| Literature DB >> 31278624 |
M Chris Runken1, Paolo Caraceni2, Javier Fernandez3,4, Alexander Zipprich5, Rashad Carlton6, Martin Bunke7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Albumin is frequently prescribed in cirrhotic patients with acute decompensation. However, the true cost effectiveness of albumin use in cirrhotic patients is still under debate.Entities:
Keywords: Albumin; Cost-effectiveness; Decompensated cirrhosis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31278624 PMCID: PMC6734265 DOI: 10.1186/s13561-019-0237-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Econ Rev ISSN: 2191-1991
Fig. 1Decision tree for large volume paracentesis
Fig. 2Decision tree for spontaneous bacterial peritonitis
Fig. 3Decision tree for hepatorenal syndrome
Country-Specific Cost Inputs
| Cost Input | Germany | Italy | Spain |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pharmaceutical costs | |||
| Albumin (g) | €4.68 [ | €4.35 [ | €3.69 [ |
| Gelatin (100 mL) | €1.61 [ | €0.67 [ | €1.47 [ |
| Saline (100 mL) | €0.33 [ | €0.36 [ | €0.40 [ |
| Antibiotics (g) (cefotaxime) | €6.38 [ | €3.40 [ | €3.12 [ |
| Terlipressin (mg) | €54.55 [ | €19.41 [ | €16.38 [ |
| Noradrenaline (mg) | €0.61 [ | €0.32 [ | €0.47 [ |
| Medical costs | |||
| Renal impairment | €14,178 [ | €5329 [ | €4089 [ |
| Hepatic encephalopathy | €18,134 [ | €13,393 [ | €3190 [ |
| Hyponatremia | €2203 [ | €3000 [assumption] | €4023 [ |
| Hospital inpatient day | €794.94 [ | €397.21 [ | €601.22 [ |
Effectiveness and Utility Inputsa
| Treatment | Hyponatremia Incidence (%) | Renal Impairment Incidence (%) | HE Incidence (%) | Hospital Length of Stay (Days) | Mortality (%) | Utility Values |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LVP after ascites | ||||||
| Albumin | 8.8% [ | 7.2% [ | 3.1% [ | – | 2.1% [ | – |
| Gelatin | 22.6% [ | 10.1% [ | 5.1% [ | – | 6.1% [ | – |
| Saline | 14.3% [ | 8.6% [ | 5.4% [ | – | 2.9% [ | – |
| No fluid | 16.5% [ | 11.3% [ | 5.7% [ | – | 3.8% [ | – |
| Decompensated cirrhosis | – | – | – | – | – | 0.74 |
| Decompensated cirrhosis with encephalopathy | – | – | – | – | – | 0.55 |
| SBP | ||||||
| Antibiotics + albumin | – | 10% [ | – | 14 [ | 22% [ | – |
| Antibiotics alone | – | 33% [ | – | 13 [ | 41% [ | – |
| Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis | – | – | – | – | – | 0.45 |
| HRS | ||||||
| Albumin + terlipressin | – | 29.6% [ | – | – | 40.7% [ | – |
| Albumin + noradrenaline | – | 52.4% [ | – | – | 52.4% [ | – |
| Vasoconstrictor aloned | – | 75.0% [ | – | – | 87.5% [ | – |
| Decompensated cirrhosis | – | – | – | – | – | 0.45 |
aData reflect the rates of various complications as reported in the literature
bThe rate of HE in patients treated with saline was assumed to be the same as the HE rate for those treated with dextran
cThe data reflect the percentage of patients without resolution of their renal impairment
dThe effectiveness inputs for vasoconstrictor alone are based on terlipressin results
Key: HE hepatic encephalopathy, HRS hepatorenal syndrome, LVP large-volume paracentesis, SBP spontaneous bacterial peritonitis
Fig. 4Expected cost of treatment of the different strategies for large volume paracentesis
Fig. 5Quality-adjusted life-year and survival of the different strategies for large volume paracentesis
Fig. 6Expected cost of treatment of the different strategies for SBP
Fig. 7Quality-adjusted life year and survival of the different strategies for SBP
Fig. 8Expected cost of treatment of the different strategies for hepatorenal syndrome
Fig. 9Quality-adjusted life-year and survival of the different strategies for hepatorenal syndrome