| Literature DB >> 26546142 |
Craig I Coleman1, Nick Freemantle2, Christine G Kohn3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To estimate the cost-effectiveness of ranolazine when added to standard-of-care (SoC) antianginals compared with SoC alone in patients with stable coronary disease experiencing ≥3 attacks/week.Entities:
Keywords: CARDIOLOGY; HEALTH ECONOMICS
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26546142 PMCID: PMC4636621 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-008861
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Schematic representation of the economic decision model. The model was used to determine separately the total cost of treatment accrued and quality-adjusted life-years lived by the patients with stable angina receiving and not receiving ranolazine. Regardless of treatment assignment, patients entered the model in one of three angina frequency health states based on SAQAF scores (100=no; 61–99=monthly; 31–60=weekly; 0–30=daily angina; no patients started in ‘no’ angina) and were allowed to transition between states in the first month based on treatment-specific probabilities derived from the Efficacy of Ranolazine in Chronic Angina trial and other studies. Patients not responding to ranolazine in month 1 (ie, not improving ≥1 SAQAF health state) or experiencing an adverse event requiring discontinuation were assumed to stop taking ranolazine and behave like SoC (plus placebo) patients. Only patients assigned to receive ranolazine at the initiation of the model could discontinue therapy (for lack of efficacy or adverse drug events) and discontinuation could only occur during the first cycle. Patients randomised to SoC (plus placebo) started and had to remain ‘off drug’. In the 2nd through 12th month, all patients were assumed to stay in the same angina frequency health state for the remainder of the model's time horizon or until death. Transition to death could occur during any cycle. M, Markov node; SAQAF, Seattle Angina Questionnaire Angina Frequency; SoC, standard-of-care.
Transition probability matrix for ranolazine responders during the first cycle
| SAQAF EOT classification | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SAQAF baseline classification | ||||
| No | – | – | – | – |
| Monthly | 2/2 | – | – | – |
| Weekly | 13/95 | 82/95 | – | – |
| Daily | 2/47 | 10/47 | 35/47 | – |
The SAQAF Domain category ranolazine responders started in are depicted on the vertical axis (100=no, 61–99=monthly, 31–60=weekly and 0–30=daily symptoms) and the category they finished the double-blind trial period in is depicted on the horizontal axis. For example, 47 ranolazine responders began the study reporting ‘daily’ angina symptoms and 0 (0%), 35 (74.5%), 10 (21.3%) and 2 (4.3%) of these same patients reported having daily, weekly, monthly and no angina symptoms at the end of the trial.
EOT, end-of-treatment; SAQAF, Seattle Angina Questionnaire Angina Frequency.
Transition probability matrix for standard-of-care (plus placebo) during the first cycle
| SAQAF EOT classification | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SAQAF baseline classification | ||||
| No | – | – | – | – |
| Monthly | 1/20 | 17/20 | 2/20 | 0/20 |
| Weekly | 8/193 | 65/193 | 112/193 | 8/193 |
| Daily | 2/68 | 9/68 | 33/68 | 24/68 |
The SAQAF Domain category standard-of-care patients started in are depicted on the vertical axis (100=no, 61–99=monthly, 31–60=weekly and 0–30=daily symptoms) and the category they finished the double-blind trial period in is depicted on the horizontal axis. For example, 68 standard-of-care patients began the study reporting ‘daily’ angina symptoms and 24 (35.3%), 33 (48.5%), 9 (13.2%) and 2 (2.9%) of these same patients reported having daily, weekly, monthly and no angina symptoms at the end of the trial.
EOT, end-of-treatment; SAQAF, Seattle Angina Questionnaire Angina Frequency.
Base-case variables and ranges used in sensitivity analysis
| Variable | Base-Case | Range | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| SAQAF classification definition | |||
| No | SAQAF=100 | NA | |
| Monthly | SAQAF=61–99 | NA | |
| Weekly | SAQAF=31–60 | NA | |
| Daily | SAQAF=0–30 | NA | |
| SAQAF classification at baseline | |||
| No | 0% | NA | |
| Monthly | 6.1% | 100% | |
| Weekly | 71.0% | 100% | |
| Daily | 22.9% | 100% | |
| Definition of SAQAF responder | Improvement of ≥1 SAQAF classification | 20-point change in SAQAF | |
| Ranolazine non-response | 48% during first 4 weeks | 42.2–53.9% | |
| Ranolazine discontinuation due to AE | 1.1% during first 4 weeks | 0.37–6% | |
| All-cause mortality by angina frequency | |||
| No | 4.6% per year | 3.8–5.5% | |
| Monthly | 4.8% per year | 3.8–6.1% | |
| Weekly | 8.1% per year | 6.1–10.8% | |
| Daily | 10.9% per year | 7.5–15.4% | |
| All-cause mortality for all patients with angina | 5.8% per year | NA | |
| Angina frequency utility (using EOT data) | |||
| No | 0.87 | 0.84–0.90 | |
| Monthly | 0.76 | 0.75–0.77 | |
| Weekly | 0.65 | 0.64–0.66 | |
| Daily | 0.54 | 0.52–0.56 | |
| Cost of ranolazine twice daily at any dose | £48.98/month | £24.49–£97.96 | |
| Stable angina direct treatment costs/year (not including ranolazine) | |||
| No | £3529 | £3276–£3786 | |
| Monthly | £4711 | £4255–£5023 | |
| Weekly | £5493 | £4765–£6229 | |
| Daily | £8374 | £6754–£9990 | |
| Stable angina indirect costs/year | |||
| No | £2362 | £1011–£3373 | |
| Monthly | £4012 | £2694–£5395 | |
| Weekly | £4271 | £2694–£5395 | |
| Daily | £8194 | £5395–£10 783 |
AE, adverse event; EOT, end-of-treatment; NA, not applicable; SAQAF, Seattle Angina Questionnaire Angina Frequency.
Results of base-case, sensitivity and scenario analyses
| Sensitivity or scenario analysis | Treatment | Cost | QALY | ICER vs placebo |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Base-case | Ranolazine | £5208 | 0.701 | Ranolazine dominant |
| SoC+placebo | £5318 | 0.662 | – | |
| 100% daily | Ranolazine | £5915 | 0.639 | Ranolazine dominant |
| SoC+placebo | £6160 | 0.614 | – | |
| 100% weekly | Ranolazine | £5058 | 0.713 | Ranolazine dominant |
| SoC+placebo | £5109 | 0.672 | – | |
| Mortality differences assumed | Ranolazine | £5190 | 0.700 | Ranolazine dominant |
| SoC+placebo | £5272 | 0.659 | – | |
| Indirect costs included | Ranolazine | £9237 | 0.701 | Ranolazine dominant |
| SoC+placebo | £9725 | 0.662 | – | |
| Indirect costs included and mortality differences assumed | Ranolazine | £9203 | 0.700 | Ranolazine dominant |
| SoC+placebo | £9639 | 0.659 | – | |
| 20-point change | Ranolazine | £5362 | 0.688 | £1692/QALY |
| SoC+placebo | £5318 | 0.662 | – |
Results for the base-case and scenario analyses are depicted above. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios were calculated as the difference in costs divided by the difference in QALYs between the two treatments. Ranolazine added to SoC therapy was considered cost-effective compared with SoC therapy alone when an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio was less than £20 000/QALY.
QALY, quality-adjusted life-year; SoC, standard-of-care.
Figure 2Incremental cost-effectiveness plane. Incremental cost-effectiveness plane based on 10 000 Monte Carlo simulation iterations, which drew parameters for each input simultaneously from probability distributions. Incremental cost (2014£) is on the vertical axis and incremental efficacy (quality-adjusted life-years, QALYs) is on the horizontal axis. As depicted on the incremental cost-effectiveness plane, the probability of ranolazine being cost-effective was >99% (quadrants II and III), assuming a willingness-to-pay (WTP) threshold of £20 000/QALY. We estimated there was a 70.5% chance the addition of ranolazine to standard-of-care therapy would be a dominant economic strategy compared with standard-of-care alone (quadrant III).