| Literature DB >> 29616460 |
Emily Eaton Turner1, Michelle Jenks2, Rachael McCool2, Chris Marshall2, Liesl Millar3, Hannah Wood2, Alison Peel2, Joyce Craig2, Andrew J Sims4,5.
Abstract
Memokath-051 is a thermo-expandable, nickel-titanium alloy spiral stent used to treat ureteric obstruction resulting from malignant or benign strictures. The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) selected Memokath-051 for evaluation. The company, PNN Medical, claimed Memokath-051 has clinical superiority and cost savings compared with double-J stents. It identified five studies reporting clinical evidence on Memokath-051 and constructed a de novo cost model comparing Memokath-051 to double-J stents. Results indicated that Memokath-051 generated cost savings of £4156 per patient over 2.5 years. The External Assessment Centre (EAC) critiqued the company's submission and completed substantial additional work. Sixteen studies were identified assessing Memokath-051 and all listed comparators in the scope (double-J stents, reconstructive surgery and metallic and alloy stents) except nephrostomy. Similar success rates were reported for Memokath-051 compared with double-J and Resonance stents and worse outcomes compared with other options with evidence available. The EAC updated the company's cost model structure and modified several inputs. The EAC's model estimated that Memokath-051 generated savings of at least £1619 per patient over 5 years compared with double-J stents, was cost neutral compared with other metallic stents and was cost saving compared with surgery up to month 55. Overall, Memokath-051 is likely to be cost saving in patients not indicated for reconstructive surgery and those expected to require a ureteral stent for at least 30 months. The Medical Technologies Advisory Committee (MTAC) reviewed the evidence and supported the case for adoption, issuing partially supportive recommendations published after public consultation as Medical Technologies Guidance 35.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29616460 PMCID: PMC6028873 DOI: 10.1007/s40258-018-0389-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Appl Health Econ Health Policy ISSN: 1175-5652 Impact factor: 2.561
Fig. 1EAC’s PRISMA diagram. EAC External Assessment Centre
Key details of the comparative studies deemed eligible for inclusion by the EAC (meets scope fully, partially or not at all)
| Publication/study (description) | Design and intervention(s) | Participants and settinga | Follow-up | Outcomes | EAC comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Akbarov 2017 [ | Observational study (retrospective) investigating Memokath-051 and IUR | Patients: patients with ureteral strictures (benign or malignant) | Mean follow-up period was 42 months | Technical success, clinical success and complications | Abstract only: limited information |
| Bolton 2015 [ | Observational study (case series) investigating Memokath-051 and Allium stents. Patients completed the USSQ | Patients: | NA: data collected from a one-off survey | Clinical success and complications | Abstract only: limited information |
| Kim 2014 [ | Observational study (retrospective) comparing efficacy and safety of Memokath-051 and UVENTA stents | Patients: | Memokath-051 group: mean follow-up of 13.6 (± 4.6) months. One patient died during follow-up. | Technical success, clinical success, length of time the stent remains in situ and complications | Authors suggest that careful patient selection and delicate insertion procedure are important to achieve better outcomes and fewer cases of stent migration with the Memokath-051 stent |
| Maan 2010 [ | Observational study (questionnaire survey) comparing QoL between double-J and Memokath-051 stents using the USSQ | Patients: | NA: data collected from a one-off survey | QoL measured using the USSQ, pain, stent removal/replacement | Study partially matches the scope and provides UK comparative data for a small number of outcomes |
| Nam 2015 [ | Observational study (case series) comparing Memokath-051 and Resonance stents | Patients: | Memokath-051: mean follow-up: 16 (range 4–98) months. | Clinical success, theatre time and QoL | Study partially matches the scope and provides comparative data for a small number of outcomes |
| NCT00166361 2014 [ | Non-randomised, open-label, clinical study investigating Memokath-051 vs double-J | Patients: | Monitoring continued for as long as the stent was in place | Length of time stent remains in situ and complications | Low number of subjects in each cohort |
EAC External Assessment Centre, IUR ileal ureteral replacement, NA not applicable, NR not reported, QoL quality of life, SD standard deviation, USSQ Ureteral Stent Symptom Questionnaire
aGender was not consistently reported in the studies. Where data were reported, details of gender have been included
Results of the clinical review
| Study | Success | Stent removal and replacement | Migration and encrustation | Operative time and hospital stay | Quality of life | Complications/adverse events |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| Akbarov 2017 [ | Technical success: NR | Removal: NR | Migration: | NR | NR | Memokath-051: |
| Bolton 2015 [ | Technical success: NR | Removal: NR | Migration: | NR | Results from the USSQ showed that patients noted mild flank pain following stent insertion and self-limiting haematuria | Ureteric perforation in 1 patient—unclear which treatment arm |
| Kim 2014 [ | Technical success: stent insertion technically successful in all cases | Removal: NR | Migration: | NR | NR | Intermittent flank pain, intermittent gross haematuria, or acute pyelonephritis: |
| Maan 2010 [ | NR | Removal: Memokath-051: 2 due to resolution of stricture (11%) | Migration: | NR | Patients responding ‘yes’ to pain: | Stent blockage: |
| Nam 2015 [ | Technical success: NR | Removal: NR | Migration: NR | Operative time: | Authors report that differences in USSQ scores were not statistically significant between stents; each produced similar scores | NR |
| NCT00166361 2014 [ | Technical success: NR | Removal: NR | Migration: | NR | NR | Serious adverse events reported by more than 1 patient in a treatment arm: |
|
| ||||||
| Agrawal 2009 [ | Technical success: NR | Removal: NR | Migration: | Operative time: NR | NR | Immediate complications: |
| Arya 2001 [ | Technical success: NR | Removal: 3 stents due to encrustation (23%) | Migration: 1 (8%) | NR | NR | NR |
| Bourdoumis 2014 [ | Technical success: NR | Removal: 1 stent due to encrustation (4%) | Migration: 2 (9%) | NR | NR | NR |
| Klarskov 2005 [ | Technical success: NR | Removal: 21 of the original 37 stents (57%); 4 of the 7 replacement stents (57%) | Migration: 10 (27%) | NR | NR | Complications during insertion procedure: 7 (19%) |
| Kulkarni 2001 [ | Technical success: NR | Removal: 1 stent due to demand by a patient with a psychiatric problem (3%) | Migration: 4 (11%) | NR | NR | NR |
| Papadopoulos 2010 [ | Technical success: NR | Removal: 3 stents migrated and were not replaced (23%) | Migration: 6 (46%) | Operative time: NR | NR | Ureteral strictures: 2 (15%) |
| Papatsoris 2010 [ | Technical success: NR | Removal: 6 stents overall (7%) due to: | Migration: 15 (17%) | Operative time: 23 min (range 17–52 min) | NR | No perioperative of immediate post-operative complications were recorded |
| Zaman 2011 [ | Technical success: insertion was successful in all cases without technical difficulty | Removal: NR | Migration: 5 (12%) | Operative time | NR | UTI: 3 (7%) |
IUR ileal ureteral replacement, NR not reported, QoL quality of life, USSQ Ureteral Stent Symptom Questionnaire, UTI urinary tract infection
Fig. 2Economic model schematic developed by the company. Asterisk refers to multipled by
Model input parameters used in company’s model
| Variable | Value per patient | Source | EAC critique |
|---|---|---|---|
| Theatre staff costs: Memokath-051 | £1160 | [ | Duration of procedure: procedure time of 4 h and a theatre time (all staff present apart from the surgeon) of 4.5 h. The EAC judged this to be too long based upon information provided by the company and experts |
| Theatre staff costs: double-J stent | £1160 | [ | Duration of procedure: as above |
| Theatre consumable costs: Memokath-051 | £1874 | [ | The company’s consumable cost includes a device cost of £1630. This is lower than the current list price of £1690 reported in the company’s submission |
| Theatre consumable costs: double-J stent | £109 | [ | The EAC deems this value appropriate based upon the AUH data [ |
| Procedure code/surgery tariff: Memokath-051 | £34 | [ | The EAC judges the inclusion of a tariff cost is inappropriate for analysis from the NHS and PSS perspective and excluded this parameter from its analysis |
| Procedure code/surgery tariff: double-J stent | £407 | [ | As above |
| 6-month follow-up costs: Memokath-051 | £143 | [ | The EAC deems this value appropriate based upon the AUH data. However, using national sources for unit costs would increase the cost [ |
| 6-month follow-up costs: double-J stent | £100 | No source provided | It is unclear how this cost was derived and is not included within the AUH data, thus is deemed inappropriate |
| Risk of unplanned exchange: Memokath-051 | £945 | Calculated as 25% of the undiscounted pathway-related cost for 2.5 years | The EAC judges that this cost has been applied incorrectly given that it was applied to the total per patient cost over 2.5 years as opposed to the insertion cost only |
| Risk of unplanned exchange: double-J stent | £0 | Zero as no risk factor for complications | Given that double-J stents undergo planned replacement, this is considered appropriate and is in line with clinical evidence [ |
AUH Aintree University Hospital, EAC External Assessment Centre, NHS National Health Service, PSS Personal Social Services
Fig. 3Economic model schematic developed by the EAC. EAC External Assessment Centre
Model input parameters used in EAC’s model
| Parameter | Memokath-051 | Double-J stent | UVENTA | Allium | Resonance | Reconstructive surgery |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Length of time in situ (no complications) | Company = 30 months | Company = 6 months | Company = NA | Company = NA | Company = NA | Company = NA |
| EAC = 60 months | EAC = 6 months | EAC = 18 months | EAC = 36 months | EAC = 12 months | EAC = NA | |
| Monthly risk for unplanned stent removal and replacement | Company = 0.95% (reported as 25% over 30 months) | 0% | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| EAC = 1.4% (4.41% vs UVENTA) | 0% | 0.49% | 0.49% | 1.4% | NA | |
| Monthly risk of UTI | Company = NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| EAC = 0.42% (1.25% vs surgery) | 0.42% | 0.42% | 0.42% | 0.42% | 0.17% | |
| Total cost of insertion | Company = £3068 | £1676 | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| EAC = £3010 | £786 | £2736 | £2936 | £2148 | £7414 (includes all follow-up costs) | |
| Monthly follow-up cost | Company = £23.75 | £16.67 | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| EAC = £42.50 | £0 | £42.50 | £42.50 | £21.25 | NA | |
| Total cost of replacement | Company = £3781 | £1676 | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| EAC = £3347 | £1052 | £3157 | £3357 | £2569 | NA | |
| Cost of UTI | Company = NA | |||||
| EAC = £37.32 | ||||||
EAC External Assessment Centre, NA not applicable, UTI urinary tract infection
| The case for adopting Memokath-051 compared with double-J stents for treating ureteric obstruction is partially supported by evidence. |
| The evidence is limited but suggests that in selected patients, Memokath-051 is effective at relieving ureteric obstruction and improving quality of life. When inserted by clinicians trained in using Memokath-051 specifically and in appropriate patients, Memokath-051 is associated with equivalent success rates and a better patient experience compared with double-J stents. |
| The cost consequences of adopting Memokath-051 are uncertain. However, when used in appropriate patients and by clinicians trained in its use, potential cost savings resulting from fewer repeat procedures may arise with Memokath-051. |
| The key challenges of the assessment resulted from the poor quality and quantity of available evidence and therefore uncertainty in conclusions. |