| Literature DB >> 28761876 |
A Poscia1, J Stojanovic1, F Kheiraoui1, E M Proli2, F Scaldaferri3, M Volpe4, M L Di Pietro1, A Gasbarrini3, L Fabrizio5, S Boccia6, C Favaretti1.
Abstract
Iron deficiency anaemia (IDA) is the main extraintestinal manifestation affecting patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). The Health Technology Assessment approach was applied to evaluate the sustainability of intravenous (IV) iron formulations in the Italian hospital setting, with particular focus on ferric carboxymaltose. Data on the epidemiology of IBD and associated IDA, in addition to the efficacy and safety of IV iron formulations currently used in Italy, were retrieved from scientific literature. A hospital-based cost-analysis of the outpatient delivery of IV iron treatments was performed. Organizational and ethical implications were discussed. IDA prevalence in IBD patients varies markedly from 9 to 73%. IV iron preparations were proven to have good efficacy and safety profiles, and ferric carboxymaltose provided a fast correction of haemoglobin and serum ferritin levels in iron-deficient patients. Despite a higher price, ferric carboxymaltose would confer a beneficial effect to the hospital, in terms of reduced cost related to individual patient management and additionally to the patient by reducing the number of infusions and admissions to healthcare facilities. Ethically, the evaluation is appropriate due to its efficacy and compliance. This assessment supports the introduction of ferric carboxymaltose in the Italian outpatient setting.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28761876 PMCID: PMC5518486 DOI: 10.1155/2017/3470893
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Summary of individual studies on prevalence of anaemia in IBD, retrieved from recent literature reviews.
| Author | Year | Country | Patients ( | Prevalence of anaemia (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IBD | CD | UC | ||||
| Koutroubakis et al. | 2016 | USA | 1,821 | 50.1 | 53.3 (574/1,077) | 44.7 (333/744) |
| Hoivik et al. | 2014 | Norway | 756 | 29.1 | 48.8 (116/237) | 20.2 (104/519) |
| Sjoberg et al. | 2014 | Sweden | 749 | 30 | 42 (107/254 | 24 (119/495) |
| Toruner et al. | 2014 | Turkey | 398 | 45.11 | 24 (45/186) | 22 (47/212) |
| Rejler et al. | 2012 | Sweden | 485 | 6 | 9 | 5 |
| Bager et al. | 2011 | Denmark, Norway, Sweden | 429 | 17 | 23.6 (60/254) | 7.4 (13/175) |
| Bergamaschi et al. | 2010 | Italy | 263 | 36.96 | 43 (71/165) | 34 (33/98) |
| Blumenstein et al. | 2011/2008 | Germany | 636 | 18.87 | 17 (57/336) | 21 (63/300) |
| Goodhand et al. | 2011 | UK | 124 | 40 | 48 | 45 |
| Oustamanolakis et al. | 2011 | Greece | 100 | 42 | 42 (20/48) | 41 (21/51) |
| Romberg-Camps et al. | 2010 | Netherlands | 707 | 9.2 | 11.5 | 7.3 |
| Voegtlin et al. | 2010 | Switzerland | 241 | 19.92 | 17 (23/137) | 24 (25/104) |
| De la Morena and Gisbert | 2009 | Spain | 253 | 24.11 | 32 (43/136) | 15 (18/117) |
| Vijverman et al. | 2006 | Belgium | 170 | 24.7 | / | / |
| Ebinger et al. | 2004 | Germany | 599 | 4.8 | 3.2 (13/390) | 6.2 (13/209) |
| Ershler et al. | 2005 | USA | 7200 | 13 | / | / |
| Lakatos et al. | 2003 | Hungary | 254 | 26.5 | 35.8 | 25 |
| Revel-Vilke et al. | 2000 | Israel | 63 | 41.3 | / | / |
| Schreiber et al. | 1996 | Germany | 676 | 31.7 | 26 (88/334) | 37 (126/342) |
| Gasche et al. | 1994 | Austria | 49 | / | 33 (16/49) | / |
| Horina et al. | 1993 | Austria | 85 | 33 | / | / |
Modified from Filmann et al. [23], Stein et al. [21], and Kulnigg and Gasche [22].
Intravenous iron formulations available in Italy.
| Active ingredient | Ferric gluconate | Ferric carboxymaltose | Iron sucrose |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pharmaceutical form (volume in ml) | po/IV vial (5) | IV vial (10) | IV vial (5) |
|
| |||
| Amount of elemental iron/vial (mg) | 62.5 | 500 | 100 |
|
| |||
| Indications | Treatment of iron deficiency anaemia in patients with lack of response to oral iron | Treatment of iron deficiency anaemia in patients with known intolerance or lack of response to oral iron | Iron deficiency: in case of a clinical need for rapid release of iron from reserves: |
|
| |||
| Maximum dose that can be administered as a single infusion (mg) | From 62.5 to 125 | 1000 | 200 |
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| |||
| Cumulative dose prescribed /patient (based on the most commonly calculated iron needs) (mg) | 1000 | 1000 | 1000 |
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| Time necessary to reach maximum single dose (min) | “Very slowly” | 15 | 30 |
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| Number of sessions/visits needed to instil the prescribed dose of 1000 mg (RCP) | 16 for a single dosage of 62,5 mg and | 1 | 5 |
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| Cumulative time necessary to instil the prescribed dose of 1000 mg (minutes) | (i) 800 when applying “very slowly” (50 per every infusion of 62.5 mg) | 15 | 150 |
Cost analysis: base model.
| Base model | Ferric carboxymaltose 1000 Mg | Ferric gluconate 1000 Mg | Ferric gluconate 1000 Mg |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of exams | 559 | 559 | 559 |
| Administration time (hours) | 0.41 | 14.72 | 7.36 |
| Cost of labour (€) | 24.34 | 405.49 | 216.56 |
| Medication and | 182.81 | 36.81 | 25.44 |
| Total costs (€) | 207.15 | 442.30 | 242.00 |
| Regional reimbursement (€) | 108.91 | 80.66 | 56.66 |
| Reimbursement costs (€) | −98.24 | −361.64 | −185.34 |
Cost analysis: summary of the sensitivity analysis—best and worst case.
| Total iron dose for patient | Variables | Ferric carboxymaltose | Ferric gluconate | Ferric gluconate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1000 Mg | Administration time (hours) | 0.41–0.58 | 14.72–38.72 | 7.36–19.36 |
| Labor cost (€) | 24.34–28.70 | 405.49–1017.47 | 216.56–522.55 | |
| Medication and | 86.07–271.91 | 34.38–45.9 | 23.01–34.53 | |
| Total costs (€) | 110.41–300.61 | 439.87–1.063.31 | 239.57–557.08 | |
| Regional reimbursement (€) | 108.91 | 80.66 | 56.66 | |
| Reimbursement cost (€) | −1.50–−191.70 | −359.21–−982.65 | −182.91–−500.42 | |
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| ||||
| 500 Mg | Administration time (hours) | 0.41–0.58 | 7.36–19.36 | 3.68–9.68 |
| Labor cost (€) | 24.34–28.70 | 216.56–522.55 | 122.10 –275.09 | |
| Medication and | 43.44–136.36 | 26.54–33.26 | 15.17–21.89 | |
| Total costs (€) | 67.78–165.64 | 233.75–545.50 | 133.61–292.36 | |
| Regional reimbursement (€) | 66.29 | 56.66 | 44.66 | |
| Reimbursement cost (€) | −1.49–−99.35 | −177.09–−488.84 | −88.95–−247.70 | |