| Literature DB >> 30092774 |
Oleg Borisenko1, Jochen Müller-Ehmsen2, JoAnn Lindenfeld3, Erik Rafflenbeul4, Christian Hamm5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This study aimed to evaluate cost-utility of baroreflex activation therapy (BAT) using the Barostim neo™ device (CVRx Inc., Minneapolis, MN, USA) compared with optimized medical management in patients with advanced chronic heart failure (NYHA class III) who were not eligible for treatment with cardiac resynchronization therapy, from a statutory health insurance perspective in Germany over a lifetime horizon.Entities:
Keywords: Baroreflex activation therapy; Barostim; Cost-utility; Germany; Health economics; Markov modeling
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30092774 PMCID: PMC6085633 DOI: 10.1186/s12872-018-0898-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cardiovasc Disord ISSN: 1471-2261 Impact factor: 2.298
Fig. 1Structure of decision tree
Fig. 2Structure of Markov model. NYHA, New York Heart Association. Figure is reproduced with permission from Borisenko O, Haude M, Hoppe UC, Siminiak T, Lipiecki J, Goldberg SL, et al. Cost-utility analysis of percutaneous mitral valve repair in inoperable patients with functional mitral regurgitation in German settings. BMC Cardiovasc Disord. 2015;15:43. doi: 10.1186/s12872-015-0039-8
Probability of hospitalization, excess mortality for hospitalized states and probability of adverse events
| Parameter | Value | Variance | Distribution and coefficients for probabilistic sensitivity analysis | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Six-month probability of excess mortality for NYHA class II | 0.04 | 0.032–0.048 | Beta (α = 4; β = 96) | Cowper 2004 [ |
| Six-month probability of excess mortality for NYHA class III | 0.07 | 0.056–0.084 | Beta (α = 7; β = 93) | |
| Six-month probability of excess mortality for NYHA class IV | 0.28 | 0.224–0.336 | Beta (α = 28; β = 72) | |
| Monthly probability of hospitalization for NYHA class I | 0.015 | 0.008–0.023 | Beta (α = 1.5; β = 98.5) | Ford 2012 [ |
| Monthly probability of hospitalization for NYHA class II | 0.024 | 0.012–0.036 | Beta (α = 2.4; β = 97.6) | |
| Monthly probability of hospitalization for NYHA class III | 0.024 | 0.012–0.036 | Beta (α = 2.4; β = 97.6) | |
| Monthly probability of hospitalization for NYHA class IV | 0.154 | 0.77–0.23 | Beta (α = 15.4; β = 84.6) | |
| Probability of short-term adverse events (30 days) | 0.070 | 0.03–0.1 | Beta (α = 3; β = 38) | Barostim Clinical evidence report (unpublished) |
| Probability of serious adverse event (Months 1 to 6) | 0.033 | 0–0.05 | Beta (α = 1; β = 29) | Hoppe 2012 [ |
| RR for mortality in Barostim arm | 0.61 | 0.52–0.70 | Log-normal (SElog = 0.0467) | Application of the data from the MAGGIC risk prediction model to the individual patient data from the RCT of Barostim in heart failure |
| RR for hospitalizations due to heart failure in Barostim arm | 0.40 | 0.34–1.05 | Log-normal (SElog = 0.18) | Zile 2015 [ |
Cost inputs
| Variable | Value | Variance | Distribution and coefficients for probabilistic sensitivity analysis | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cost of Barostim implant procedure, € | 3628 | 1814–5442 | – | G-DRG 901D 2013, LOS = 2 days, cost of implant was subtracted |
| Cost of battery replacement procedure, € | 1808 | 904–2712 | – | G-DRG F17B 2013, LOS = 2 days, cost of implant was subtracted |
| Cost of pre- and post-implant physician visits, € | 68 | 34–102 | – | EBM 13542 (1 visit), EBM 07212 (2 visits) |
| Cost of full Barostim system, € | 21,000 | 15,000–24,000 | – | CVRx Inc. |
| Cost of Barostim battery, € | 15,000 | 10,000–17,000 | – | CVRx Inc. |
| Cost of short-term complications, € | 3056 | 1528–4584 | – | G-DRG 901D 2013. The difference between 2 and 5-day LOS. It was assumed that complication will lead to prolongation of hospital stay |
| Cost of long-term complications, € | 0 | 0–100 | – | Assumption |
| Battery life, years | 6 | 3–6 | – | CVRx Inc. |
| Percentage of patients being hospitalized with stay in intensive care unit | 7.2% | – | – | Yao 2007 [ |
| Percentage of patients being hospitalized with stay in coronary care unit | 25.6% | – | – | |
| Percentage of patients being hospitalized with CABG performed | 0.3% | – | – | |
| Percentage of patients being hospitalized with PTCA performed | 0.2% | – | – | |
| Percentage of patients being hospitalized with heart transplantation performed | 2.6% | – | – | |
| Percentage of patients being hospitalized with no procedure performed | 62.3% | – | – | |
| Cost of hospitalization with stay in intensive care unit, € | 5005 | 2502–7507 | – | G-DRG code F62A 2013 |
| Cost of hospitalization with stay in coronary care unit, € | 5004 | 2502–7507 | – | G-DRG code F62A 2013 |
| Cost of hospitalization with CABG performed, € | 15,056 | 7528–22,584 | – | G-DRG code F06E |
| Cost of hospitalization with PTCA performed, € | 3793 | 1896–5689 | – | G-DRG code F56B plus ZE101 |
| Cost of hospitalization with heart transplantation performed, € | 86,337 | 43,169–129,507 | – | G-DRG code A05B 2013 |
| Cost of hospitalization with no procedure performed, € | 2740 | 1370–4110 | – | G-DRG code F62B 2013 |
| Yearly cost of routine management NYHA I, € | 516 | 258–1031 | Gamma (α = 1;λ = 516) | Biermann 2012 [ |
| Yearly cost of routine management NYHA II, € | 910 | 455–1821 | Gamma (α = 1;λ = 910) | |
| Yearly cost of routine management NYHA III, € | 900 | 450–1800 | Gamma (α = 1;λ = 900) | |
| Yearly cost of routine management NYHA IV, € | 967 | 484–1935 | Gamma (α = 1;λ = 967) |
Results of cost-utility analysis
| Cost, € | ∆ cost € | Life years gained | ∆ LYG | QALYs gained | ∆ QALY | ICER, €/QALY | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BAT | 50,856 [34,358-59,437] | 33,185 [24,561-38,637] | 7.25 [3.44–9.17] | 1.78 [0.45–2.71] | 4.86 [2.30–6.14] | 1.19 [0.30–1.81] | 27,951 [21,357-82,970] |
| OMM | 17,671 [9796-20,800] | 5.47 [3.00–6.46] | 3.67 [2.00–4.33] |
Fig. 3Tornado diagram
Fig. 4Cost-effectiveness acceptability plane
Fig. 5Cost-effectiveness acceptability curve. WTP, willingness-to-pay threshold