| Literature DB >> 29255367 |
Anke van Engen1, Montserrat Casamayor2, Soyoung Kim3, Maureen Watt4, Isaac Odeyemi4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The incidence of azole-resistant Candida infections is increasing. Consequently, guidelines for treating systemic Candida infection (SCI) recommend a "de-escalation" strategy: initial broad-spectrum antifungal agents (e.g., echinocandins), followed by switching to fluconazole if isolates are fluconazole sensitive, rather than "escalation" with initial fluconazole treatment and then switching to echinocandins if isolates are fluconazole resistant. However, fluconazole may continue to be used as first-line treatment in view of its low acquisition costs. The aim of this study was, therefore, to evaluate the budget impact of the de-escalation strategy using micafungin compared with the escalation strategy in France and Germany.Entities:
Keywords: Candida; de-escalation; fluconazole; micafungin
Year: 2017 PMID: 29255367 PMCID: PMC5722012 DOI: 10.2147/CEOR.S141548
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clinicoecon Outcomes Res ISSN: 1178-6981
Clinical and treatment-related model input parameters (based on Masterton et al22)
| Parameter | Sensitive | Resistant | Sources | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Value (SA range) | Distribution (parameters) | Value (SA range) | Distribution (parameters) | ||
| Clinical outcome, % | |||||
| Early mortality (day 3) | 9.84 (6.06–14.41) | Beta (n=19, N=193) | ES: 14.49 (7.28–17.14) | Beta (ES: n=19, N=193; DE: n=10, N=69) | |
| Late mortality (day 42) | 21.26 (15.53–27.63) | Beta (n=37, N=174) | ES: 50.85 (38.22–63.42) | Beta (ES: n=37, N=174; DE: n=10, N=69) | |
| Clinical success | 65.57 (60.00–71.00) | Beta (n=79, N=273) | 76.91 (74.00–80.00) | Beta (n=493, N=641) | |
| Mycological success | 61.62 (40.00–84.00) | None | 83.77 (76.00–91.00) | Beta (n=387, N=462) | |
| Treatment duration (days) | |||||
| Overall | 14 (10–19) | None | ES: 17 (13–19) | None | |
| Fluconazole | ES: 14 | None | ES: 3 | None | |
| Micafungin | ES: 0 DE: 3 | None | 14 | None | |
Notes:
Values for fluconazole-sensitive Candida infections were also applied to dose-dependent Candida infections, unless otherwise specified;
values were applied to DE and ES strategies, unless otherwise specified.
Data from: Slavin et al32;
Anaissie et al34;
Fluconazole: Anaissie et al,34 Phillips et al,35 Rex et al,36 Sipsas et al37;
Micafungin: Marfo and Guo,38 Kubiak et al,33 Pappas et al,29 Sidhu et al,51 Dupont et al,41 Kuse et al30;
Kujath et al,39 Nolla-Salas et al,40 Marfo and Guo,38 Pappas et al,29 Dupont et al41;
Chalmers and Bal28 and Mycamine Summary of Product Characteristics.27
Abbreviations: DE, de-escalation; ES, escalation; SA, sensitivity analyses.
Figure 1Candida epidemiology and fluconazole susceptibility. (A) France (calculated from Leroy et al,42 as described in the text); (B) Germany (calculated from Schmalreck et al43).
Notes: Fluconazole S-DD, fluconazole sensitivity is dose-dependent. Percentages may not total 100 due to rounding.
Abbreviation: C, Candida.
Costs and health resource utilization used in the model (based on Masterton et al22)
| Parameter | Value (95% CI) | Sources |
|---|---|---|
| Cost of anti-fungals (€) | ||
| Micafungin (100 mg vial) | France: 430.00 | |
| Germany: 631.77 | ||
| Fluconazole (100 mL vial; 2 mg/mL) | France: 24.24 | |
| Germany: 36.56 | ||
| Resource utilization | ||
| Additional hospitalization (days in general ward) | ES: 7.7 (3.0–14.6) | |
| DE: 0 | ||
| Daily cost of general ward (€) | France: 1,252 (1,075–1,411) | |
| Germany: 455 (391–513) |
Notes:
Values apply to all Candida fluconazole-susceptibility isolates, ES and DE strategies and both countries, unless otherwise stated;
additional hospitalization resulting from inappropriate treatment, i.e., initial fluconazole treatment of fluconazole-resistant infections.
From: Répertoire des Spécialités Pharmaceutiques, France, 2014;
WHO-CHOICE initiative 2008, inflated to 2014 prices;
Zilberberg et al6;
Agence Regionale de Sante 2012 and Institut National de la Statistique et des Études Économiques 2014, inflated to 2014 prices.
Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; DE, de-escalation; ES, escalation.
(A) Clinical outcomes and costs and (B) mycological success and costs of the escalation and de-escalation strategies in all patients with systemic Candida infection (42-day horizon)
| France
| Germany
| |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Escalation | De-escalation | Escalation | De-escalation | |
| Patients alive at 42 days (%) | 68.8 | 71.1 | 66.4 | 71.2 |
| Clinical success (%) | 45.5 | 47.2 | 44.3 | 48.0 |
| Hospitalization costs (€) | 633 | 0 | 475 | 0 |
| Medication costs (€) | 2,173 | 3,363 | 3,279 | 5,096 |
| Total costs | 2,806 | 3,363 | 3,754 | 5,096 |
| Incremental cost of de-escalation compared to escalation (€) | 557 | 2,152 | ||
| Patients alive at 42 days (%) | 68.8 | 71.1 | 66.4 | 71.2 |
| Mycological success (%) | 43.1 | 45.0 | 42.4 | 46.4 |
| Hospitalization costs (€) | 633 | 0 | 475 | 0 |
| Medication costs (€) | 2,302 | 4,002 | 3,407 | 6,670 |
| Total costs | 2,935 | 4,002 | 3,882 | 6,670 |
| Incremental cost of de-escalation compared to escalation (€) | 1,067 | 2,788 | ||
Figure 2Outcomes of the escalation and de-escalation strategies in patients with fluconazole-resistant systemic Candida infection (42-day horizon).
Figure 3Costs per patient of the escalation and de-escalation strategies in patients with fluconazole-resistant systemic Candida infection (42-day horizon).
Figure 4Tornado plots showing the results of one-way sensitivity analyses on incremental cost per patient of de-escalation compared to escalation in (A) Germany and (B) France, for (i) clinical success and (ii) mycological success. Results are shown as the difference from the base case scenario. (Ai) Germany, clinical success; (Aii) Germany, mycological success; (Bi) France, clinical success; (Bii) France, mycological success.
Abbreviation: C, Candida.