonary embolism; PTS, post-thrombotic syndrome; rVTE, recurrent venous thromboembolism; Tx, treatment; VKA, vitamin K antagonist; VTE, venous thromboembolism.
Figure 1State diagram for the economic model. The model states referred to here are described in Table 1. Note that states, On Tx-post DVT, and, PE post DVT, were specific to analyses for patients post index PE and have been omitted from the diagram. PTS risk was restricted to states with a DVT history in the PE analysis. CTEPH, chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension; DVT, deep vein thrombosis; EC, extracranial; IC, intracranial; NMCR, non-major clinically relevant; PE, pulmonary embolism; PTS, post-thrombotic syndrome; rVTE, recurrent venous thromboembolic event; Tx, treatment.
Incidence of clinical events in EINSTEIN DVT [25] and EINSTEIN PE [26]
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| 0–3 months | 0.015 (0.008) | 0.016 (0.011) |
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| 0–3 months | 0.024 (0.005) | 0.016 (0.003) |
| 3–6 months | 0.003 (0.002) | 0.002 (0.001) |
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| 0–3 months | 0.035 (0.009) | 0.015 (0.004) |
| 3–6 months | 0.008 (0.004) | 0.003 (0.002) |
| 6–12 months | 0.003 (0.003) | 0.001 (0.001) |
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| >12 months | 0.700 (0.107) | 0.700 (0.107) |
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| 0–3 months | 0.020 (0.010) | 0.041 (0.018) |
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| 0–3 months | 0.009 (0.003) | 0.010 (0.003) |
| 3–6 months | 0.004 (0.002) | 0.008 (0.003) |
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| 0–3 months | 0.002 (0.002) | 0.013 (0.004) |
| 3–6 months | – (0.002) | 0.004 (0.002) |
| 6–12 months | – (0.002) | 0.006 (0.003) |
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| >12 months | 1.600 (0.245) | 1.600 (0.245) |
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| 0–3 months | 0.060 (0.017) | 0.066 (0.022) |
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| 0–3 months | 0.047 (0.006) | 0.067 (0.007) |
| 3–6 months | 0.013 (0.004) | 0.022 (0.004) |
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| 0–3 months | 0.049 (0.01) | 0.062 (0.008) |
| 3–6 months | 0.024 (0.008) | 0.029 (0.006) |
| 6–12 months | 0.038 (0.01) | 0.030 (0.006) |
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| >12 months | 0.014 (0.002) | 0.022 (0.002) |
LMWH, low molecular weight heparin; NMCR, non-major clinically relevant; SE standard error; VKA, vitamin K antagonist; VTE, venous thromboembolism.
Overview of assumed clinical parameters for DVT and/or PE patients
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| Incidence of recurrent VTE (HR) | 0.68 (0.218) | 1.123 (0.207) | * |
| Incidence of major bleeding (HR) | 0.646 (0.242) | 0.493 (0.24) | * |
| Incidence of NMCR bleeding (RR) | 1.055 (0.123) | 1.001 (0.088) | * |
| Probability that a recurrent VTE is a DVT | 0.483 (0.054) | 0.372 (0.050) | * |
| Probability that a major bleeding event is a (major) IC bleed | 0.125 (0.058) | 0.143 (0.076) | * |
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| Patients with IC bleeding events | 1.00 (0.0) | 1.00 (0.0) | * |
| Patients with major EC bleeding events | 0.400 (0.089) | 0.164 (0.045) | * |
| Patients with NMCR bleeding events | 0.110 (0.020) | 0.054 (0.010) | * |
| For any other reason (additional) 3–12 months | 0.019 (0.001) | 0.021 (0.001) | * |
| For any other reason (additional) >12 months | 0.036 (0.013) | 0.036 (0.013) | Boggon 2011 [ |
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| Recurrent VTE (per 3-month time step) | 0.013 (0.074) | Prandoni 2007 [ | |
| Progression to CTEPH after a PE | 0.013 (0.002) | Miniati 2006 [ | |
| Cumulative incidence of severe PTS (to 1 year) | 0.027 (0.007) | Prandoni 1997 [ | |
| Cumulative incidence of severe PTS (to 5 years) | 0.081 (0.012) | Prandoni 1997 [ | |
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| PE (during acute treatment phase) | 0.250 (0.041) | * | |
| PE (after acute treatment phase) | 0.331 (0.041) | Prandoni 1997 [ | |
| Major IC bleeding | 0.436 (0.036) | Linkins 2010 [ | |
| Major EC bleeding | 0.039 (0.007) | * | |
| CTEPH (per 3-month cycle) | 0.025 (0.020) | Condliffe 2008 [ | |
*Data are from EINSTEIN DVT or EINSTEIN PE unless otherwise stated [25,26].
CTEPH, chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension; DVT, deep vein thrombosis; EC, extracranial; HR, hazard ratio; IC, intracranial; NMCR, non-major clinically relevant; PE, pulmonary embolism; PTS, post-thrombotic syndrome; RR, relative risk; SE, standard error; VTE, venous thromboembolism.
Utility values assumed in the cost-effectiveness evaluation
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| Population norm | 0.825 | 0.819 | 0.831 | Kind 1998 [ |
| Post-IC bleeding | 0.71 | 0.70 | 0.72 | Rivero-Arias 2010 [ |
| CTEPH | 0.56 | 0.53 | 0.59 | Meads 2008 [ |
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| DVT | 0.84 | 0.64 | 0.98 | Locadia 2004 [ |
| PE | 0.63 | 0.36 | 0.86 | Locadia 2004 [ |
| EC bleeding (gastrointestinal bleeding was the disease state valued) | 0.65 | 0.49 | 0.86 | Locadia 2004 [ |
| IC bleeding (haemorrhagic stroke was the disease state valued) | 0.33 | 0.14 | 0.53 | Locadia 2004 [ |
| PTS (serious PTS was the disease state valued) | 0.93 | 0.91 | 1.00 | Lenert 1997 [ |
Locadia et al. quoted a population norm (own health) as 0.95 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.81–1.00) [46]. Utility values were adjusted according to this value before adjusting for UK population norm.
Lower and upper values are estimates of 95% CIs from data presented (e.g. sample population size, n and standard deviation) in the source literature.
The 95% CIs for DVT, PE, and EC and IC bleeding adjustments to utility norms have been assumed to equal the interquartile range because of the absence of further information and the size of the sample in Locadia et al. [46].
For the probabilistic sensitivity analyses, the parameters above were modelled as arising from independent beta distributions with alpha and beta parameters set such that the mean is the point estimate and the lower and upper values represent the 95% CI.
CTEPH, chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension; DVT, deep vein thrombosis; EC, extracranial; IC, intracranial; PE, pulmonary embolism; PTS, post-thrombotic syndrome.
Base case results
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| Drug acquisition cost (£) | 220 | 98 | 122 | 217 | 99 | 118 |
| Other costs (£) | 1592 | 1964 | −372 | 4295 | 4808 | −513 |
| Total costs (£) | 1812 | 2063 | −251 | 4511 | 4907 | −396 |
| QALYs | 13.286 | 13.264 | 0.022 | 11.940 | 11.912 | 0.027 |
| ICER (£) | Rivaroxaban dominates | Rivaroxaban dominates | ||||
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| Drug acquisition cost (£) | 398 | 104 | 295 | 393 | 105 | 288 |
| Other costs (£) | 1561 | 2040 | −479 | 4153 | 4654 | −501 |
| Total costs (£) | 1959 | 2143 | −184 | 4546 | 4759 | −213 |
| QALYs | 13.294 | 13.268 | 0.026 | 11.992 | 11.979 | 0.013 |
| ICER (£) | Rivaroxaban dominates | Rivaroxaban dominates | ||||
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| Drug acquisition cost (£) | 731 | 114 | 617 | 728 | 115 | 613 |
| Other costs (£) | 1512 | 2186 | −673 | 4154 | 4900 | −746 |
| Total costs (£) | 2243 | 2299 | −56 | 4881 | 5015 | −133 |
| QALYs | 13.308 | 13.274 | 0.034 | 12.035 | 12.015 | 0.020 |
| ICER (£) | Rivaroxaban dominates | Rivaroxaban dominates | ||||
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| Drug acquisition cost (£) | 6566 | 288 | 6278 | 6025 | 284 | 5740 |
| Other costs (£) | 2084 | 6835 | −4751 | 4532 | 9209 | −4677 |
| Total costs (£) | 8649 | 7122 | 1527 | 10,557 | 9493 | 1064 |
| QALYs | 13.507 | 13.331 | 0.176 | 12.526 | 12.375 | 0.150 |
| ICER (£) | 8677 | 7072 | ||||
ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; LMWH, low molecular weight heparin; QALY, quality-adjusted life-year; VKA, vitamin K antagonist.
Summary of resource usage assumptions
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| Number of days of acute treatment (i.e. LMWH) required by a DVT patient | 9.6 | 6 | 10 | Dirichlet | EINSTEIN DVT [ |
| SIGN guidelines [ | |||||
| Number of days of acute treatment (i.e. LMWH) required by a PE patient | 9.7 | 7 | 13 | Dirichlet | Mean duration from EINSTEIN PE [ |
| Proportion of patients who self-inject LMWH (%) | 92 | 64.40 | 100 | Beta | The point estimate is taken from the assumptions in NICE CG92 [ |
| Proportion of remaining patients who require nurse assistance at home (%) | 80 | 60 | 100% | Beta | These values are assumptions based on inputs determined for the NICE CG92 model |
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| Visits in first 3 months | 9 | 5 | 15 | Gamma | EINSTEIN DVT [ |
| SIGN guidelines [ | |||||
| Visits each 3 months thereafter | 5 | 2.5 | 10 | Gamma | BNF [ |
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| Recurrent DVT patients (%) | 69 | 50 | 100 | Beta | SIGN guidelines [ |
| Incident PE patients (%) | 17 | 0 | 30 | Beta | Survey data |
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| Proportion of patients requiring NHS-funded transportation (%) | 8.55 | 6 | 11 | Beta | Survey data |
| Proportion of CTEPH patients who require PEA (%) | 68.40 | 64.20 | 72.60 | Beta | 321 of 469 patients from Condliffe 2008 [ |
| Length of admission post DVT, days | van Bellen 2014 [ | ||||
| LMWH/VKA | 8* | 4 | 10 | ||
| Rivaroxaban | 5* | 3 | 9 | ||
| Length of admission post PE, days | van Bellen 2014 [ | ||||
| LMWH/VKA | 7* | 5 | 10 | ||
| Rivaroxaban | 6* | 4 | 9 | ||
*Median values.
BNF, British National Formulary; CTEPH, chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension; DVT, deep vein thrombosis; INR, international normalized ratio; LMWH, low molecular weight heparin; NHS, National Health Service; NICE, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence; PE, pulmonary embolism; PEA, pulmonary endarterectomy; SIGN, Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network; VKA, vitamin K antagonist; VTE, venous thromboembolism.
Figure 2Tornado diagram of net monetary benefit of rivaroxaban versus LMWH/VKA. Patients requiring 6 months of anticoagulation. DVT, deep vein thrombosis; GP, general practitioner; HR, hazard ratio; LMWH, low molecular weight heparin; OP, outpatient; OWSA, one-way sensitivity analysis; PE, pulmonary embolism; QALY, quality-adjusted life-year; VKA, vitamin K antagonist; VTE, venous thromboembolism.