| Literature DB >> 29667146 |
Przemysław Holko1, Paweł Kawalec2, Andrzej Pilc2,3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The aim was to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of Crohn's disease (CD) treatment with vedolizumab and ustekinumab after failure of therapy with tumor necrosis factor-α antagonists (anti-TNFs).Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29667146 PMCID: PMC5999163 DOI: 10.1007/s40273-018-0653-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacoeconomics ISSN: 1170-7690 Impact factor: 4.981
Fig. 1Markov model diagram. “CR” indicates clinical remission, “R” response without remission (mild, moderate or severe Crohn’s disease), “NR” non-response (moderate or severe Crohn’s disease) and “S” any surgery for Crohn’s disease (criterion for discontinuation of biologics in some cases). “Best supportive care” was defined as an intensified standard of care (standard treatments and surgery) among patients who had failed or had contraindications to therapy with all available biologics (the module included the response rate observed in the placebo arm of the clinical trials). The “standard of care” module included 7 groups of presented states, allowing the time since the last dose of a biologic agent to be accounted for. “End of treatment” included elective discontinuation due to therapeutic success and completion of the 12-month treatment period. “Relapse” was defined as progression to the NR state. No surgery was assumed during induction treatment with biologics (first 3 cycles of the biologic treatment). Biologics were used in the NR state only during induction treatment
Main input parameters
| Value | Source | |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Probability of response induction: infliximab and adalimumab (anti-TNF naive) | 0.684 | Meta-analysis [ |
| Probability of response induction: placebo (anti-TNF failure) | 0.210 | Meta-analysis [ |
| OR of response induction vs. placebo (anti-TNF failure) | ||
| Vedolizumab | 2.67 | [ |
| Ustekinumab | 2.75 | Meta-analysis [ |
| OR of remission maintenance vs. placebo | ||
| Infliximab/adalimumab (anti-TNF naive) | 2.80/5.10 | NMA [ |
| Vedolizumab (anti-TNF failure) | 2.60 | [ |
| Ustekinumab (anti-TNF failure) | 1.96 | Meta-analysis [ |
| Discontinuation due to adverse events | ||
| Infliximab: cumulative rate | 0.076 | Meta-analysis [ |
| OR, infliximab vs. adalimumab/vedolizumab | 5.56/4.17 | NMA [ |
| OR, infliximab vs. ustekinumab | 2.51 | [ |
| Share of CD in remission among responders | ||
| Infliximab/adalimumab (anti-TNF naive) | 0.485/0.615 | Meta-analysis [ |
| BSC (anti-TNF failure) | 0.456 | Meta-analysis [ |
| Vedolizumab (anti-TNF failure) | 0.568 | [ |
| Ustekinumab (anti-TNF failure) | 0.503 | Meta-analysis [ |
| Share of mild CD among responders without remission | 0.724 | [ |
| IRR of surgery: during vs. after biologic treatment | 0.26 | Analysis of 1393 patientsb |
| Share of surgeries that result in biologic treatment discontinuation | 0.407 | Analysis of 1393 patientsb |
| Relapse rate after biologics discontinuation | 0.0707 per cycle | [ |
| HR of relapse: failure vs. elective discontinuation | 1.23 | [ |
| Probability of retreatment success | 0.92 | [ |
|
| ||
| CR state (clinical remission) | 0.908 | [ |
| R state (response without CD in remission) | 0.822 | [ |
| NR state (non-response) | 0.727 | [ |
| S state (surgery) | 0.878 | [ |
| Multiplicator of state’s utility for aging of the cohort | 0.76–1.00 | [ |
|
| ||
| Net price of vedolizumab, 300 mg viala | €1872.37 | Without VAT, margins [ |
| Net price of ustekinumab, 130 or 90 mg viala | €2362.80 | Without VAT, margins [ |
| Cost of 1 mg of infliximab/adalimumab (NFZ) | €2.64/€9.73 | With VAT, margins [ |
| Administration of infliximab or vedolizumab (NFZ) | €156.46 | Per each administrationb |
| Administration of adalimumab or ustekinumab (NFZ) | €119.28 | Every 4 to 12 weeksb |
| Diagnostic procedures during biologic treatment (NFZ) | €52.42 per cycle | Analysis of 1393 patientsb |
| Healthcare costs, per cycle | ||
| During biologic treatment: NFZ/patients | €79.49/€7.31 | Analysis of 1393 patientsb |
| After treatment, standard of care: NFZ/patients | €113.61/€7.93 | Analysis of 1393 patientsb |
| After treatment, BSC: NFZ/patients | €144.70/€8.03 | Analysis of 1393 patientsb |
| Surgery and care after procedure: NFZ/patients | €1,170.06/€10.07 | Analysis of 1393 patientsb |
| Non-medical costs (patients) | ||
| CR state (clinical remission) | €12.62/€167.96 | [ |
| R state (response without CD in remission) | €23.28/€349.66 | [ |
| NR state (non-response) | €29.59/€421.94 | [ |
| S state (surgery) | €22.00/€751.21 | [ |
Anti-TNF tumor necrosis factor-α antagonist, BSC best supportive care, CD Crohn’s disease, HR hazard ratio, IRR incidence rate ratio, NFZ Narodowy Fundusz Zdrowia (Polish National Health Fund), NMA network meta-analyses, OR odds ratio, VAT value added tax
aMultiplied by 1.134 to obtain the cost of vial from the NFZ perspective
bA retrospective analysis of 1393 adults with CD who used biologics in Poland (see Electronic Supplementary Material for the details)
cSpecial diet, transportation to the medical facility, etc
dAbsenteeism, presenteeism among patients at productivity age, loss of productivity at unpaid job (if not compensated by caregivers), and informal care; among patients aged ≥ 65 years, the values were reduced by 80–90% (see Electronic Supplementary Material, Supplementary Table 6)
Results of base-case analysis
| Status quo | New strategy with vedolizumab | New strategy with ustekinumab | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Health outcomes | |||
| Life years | 16.316 | 16.597 | 16.584 |
| Life years with CD in remission | 8.749 | 9.514 | 9.468 |
| QALYs | 13.258 | 13.623 | 13.608 |
| Costs (economic perspective) | |||
| All biologic agents (NFZ); incl. ustekinumab or vedolizumab | €14,744.17 | €22,210.41; incl. €6784.85 | €23,397.90; incl. €7901.22 |
| Administration and diagnostic procedures during biologic treatment (NFZ) | €3602.24 | €4469.20 | €4216.21 |
| Healthcare after (i.e., “standard of care”) and during biologic treatment (NFZ) | €15,183.84 | €18,645.69 | €18,589.90 |
| “Best supportive care” (NFZ) | €8002.52 | €3419.03 | €3472.63 |
| All above healthcare costs (NFZ) | €41,532.77 | €48,744.34 | €49,676.64 |
| All healthcare costs (patients) | €1415.94 | €1430.05 | €1429.06 |
| Non-medical direct costs (patients) | €3315.96 | €3220.34 | €3223.66 |
| Indirect costs (society) | €45,696.17 | €44,166.35 | €44,225.30 |
| Total cost from the societal perspective | €91,960.84 | €97,561.08 | €98,554.66 |
| Cost-effectiveness | |||
| ICER vs. status quo (per QALY gained) | Reference | €15,369 | €18,878 |
| ICER, ascending (per QALY gained) | Reference | €15,369 | Dominated |
CD Crohn’s disease, ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, incl. including, NFZ Narodowy Fundusz Zdrowia (Polish National Health Fund), QALY quality-adjusted life year
Fig. 2Results of probabilistic sensitivity analysis: the scatter plot (a) and the cost-effectiveness acceptability curves (b). The gray circles and grey line indicate the results of a new strategy with vedolizumab compared with status quo; the black circles and black line indicate a new strategy with ustekinumab compared with status quo. The dashed line on the scatter plot indicates the threshold of €31,500 per QALY gained. QALY quality-adjusted life year
Fig. 3Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios in relation to the position of ustekinumab and vedolizumab in the sequence of biologic treatments of Crohn’s disease. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios are presented in relation to (1) the share of best supportive care (BSC) in the last line (third line for the new strategy; second line for status quo; the BSC of status quo was replaced in part or full by vedolizumab or ustekinumab in the new strategy); (2) first-line treatment (a, b infliximab; c, d adalimumab); and (3) the share of vedolizumab (a, c) or ustekinumab (b, d) in the second line of the new strategy (the remaining patients were using the treatment or BSC in the third line, after failure of therapy with the second-line tumor necrosis factor-α antagonist). The gray filled area indicates a incremental cost-effectiveness ratio above the threshold of €31,500 per quality-adjusted life year gained
Fig. 4Tornado diagram for deterministic sensitivity analyses. The dashed line indicates the threshold of €31,500 per quality-adjusted life year gained. BCS best supportive care (intensified standard of care that included standard treatments and surgery), CD Crohn’s disease, CI confidence interval, ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, NFZ Narodowy Fundusz Zdrowia (Polish National Health Fund)
| Ustekinumab and vedolizumab are effective treatments of Crohn’s disease (CD) with uncertain pharmacoeconomic value after failure of therapy with tumor necrosis factor-α antagonists (anti-TNFs). |
| Ustekinumab and vedolizumab treatment after failure of anti-TNF therapy appears to be cost-effective from the societal perspective |
| Sensitivity analyses revealed that the conclusion was influenced by the course of the disease (e.g., relapse rate) among patients who failed or had contraindications to therapy with infliximab and adalimumab. The highest economic value of ustekinumab or vedolizumab was estimated after failure of therapies with both anti-TNFs |