| Literature DB >> 27067724 |
Krithika Rajagopalan1, David Trueman2, Lydia Crowe2, Daniel Squirrell2, Antony Loebel3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In 2014, lurasidone, an atypical antipsychotic, was approved for the treatment of schizophrenia in adults. It is an alternative treatment option to aripiprazole, and when compared with aripiprazole, lurasidone was associated with improved symptom reduction and reduced risk of weight gain and relapse. We conducted a cost-utility analysis of lurasidone versus aripiprazole from the perspective of healthcare services, using Scotland and Wales as specific case studies.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27067724 PMCID: PMC4901121 DOI: 10.1007/s40273-016-0405-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacoeconomics ISSN: 1170-7690 Impact factor: 4.981
Fig. 1Model schematic
Summary of efficacy and safety data used in the model
| Therapy | ||
|---|---|---|
| Lurasidone | Aripiprazole | |
| Acute phase model inputs | ||
| All-cause discontinuation [OR] (95 % CI)a | 0.77 (0.61, 096) | 0.61 (0.51, 0.72) |
| EPS [OR] (95 % CI)a | 2.46 (1.55, 3.72) | 1.20 (0.73, 1.85) |
| Weight gain [%]b | 5.22 | 7.04 |
| Maintenance phase model inputs | ||
| Relapse [HR] (95 % CrI) vs. quetiapine | 0.699c (0.303, 1.244) | 1.029d |
| Discontinuation [HR] vs. quetiapine | 0.723 | 0.98 |
CI confidence interval, CrI credible interval, EPS extrapyramidal symptoms, HR hazard ratio, OR odds ratio
aCalculated vs. placebo [34]
bProbability of weight gain ≥7 % at week 6 estimated assuming a common standard deviation, assuming mean change in weight is normally distributed
cFrom study D1050234, as reported Loebel et al. [37]
dCalculated by indirection comparison with quetiapine [36]
Health-state utility values used in the economic model
| State | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Stable | 0.799 | NICE CG82 [ |
| Relapse | 0.670 | |
| Weight gain | −0.959 %a | |
| EPS | −0.888 %a | |
| Diabetes | −0.150b | Estimated from Briggs et al. [ |
EPS extrapyramidal symptoms, NICE National Institute for Health and Care Excellence
aPercentage decrement applied to utility value for stable schizophrenia
bAbsolute decrement in utility
Summary of cost inputs used in the model
| Source data | Value used (£) | |
|---|---|---|
| Pharmacological therapies (annual) | ||
| Lurasidone | List price from MIMS [ | 1183a |
| Aripiprazole | List price from MIMS [ | 984b |
| Adverse events (weighted per event) | ||
| EPS | MIMS [ | 140c |
| Weight gain | 2 × GP consultation costs [ | 128d |
| Switching therapy | ||
| Consultant psychiatrists | Total direct cost per attendance–general psychiatry [ | 402e |
| Outpatient, primary and community care (per 6 weeks) | ||
| Total combined cost of all services | See online resources for detailed costs | Stable patient: 647 |
| Relapse | ||
| Acute hospital (per inpatient week) | Mean length of stay for mental health specialties combined with gross cost per inpatient week for general psychiatry [ | 2807f |
| CRHTT (per case) | Crisis Resolution Team for adults with mental health problems. Average cost per case [ | 29,971g |
| Residential care (weighted per 6 weeks) | ||
| Sheltered housingh | Private sector care homes for people with mental health problems. Cost per residential week [ | 746 |
| Group homei | NICE CG82, assuming 2006/07 costs [ | 15 |
| Long-term hospital carek | NICE CG82, assuming 2007/08 costs [ | 51 |
| Total cost/cycle in stable health state | 812 | |
CRHTT crisis resolution home treatment team, EPS extrapyramidal symptoms, GP General Practitioner, NICE National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, WHO World Health Organization, ATC Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical, MIMS Monthly Index of Medical Specialities
aBased on an assumed dose of 40 or 80 mg daily
bBased on an assumed dose of 15 mg daily
cAssumes 100 % of patients receive procyclidine 5 mg/day for 3 months [50] and have one psychiatrist outpatient visit
dCost of two GP visits and three dietetic outpatient contacts, based on 100 % and 20 % of patients receiving these services, respectively
eBased on three visits to a consultant psychiatrist
fBased on 30 % of patients receiving treatment
gBased on 70 % of patients receiving treatment
hBased on 18 % of patients in sheltered housing
iBased on 2 % of patients in group accommodation
jCosts adjusted to 2013/14 using the Hospital Pay and Price Index
kBased on 3 % of patients in long-term hospital care
Base-case analysis results for lurasidone versus aripiprazole (10-year time horizon)
| Lurasidone | Aripiprazole | Incremental outcomesa | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Costs (£) | |||
| Drug acquisition | 2195 | 1779 | 416 |
| Inpatient relapse | 18,933 | 20,054 | −1121 |
| CRHTT relapse | 47,844 | 50,665 | −2821 |
| Residential care | 56,093 | 55,962 | 131 |
| Switching | 566 | 583 | −17 |
| AEs | 1354 | 1404 | −50 |
| Outpatient/primary/community care | 44,344 | 44,264 | 80 |
| Total | 171,329 | 174,712 | −3383 |
| Outcomes | |||
| QALYs | 6.490 | 6.485 | 0.005 |
| Relapse-free days | 3415 | 3408 | 7 |
| Life-years | 8.284 | 8.284 | 0 |
| Incremental analysis | |||
| ICER (lurasidone vs. aripiprazole) | – | – | Lurasidone-dominant |
AEs adverse events, CRHTT crisis resolution home treatment team, ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, QALYs quality-adjusted life-years
aIncremental outcome is equal to lurasidone minus aripiprazole
Fig. 2Univariate sensitivity analysis for lurasidone versus aripiprazole. NMB net monetary benefit (willingness-to-pay was £20,000 per quality-adjusted life-year)
Results from scenario analyses
| Scenario | Costs (£) | QALYs | Optimal strategy | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lurasidone | Aripiprazole (primary comparison) | Lurasidone | Aripiprazole (primary comparison) | WTP = £20,000 | WTP = £30,000 | |
| Time horizon 1 year | 19,085 | 20,234 | 0.788 | 0.787 | Lurasidone | Lurasidone |
| Time horizon 5 years | 93,764 | 96,494 | 3.617 | 3.614 | Lurasidone | Lurasidone |
| Cost of lurasidone is based on 2 × tablets dailya | 172,626 | 174,712 | 6.490 | 6.485 | Lurasidone | Lurasidone |
| LOS inpatient relapse is 104 days | 183,878 | 188,017 | 6.479 | 6.474 | Lurasidone | Lurasidone |
| No difference in short-term discontinuation between therapiesb | 169,872 | 174,392 | 6.490 | 6.481 | Lurasidone | Lurasidone |
| No difference in relapse ratesc | 171,329 | 168,952 | 6.490 | 6.494 | Aripiprazole | Aripiprazole |
| Cost of inpatient relapse halved | 137,941 | 139,352 | 6.490 | 6.485 | Lurasidone | Lurasidone |
| Cost of inpatient relapse doubled | 238,106 | 245,431 | 6.490 | 6.485 | Lurasidone | Lurasidone |
| Discount rate benefits = 1.5 %, costs = 6 % | 153,551 | 156,713 | 7.112 | 7.107 | Lurasidone | Lurasidone |
| Relapse follows Gompertz distribution | 153,266 | 158,187 | 6.516 | 6.508 | Lurasidone | Lurasidone |
| Discontinuation follows exponential distribution | 170,155 | 173,501 | 6.492 | 6.487 | Lurasidone | Lurasidone |
| Exclude costs of residential care | 115,236 | 118,749 | 6.490 | 6.485 | Lurasidone | Lurasidone |
| 77 % of patients treated in inpatient settingd | 167,348 | 170,502 | 6.474 | 6.469 | Lurasidone | Lurasidone |
| Aripiprazole cost based on Maudsley prescribing guidelines | 171,329 | 176,019 | 6.490 | 6.485 | Lurasidone | Lurasidone |
| Annual cost of aripiprazole = annual cost of quetiapine (£42.10) | 171,329 | 173,898 | 6.490 | 6.485 | Lurasidone | Lurasidone |
LOS length of stay, QALYs quality-adjusted life-years, WTP willingness-to-pay threshold
aAssumption reflecting doses of 120 mg/day or greater
bAll set to the same as quetiapine
cAll the same as lurasidone
dBase-case is 30 %
Fig. 3Cost-effectiveness plane from probabilistic sensitivity analysis (5000 simulations). QALYs quality-adjusted life-years. Percentages represent the distribution estimates for each quadrant, ‡hazard ratios were a significant contributor to the observed spread of point estimates
Fig. 4Cost-effectiveness acceptability curve from probabilistic sensitivity analysis (5000 simulations)
| Treatment of schizophrenia with atypical antipsychotics may be associated with weight gain and metabolic side effects. |
| Lurasidone is a recently approved atypical antipsychotic for the treatment of schizophrenia in adults in Scotland. |
| Lurasidone is associated with statistically significant improvements in efficacy and was generally well-tolerated in clinical studies when compared with other common atypical antipsychotics. |
| Lurasidone is most likely to displace aripiprazole in patients with schizophrenia at risk of weight gain and/or metabolic disease. |
| Lurasidone is likely to provide overall savings due to lower relapse rates and greater improvements in quality of life when compared with aripiprazole. |