| Literature DB >> 29772018 |
Freekje van Asten1, Charlotte T J Michels2, Carel B Hoyng1, Gert Jan van der Wilt2, B Jeroen Klevering1, Maroeska M Rovers2, Janneke P C Grutters2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The discussion on the use of bevacizumab is still ongoing and often doctors are deterred from using bevacizumab due to legal or political issues. Bevacizumab is an effective, safe and inexpensive treatment option for neovascular age-related macular degeneration (AMD), albeit unregistered for the disease. Therefore, in some countries ophthalmologists use the equally effective but expensive drugs ranibizumab and aflibercept. We describe the economic consequences of this dilemma surrounding AMD treatment from a societal perspective.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29772018 PMCID: PMC5957378 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0197670
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Results of meta-analysis.
| Variable | ||
|---|---|---|
| 52.1 | (14.1) | |
| Ranibizumab | 4.7 | (15.9) |
| Aflibercept | 8.4 | (14.7) |
| Bevacizumab | 5.4 | (8.8) |
| Ranibizumab | 6.2 | |
| Aflibercept | 7.0 | |
| Bevacizumab | 7.0 |
ETDRS = early treatment for diabetic retinopathy study; SD = standard deviation.
Utility value per visual acuity category.
| Visual acuity category | Visual acuity range | Utility value | Standard error | Distribution |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | 20/20-20/25 | 0.84 | 0.027 | Beta |
| 2. | 20/30-20/40 | 0.80 | 0.024 | Beta |
| 3. | 20/50-20/100 | 0.71 | 0.029 | Beta |
| 4. | ≤ 20/200 | 0.59 | 0.027 | Beta |
Derived from Brown et al. 2002[18]
Fig 1Acceptability curve of the three anti-VEGF treatments.
The acceptability curve shows the probability of a treatment being cost-effective over a range of willingness-to-pay thresholds. The curve shows that bevacizumab is the most likely to be cost-effective until a willingness-to-pay threshold of €407,250 is reached, after which aflibercept is most likely to be cost-effective.
Differences in effectiveness and costs between treatments, per patient in the first year of treatment.
The ICERs show that we pay €278,099 per QALY if we use aflibercept instead of bevacizumab and that ranibizumab is dominated by bevacizumab, meaning it is costlier, but does not yield health benefit.
| Mean costs € (95-%CI) | Difference in costs Δ€ | Mean effectiveness QALY (95-%CI) | Difference in effectiveness ΔQALY | ICER Δ€/ΔQALY | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| € 33,137 (28,883–37,926) | € 6,050 | 0.69 (0.66–0.73) | 0.000 | Dominated | |
| € 31,119 (26,979–35,766) | € 4,032 | 0.71 (0.67–0.74) | 0.015 | € 278,099 | |
| € 27,087 (22,818–31,789) | - | 0.69 (0.66–0.73) | - | - |
QALY = quality-adjusted life year; ICER = incremental costs-effectiveness ratio; 95%-CI = 95%-confidence interval;
*Bevacizumab is comparator.
Fig 2Acceptable price per aflibercept injection.
Which price is acceptable for one aflibercept injection depends on what society is willing to pay. The graph shows that at a willingness-to-pay of €80,000 per QALY aflibercept should cost no more than €533. To reach the NICE threshold for cost-effectiveness, the costs should be reduced to £347.