| Literature DB >> 27393633 |
Reinhard Rychlik1, Fabian Kreimendahl2, Nicole Schnur3, Judith Lambert-Baumann3, Dirk Dressler4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To gather data about the medical and non-medical health service in patients suffering from post-stroke spasticity of the upper limb and evaluate treatment effectiveness and tolerability as well as costs over the treatment period of one year.Entities:
Keywords: Ashworth-score; Cost-Utility; IncobotulinumtoxinA; Post-stroke spasticity
Year: 2016 PMID: 27393633 PMCID: PMC4938805 DOI: 10.1186/s13561-016-0107-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Econ Rev ISSN: 2191-1991
Cost data sources
| Item | Cost sources |
|---|---|
| Drugs | German Rote Liste 2013, web-based research |
| Ambulatory medical treatment | German value measurement (EBM 2000+) and fee regulations for doctors (GOÄ) |
| Non-pharmacological therapies | According to agreements between German health insurance funds and professional organizations |
| Medical devices/aids | Web-based research |
| Hospitalisation and Rehabilitation | German Diagnosis-Related Groups (G-DRG), web- and phone-based research |
| Nursing home care | According to German long term care insurance |
| Reduction in earning capacity | Average payments according to German retirement insurance |
Patient demography and other baseline characteristics
| INCO pretreated | INCO naïve | INCO total | CON | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender (m) | 36 (53.7 %) | 22 (53.7 %) | 58 (53.7 %) | 70 (63.6 %) | 128 (58.7 %) |
| Age (years) | 62.3 (10.7) | 60.7 (16.0) | 61.7 (12.9) | 67.8 (12.7) | 64.8 (13.1) |
| Body mass index (kg/m2) | 26.7 (4.0) | 26.8 (4.4) | 26.7 (4.1) | 27.7 (4.8) | 27.2 (4.5) |
| Time since apoplex (years) | 8.0 (5.6) | 6.8 (6.1) | 7.5 (5.8) | 5.3 (5.1) | 6.5 (5.6) |
| Time since spasticity (years) | 6.9 (6.3) | 6.0 (6.5) | 6.6 (6.3) | 4.9 (5.4) | 5.7 (5.9) |
| Concomitant diseases (yes) | 55 (82.1 %) | 29 (70.7 %) | 84 (77.8 %) | 96 (87.3 %) | 180 (8.6 %) |
| Employed (yes) | 1 (1.5 %) | 3 (7.3 %) | 4 (3.7 %) | 9 (8.2 %) | 13 (6.0 %) |
| Retired (yes) | 58 (96.7 %) | 39 (97.5 %) | 87 (94.6 %) | 86 (86.9 %) | 173 (90.6 %) |
| Early retirement due to spasticity (yes) | 40 (63.5 %) | 20 (55.6 %) | 60 (60.6 %) | 19 (20.4 %) | 79 (41.1 %) |
| Reduction in earning capacity due to spasticity (yes) | 22 (32.9 %) | 11 (26.8 %) | 33 (30.6 %) | 23 (20.9 %) | 56 (25.7 %) |
| Level of care (none) | 12 (17.9 %) | 10 (24.4 %) | 22 (20.4 %) | 37 (35.6 %) | 59 (27.8 %) |
| Level 1 | 28 (41.8 %) | 15 (36.6 %) | 43 (39.8 %) | 33 (31.7 %) | 76 (35.8 %) |
| Level 2 | 23 (34.3 %) | 15 (36.6 %) | 38 (35.2 %) | 29 (27.9 %) | 67 (31.6 %) |
| Level 3 | 4 (6.0 %) | 1 (2.4 %) | 5 (4.6 %) | 5 (4.8 %) | 10 (4.7 %) |
All values are means (± standard deviation) or number of patients (%)
Overview of antispastic therapies and measures during the study
| IncobotulinumtoxinA group: Antispastic medications except BoNT/A, non-pharmacological therapies and aids | ||||
| First quarter ( | Second quarter ( | Third quarter ( | Fourth quarter ( | |
| Oral medication | 31 (28.7 %) | 23 (32.4 %) | 20 (20.2 %) | 18 (19.1 %) |
| Physical therapy | 60 (55.6 %) | 54 (52.9 %) | 54 (54.5 %) | 51 (54.3 %) |
| Occupational therapy | 43 (39.8 %) | 42 (41.2 %) | 41 (41.4 %) | 44 (46.8 %) |
| Speech therapy | 10 (9.3 %) | 8 (7.8 %) | 8 (8.1 %) | 9 (8.6 %) |
| Other therapies | 3 (2.8 %) | 6 (6.0 %) | 4 (4.0 %) | 4 (4.3 %) |
| Therapeutic aids | 12 (11.0 %) | 5 (5.7 %) | - | 1 (1.0 %) |
| Conventional therapy group: Antispastic medications, non-pharmacological therapies and aids | ||||
| First quarter ( | Second quarter ( | Third quarter ( | Fourth quarter ( | |
| Oral medication | 67 (60.9 %) | 66 (67.3 %) | 63 (69.2 %) | 58 (69.0 %) |
| Physical therapy | 68 (61.8 %) | 59 (60.2 %) | 54 (54.5 %) | 52 (61.9 %) |
| Occupational therapy | 15 (13.6 %) | 11 (11.2 %) | 11 (12.1 %) | 8 (9.5 %) |
| Speech therapy | 5 (4.6 %) | 5 (5.1 %) | 5 (5.5 %) | 4 (4.8 %) |
| Other therapies | 3 (2.7 %) | 5 (5.1 %) | - | 1 (1.2 %) |
| Therapeutic aids | 10 (11.0 %) | 8 (8.2 %) | 12 (13.2 %) | 8 (9.5 %) |
Responder analyses at study end after 1-year of treatment
| INCO pretreated | INCO naïve | INCO total | CON | INCO pretr. vs. CON | INCO naïve vs. CON | INCO total vs. CON | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shoulder adduction/internal rotation | 56.4 | 73.9 | 62.9 | 15.5 | <0.01 | <0.01 | <0.01 |
| Shoulder abduction | 65.5 | 100 | 73.0 | 19.7 | <0.01 | <0.01 | <0.01 |
| Shoulder elevation | 66.7 | 88.9 | 72.7 | 20.6 | <0.01 | <0.01 | <0.01 |
| Flexed elbow | 78.3 | 92.9 | 83.8 | 26.9 | <0.01 | <0.01 | <0.01 |
| Forearm pronation | 81.4 | 73.7 | 79.0 | 22.0 | <0.01 | <0.01 | <0.01 |
| Flexed wrist | 82.1 | 94.7 | 86.2 | 26.6 | <0.01 | <0.01 | <0.01 |
| Thumb-in-palm | 77.8 | 81.3 | 78.8 | 20.0 | <0.01 | <0.01 | <0.01 |
| Clenched fist | 79.1 | 95.2 | 84.4 | 22.2 | <0.01 | <0.01 | <0.01 |
| Intrinsic-plus-position of the hand | 73.3 | 100 | 78.9 | 19.5 | <0.01 | <0.01 | <0.01 |
Responder rates (%); response was definded as ≥ 1-point improvement on the Ashworth Scale for all treated muscle groups at study end; Fisher’s exact test was used for group comparisons
Fig. 1SF-12 – Dimensions ’Physical Health‘ and ‘Mental Health’. a Physical Health Score from baseline to study end. b Mental Health Score from baseline to study end. Mean values; p-values: change from baseline to study end, one-sample t-test for dependent samples
Overview of total costs by cost centers (in €)
| INCO | CON | |
|---|---|---|
| Ambulatory medical treatment | 175 | 217 |
| Drugs | 3,386 | 193 |
| Hospitalizations (including rehabilitation measures) | 40 | 138 |
| Non-pharmacological therapies | 1,408 | 998 |
| Medical devices/aids | 79 | 12 |
| Nursing home care | 3,089 | 2,203 |
| Total direct costs | 8,188 | 3,806 |
| Reduction in earning capacity | 2,081 | 988 |
| Total costs | 10,268 | 4,794 |
Overview of cost-utility ratios and ICER
| Utility parameter | INCO | CON | ICER | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Responder rate in Ashworth Score per clinical pattern | Responder rate | Cost-utility ratio | Responder rate | Cost-utility ratio | |
| Shoulder adduction/internal rotation | 62.9 % | 16,325 € | 15.5 % | 30,929 € | 11,549 € |
| Shoulder abduction | 73.0 % | 14,066 € | 19.7 % | 24,335 € | 10,271 € |
| Shoulder elevation | 72.7 % | 14,124 € | 20.6 % | 23,272 € | 10,507 € |
| Flexed elbow | 83.8 % | 12,253 € | 26.9 % | 17,821 € | 9,621 € |
| Pronated forearm | 79.0 % | 12,998 € | 22.0 % | 21,791 € | 9,604 € |
| Flexed wrist | 86.2 % | 11,912 € | 26.6 % | 18,022 € | 9,185 € |
| Thumb-in-palm | 78.8 % | 13,031 € | 20.0 % | 23,970 € | 9,310 € |
| Clenched fist | 84.4 % | 12,166 € | 22.2 % | 21,595 € | 8,801 € |
| Intrinsic-Plus-position (hand) | 78.9 % | 13,014 € | 19.5 % | 24,585 € | 9,216 € |
| Improvement in SF-12 dimension | Improvement | Cost-utility ratio | Improvement | Cost-utility ratio | ICER |
| Physical Health | 7.96 | 1,290 € | 0.83 | 5,776 € | 768 € |
| Mental Health | 10.75 | 955 € | 5.71 | 840 € | 1086 € |
Incremental Cost-Effectiveness Ratio (ICER) = (Total costs INCO – Total costs CON)/(Utility value INCO – Utility value CON)