| Literature DB >> 29691782 |
Laurence M Djatche1, Stefan Varga1, Robert D Lieberthal2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Suboptimal adherence to aspirin therapy for secondary prevention of cardiovascular (CV) events is an important public health problem. Prior studies have demonstrated non-adherent patients are at higher risk of experiencing CV events.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29691782 PMCID: PMC6249193 DOI: 10.1007/s41669-018-0075-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacoecon Open ISSN: 2509-4262
Fig. 1Cost-effectiveness model structure. Cost-effectiveness model structure comparing aspirin adherence vs aspirin non-adherence for secondary prevention of CV events. At the decision node (□), patients were assigned as being adherent or non-adherent to aspirin based on the rate found in the literature. Patients entered the decision node with a prior CV event. In each 1-year cycle, patients may experience an event (non-fatal or fatal) or no event if they are alive. This model was applied to a population without co-morbidity (non-diabetic model) and a population with type II diabetes (type II diabetes model). CV cardiovascular, GI gastrointestinal, MI myocardial infarction, PAD peripheral arterial disease
Probability and utilities of events used in the cost-effectiveness model
| Variable | Patients without comorbid diabetes | Patients with type II diabetes | Sensitivity analysis range tested | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adherent | Non-adherent | References | Adherent | Non-adherent | References | ||
| Eventa | 0.158 | 0.174 | Calculated | 0.395 | 0.464 | Calculated | 50–200% of base case |
| Non-fatal eventb | 0.035 | 0.026 | Calculated | 0.069 | 0.070 | Calculated | 50–200% of base case |
| MI | 0.008 | 0.012 | [ | 0.022 | 0.032 | [ | |
| Stroke | 0.011 | 0.014 | [ | 0.029 | 0.036 | [ | |
| PAD amputation | – | – | Assumption | 0.002 | 0.002 | [ | |
| GI bleeding | 0.016 | – | [ | 0.016 | – | [ | |
| Fatal events | 0.123 | 0.148 | [ | 0.326 | 0.394 | [ | |
| No eventc | 0.842 | 0.826 | Calculated | 0.605 | 0.536 | Calculated | |
| Utilities | [ | [ | 50–110% of base case | ||||
| MI | 0.850 | 0.850 | 0.850 | 0.850 | |||
| Stroke | 0.650 | 0.650 | 0.650 | 0.650 | |||
| PAD amputation | – | – | 0.610 | 0.610 | |||
| GI bleeding | 0.800 | 0.800 | 0.800 | 0.800 | |||
GI gastrointestinal, MI myocardial infarction, PAD peripheral arterial disease
aRate of events is the sum of non-fatal events and fatal events
bRate of non-fatal events is the sum of the rate of MI, stroke, PAD amputation and GI bleeding
cRate of no events is the rate of events subtracted from 1
Cost variables from the literature used in the cost effectiveness model
| Event | Cost per event in the literature | Year reported in the literature | 2016 cost | References | Base-case sensitivity analysis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MI | US$16,563 | 2006 | US$22,119 | [ | 50–200% of base case |
| Stroke | US$13,878 | 2006 | US$18,533 | [ | 50–200% of base case |
| PAD amputation | US$7700 | 2006 | US$10,283 | [ | 50–200% of base case |
| Fatal CHF | US$8782 | 2006 | US$11,728 | [ | 50–200% of base case |
| GI bleeding | US$6866 | 1989 | US$20,489 | [ | 50–200% of base case |
CHF congestive heart failure, GI gastrointestinal, MI myocardial infarction, PAD peripheral arterial disease
Cost-effectiveness results of aspirin adherence for the base case in the non-diabetic population and type II diabetes population
| Population | Strategy | Average 5-year cost per member | Average 5-year survival (QALYs) | Cost-effectiveness (cost per QALY) | Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (cost per QALY) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patients without comorbid diabetes | Non-adherent | US$8414 | 3.15 | US$2671 | Reference |
| Adherent | US$8420 | 3.40 | US$2476 | US$25 | |
| Patients with type II diabetes | Non-adherent | US$14,024 | 1.37 | US$10,237 | Reference |
| Adherent | US$13,727 | 1.73 | US$7934 | Dominant |
QALY quality-adjusted life year
Fig. 2One-way sensitivity analyses tornado diagram for aspirin adherence vs aspirin non-adherence. The horizontal bars show the effect varying each variable over a range of values has on the ICER. The larger the horizontal bar, the more sensitive the model is to the varying parameter. a Tornado diagram evaluating the influence of each parameter of the non-diabetic model on ICER. b Tornado diagram evaluating the influence of each parameter of the type II diabetes model on ICER. GI gastrointestinal, ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, MI myocardial infarction, PAD peripheral arterial disease
| Medication adherence remains a healthcare concern for providers and payers due to the evidence that medication adherence remains suboptimal in cardiovascular (CV) disease patients. |
| This paper reports the clinical and economic implications of aspirin adherence among CV disease patients without comorbid diabetes and with type II diabetes. |
| This paper shows there was a cost decrease only in patients with type II diabetes. |