| Literature DB >> 28093662 |
Evelina A Zimovetz1, Alain Joseph2, Rajeev Ayyagari3, Josephine A Mauskopf4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a chronic neurobehavioral disorder in children that may persist into adulthood. Lisdexamfetamine dimesylate (LDX) is approved in many countries for ADHD treatment in children, adolescents, and adults.Entities:
Keywords: ADHD; Adult; Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder; Cost-effectiveness analysis; Economic evaluation; Lisdexamfetamine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28093662 PMCID: PMC5773633 DOI: 10.1007/s10198-016-0864-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Health Econ ISSN: 1618-7598
Fig. 1Model Structure. ADHD attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, LDX lisdexamfetamine, NT no pharmacological treatment.
Reproduced from Zimovetz, E.A., Beard, S.M., Hodgkins, P. et al. CNS Drugs (2016) 30:985. doi:10.1007/s40263-016-0354-3, under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), with minor amends reflecting the change in study population from children/adolescents to adults.
Primary base-case analysis: relative risks for treatment response (drug vs. placebo)
| Treatment | Relative risk (95% CrI) | Placebo risk (95% CrI) |
|---|---|---|
| LDX | 2.14 (1.71–2.57) | 0.3084 (0.264–0.353) |
| ATX | 1.65 (1.00–2.32) | |
| MPH-ER | 1.84 (1.44–2.23) |
ADHD-RS-IV ADHD Rating Scale IV, ATX atomoxetine, CrI credible interval, CGI–I Clinical Global Impression–Improvement, LDX lisdexamfetamine dimesylate, MPH-ER methylphenidate extended release
Response was defined by a rating of 1 or 2 in CGI–I score. Quadratic regression extrapolation method (random effects model, combined doses) was used for the ATX arm, using only the ADHD-RS-IV scores in extrapolating the CGI–I-based response for ATX
Relative risks for discontinuation due to adverse events (drug vs. placebo)
| Treatment | Relative risk (95% CrI) | Placebo risk (95% CrI) |
|---|---|---|
| LDX | 3.21 (0.93–7.90) | 0.0443 (0.035–0.053) |
| ATX | 2.67 (1.68–4.13) | |
| MPH-ER | 2.76 (1.83–4.07) |
ATX atomoxetine, CrI credible interval, LDX lisdexamfetamine dimesylate, MPH-ER methylphenidate extended release
Resource use and costs applied in the base-case analysis
| Resource item | Unit cost | Units per year (SD) | Average cost per year |
|---|---|---|---|
| Responders | |||
| Psychiatrista | £266.27 | 3.34 (2.39) | £889.34 |
| Psychologistb | £201.38 | 1 (NA) | £201.38 |
| GPc | £37.00 | 3.30 (2.43) | £122.10 |
| Nursed | £44.00 | 3.72 (4.97) | £163.68 |
| Blood pressuree | £12.14 | 2.92 (2.15) | £35.45 |
| Weight measuremente | £12.14 | 2.94 (2.44) | £35.70 |
| Blood testf | £3.00 | 1.40 (1.71) | £4.20 |
| ECGg | £52.00 | 0.92 (1.22) | £47.84 |
| EEGh | £72.00 | 0.08 (0.33) | £5.76 |
| Allergy testi | £5.00 | 0.09 (0.49) | £0.45 |
| | – | – | |
| Non-responders | |||
| Psychiatrista | £266.27 | 6.83 (4.02) | £1818.62 |
| Psychologistb | £201.38 | 9.67 (5.82) | £1947.34 |
| GPc | £37.00 | 5.83 (3.89) | £215.71 |
| Nursed | £44.00 | 5.38 (6.13) | £236.72 |
| Blood pressuree | £12.14 | 3.62 (2.44) | £43.95 |
| Weight measuremente | £12.14 | 3.36 (2.54) | £40.80 |
| Blood testf | £3.00 | 1.98 (2.13) | £5.94 |
| ECGg | £52.00 | 1.36 (1.63) | £70.72 |
| EEGh | £72.00 | 0.15 (0.50) | £10.80 |
| Allergy testi | £5.00 | 0.21 (0.66) | £1.05 |
| | – | – | |
ECG electrocardiogram, EEG electroencephalogram, GP general practitioner, NA not applicable, NHS National Health Service, SD standard deviation
aSource: Curtis (2013): unit costs of health and social care 2013 (15.7 Consultant: psychiatric—per face-to-face contact. Excludes cost of qualifications) [29]. Inflated to 2015 prices using the hospital and community health services (HCHS) index [30]
bSource: Department of Health (2015): national schedule of reference costs year: 2014–15—all NHS trusts and NHS foundation trusts—outpatient attendances data (656 clinical psychology) [31]
cSource: Curtis and Burns (2015): unit costs of health and social care 20,155 (10.8b general practitioner—unit costs. Per-patient contact lasting 11.7 min. Cost excludes cost of qualification) [30]
dSource: Curtis and Burns (2015): unit costs of health and social care 2015 [10.4 nurse specialist (community)—unit costs. Per hour. Cost excludes cost of qualification] [30]
eSource: Curtis and Burns (2015): unit costs of health and social care 2015 [10.6 nurse (GP practice)—unit costs. Based on £47 per hour and consultation lasting 15.5 min. Cost excludes cost of qualification] [30]
fSource: Department of Health (2015): national schedule of reference costs year: 20,145—NHS trusts and NHS foundation trusts: directly accessed: pathology services. DAPS05—Hematology [31]
gSource: Department of Health (2015): national schedule of reference costs year: 2014–15—NHS trusts and NHS foundation trusts: direct access: diagnostic services EY51Z—electrocardiogram monitoring and stress testing [31]
hSource: Department of Health (2015): national schedule of reference costs—year 2014–15—NHS trusts and NHS foundation trusts: direct access: diagnostic services. AA33C—conventional EEG, EMG or nerve conduction studies with length of stay 2 days or less, 19 years and over [31]
iSource: Department of Health (2015): national schedule of reference costs year: 2014–15—NHS trusts and NHS foundation trusts: directly accessed pathology services. DAPS06—immunology [31]
Univariate sensitivity analysis input parameter estimates
| Input parameter | Base-case analysis | Sensitivity analysis | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Value | Source | Value | Source | |
| Efficacy (lower CrI) | RR for treatment response (drug vs. placebo) | Bayesian NMA | RR for treatment response (lower CrI) | Bayesian NMA |
| LDX | 2.14 | 1.71 | ||
| ATX | 1.65 | 1.00 | ||
| MPH-ER | 1.84 | 1.44 | ||
| Placebo | 0.3084 | 0.264 | ||
| Efficacy (upper CrI) | RR for treatment response (drug vs. placebo) | Bayesian NMA | RR for treatment response (upper CrI) | Bayesian NMA |
| LDX | 2.14 | 2.57 | ||
| ATX | 1.65 | 2.32 | ||
| MPH-ER | 1.84 | 2.23 | ||
| Placebo | 0.3084 | 0.353 | ||
| Safety (mean discontinuation rate −1SD) | Discontinuation rate due to adverse events | Bayesian NMA | Calculated discontinuation rate due to adverse events | Discontinuation rate due to adverse events calculated as mean discontinuation rate −1SD using posterior distributions from the Bayesian MTC |
| LDX | 3.21 | 1.39 | ||
| ATX | 2.67 | 2.04 | ||
| MPH-ER | 2.76 | 2.18 | ||
| Placebo | 0.044 | 0.04 | ||
| Safety (mean discontinuation rate +1SD) | Discontinuation rate due to adverse events | Bayesian NMA | Calculated discontinuation rate due to adverse events | Discontinuation rate due to adverse events calculated as mean discontinuation rate +1SD using posterior distributions from the Bayesian MTC |
| LDX | 3.21 | 5.02 | ||
| ATX | 2.67 | 3.29 | ||
| MPH-ER | 2.76 | 3.33 | ||
| Placebo | 0.044 | 0.05 | ||
| Health-state utility | Responder/non-responder: | Mitsi et al. [ | Responder/non-responder: | Matza et al. [ |
| LDX | 0.76/0.68 | 0.82/0.68 | ||
| ATX | 0.76/0.68 | 0.82/0.68 | ||
| MPH-ER | 0.76/0.68 | 0.82/0.68 | ||
| Resource utilization costs | Responder/non-responder (per 28 days): £115.84/£337.82 | Resource use estimates based on survey of UK clinicians; unit costs based on national sources | Responder/non-responder (per 28 days): £139.17/£337.82 | Assumption (annual responder costs increased by one additional visit to psychiatrist and one to GP) |
| Time horizon: all treatments | 1 year | Assumption | 5 years | Assumption |
| Drug-costing methoda | Method A: using mean doses from trials | Average doses estimated using doses reported in trials included in the MTCb | Method B: using real-world daily consumption from the IMS databasec | Assumption |
| LDX | £70.90 | £66.56 | ||
| MPH-ER | £56.24 | £57.83 | ||
| ATX | £71.03 | £75.36 | ||
| Length of titration periodd | ||||
| LDX | 28 days | Assumption | 28 days | Assumption |
| MPH-ER | 28 days | 28 days | ||
| ATX | 28 days | 84 days | ||
ATX atomoxetine, CRI credible interval, LDX lisdexamfetamine dimesylate, MPH-ER methylphenidate extended release, MTC mixed-treatment comparison, NMA network meta-analysis, RR response rate, SD standard deviation, UK United Kingdom
aDifferences in drug costs between Method A and Method B are applicable only to the post titration costs. The same costs for the titration period were used in both methods
bWeighted average doses from trials (51.5 mg for LDX, 50.93 mg for MPH-ER and 80 mg for ATX) were multiplied by the costs per milligram of the corresponding drug. Each per-milligram cost was based on the cost of the package with a tablet size closest to a given average dose
cReal-world daily UK consumption estimates (1.62 tablets per day for MPH-ER and 1.39 tablets per day for ATX) were derived from the IMS databases [Shire Pharmaceuticals: IMS Midas and IMS Prescription Databases 2013. (2014)]. For LDX, real-life usage was based on an assumption (1 tablet per day)
dVariable length of titration period is applicable only to analyses containing ATX. The assumption of 84 days as the length of the titration period for ATX reflects that, in a proportion of ATX patients, response may be achieved gradually over approximately 3 months
Base-case analysis results (per patient)
| Scenario | Comparisons | Total costs (£) | Total QALYs | Incremental costs (£) | Incremental QALYs | ICER (£ per QALY) | INMB (£)a |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | MPH-ER vs | 3384 | 0.718 | −4.78 | 0.005 | LDX dominant | 109 |
| LDX | 3379 | 0.724 | |||||
| B | ATX vs | 3579 | 0.715 | −199.93 | 0.009 | LDX dominant | 381 |
| LDX | 3379 | 0.724 |
ATX atomoxetine, ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, INMB incremental net monetary benefit, LDX lisdexamfetamine dimesylate, MPH-ER methylphenidate extended release, QALY quality-adjusted life year
aAt £20,000 per QALY
Univariate sensitivity analysis results (per patient)
| Parameter | Scenario A: LDX vs. MPH-ER | Scenario B: LDX vs. ATX |
|---|---|---|
| Base-case resultsa | QALYs: 0.005 | QALYs: 0.009 |
| Costs: −£4.78 | Costs: −£199.93 | |
| ICER: Dominant | ICER: Dominant | |
| INMBb: £109 | INMB: £381 | |
| Efficacy (lower CrI bound) | QALYs: 0.004 | QALYs: 0.012 |
| Costs: −£5.83 | Costs: −£270.80 | |
| ICER: Dominant | ICER: Dominant | |
| INMB: £88 | INMB: £508 | |
| Efficacy (upper CrI bound) | QALYs: 0.007 | QALYs: 0.004 |
| Costs: −£7.82 | Costs: −£82.34 | |
| ICER: Dominant | ICER: Dominant | |
| INMB: £142 | INMB: £169 | |
| Safety—rates of discontinuation due to adverse events (mean −1SD) | QALYs: 0.008 | QALYs: 0.012 |
| Costs: −£69.85 | Costs: −£271.24 | |
| ICER: Dominant | ICER: Dominant | |
| INMB: £232 | INMB: £511 | |
| Safety—rates of discontinuation due to adverse events (mean +1SD) | QALYs: 0.002 | QALYs: 0.005 |
| Costs: £75.24 | Costs: −£112.48 | |
| ICER: £43,525 per QALY | ICER: Dominant | |
| INMB: −£41 | INMB: £221 | |
| Health-state utility; from Matza et al. [ | QALYs: 0.009 | QALYs: 0.016 |
| Costs: −£4.78 | Costs: −£199.93 | |
| ICER: Dominant | ICER: Dominant | |
| INMB: £188 | INMB: £516 | |
| Resource utilization; responder costs increased by one additional visit to psychiatrist and one to GP | QALYs: 0.005 | QALYs: 0.009 |
| Costs: £15.06 | Costs: −£165.68 | |
| ICER: £2878 per QALY | ICER: Dominant | |
| INMB: £90 | INMB: £346 | |
| Time horizon 5 years | QALYs: 0.025 | QALYs: 0.044 |
| Costs: −£147.12 | Costs: −£1050.09 | |
| ICER: Dominant | ICER: Dominant | |
| INMB: £652 | INMB: £1921 | |
| Drug-costing method; dosing taken from observational data | QALYs: 0.005 | QALYs: 0.009 |
| Costs: £39.75 | Costs: −£434.37 | |
| ICER: £7593 per QALY | ICER: Dominant | |
| INMB: £65 | INMB: £615 | |
| Length of titration period; ATX titration period 12 weeks | NA | QALYs: 0.015 |
| Costs: −£441.92 | ||
| ICER: Dominant | ||
| INMB: £733 |
ATX atomoxetine, CrI credible interval, GP general practitioner, ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, INMB incremental net monetary benefit, LDX lisdexamfetamine dimesylate, MPH-ER methylphenidate extended release, NA not applicable, QALY quality-adjusted life year, SD standard deviation
aIn the base-case analysis, the following values were used for the parameters examined in the sensitivity analysis: utility = 0.76 (responder), 0.68 (non-responder); per-month non-drug costs = £115.84 (responder), £337.82 (non-responder); time horizon = 1 year; per-month drug costs = £70.90 (LDX), £56.24 (MPH-ER), £71.03 (ATX); length of ATX titration period = 4 weeks
bThe INMB was calculated for the threshold of £20,000 per QALY using the following formula: INMB = incremental QALYs × threshold − incremental cost
Fig. 2One-way sensitivity analysis results. ATX atomoxetine, LDX lisdexamfetamine dimesylate, MPH-ER methylphenidate extended release, QALY quality-adjusted life year
Scenario analysis results (per patient)
| Parameter | Scenario A: LDX vs. MPH-ER | Scenario B: LDX vs. ATX |
|---|---|---|
| Scenario analysisa, with health-state utility from Mitsi et al. [ | QALYs: 0.025 | QALYs: 0.044 |
| Costs: £12.04 | Costs: −£775.38 | |
| ICER: £477 per QALY | ICER: Dominant | |
| INMBb: £493 | INMB: £1646 | |
| Scenario analysisa, with health-state utility from Matza et al. [ | QALYs: 0.044 | QALYs: 0.076 |
| Costs: £12.04 | Costs: −£775.38 | |
| ICER: £273 per QALY | ICER: Dominant | |
| INMB: £871 | INMB: £2300 |
ATX atomoxetine, ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, INMB incremental net monetary benefit, LDX lisdexamfetamine dimesylate, MPH-ER methylphenidate extended release, QALY quality-adjusted life year
aIn the scenario analysis, the following alternative values to the base-case analysis were used: per-month non-drug costs = £115.84 (responder), £299.00 (non-responder); time horizon = 5 years
bThe INMB was calculated for the threshold of £20,000 per QALY using the following formula: INMB = incremental QALYs × threshold − incremental cost
Probabilistic sensitivity analysis results (per patient)
| Comparisons | Mean total cost (£) | Mean total QALYs | Mean incremental cost (95% CrI) (£) | Mean incremental QALY (95% CrI) | ICER (95% CrI) (£ per QALY) | Probability of cost-effectiveness (%)a |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LDX vs | 3379.34 | 0.725 | –8.14 (−403.88 to 363.51) | 0.006 (–0.011 to 0.031) | Dominant (undefined, undefined)b | 61 |
| MPH-ER | 3387.48 | 0.718 | ||||
| LDX vs | 3377.19 | 0.723 | −195.58 (−675.95 to 269.06) | 0.009 (−0.012 to 0.043) | Dominant (undefined, undefined) | 80 |
| ATX | 3572.77 | 0.714 |
ATX atomoxetine, CrI credible interval, ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, LDX lisdexamfetamine dimesylate, MPH-ER methylphenidate extended release, QALY quality-adjusted life year
aAt £20,000 per QALY
bThe CrIs for probabilistic ICER estimates are not defined when these estimates are spread over multiple quadrants of the cost-effectiveness plane
Fig. 3Cost-effectiveness acceptability curves. a LDX vs. MPH-ER. b LDX vs. ATX. ATX atomoxetine, LDX lisdexamfetamine dimesylate, MPH-ER methylphenidate extended release, QALY quality-adjusted life year