| Literature DB >> 31808053 |
Saku Väätäinen1, Erkki Soini2, Jukka Peltola3,4, Mata Charokopou5, Maarit Taiha6, Reetta Kälviäinen7,8.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: There is an unmet need for well-tolerated antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) that effectively control focal onset seizures. This study aimed to evaluate the economic value of new AEDs in the treatment of focal onset seizure, with or without secondary generalization, in Finnish adults and adolescents with epilepsy, comparing brivaracetam with perampanel as adjunctive AEDs.Entities:
Keywords: Brivaracetam; Economic evaluation; Epilepsy; Focal onset seizure; PICOSTEPS; Perampanel
Year: 2019 PMID: 31808053 PMCID: PMC6979440 DOI: 10.1007/s12325-019-01155-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Ther ISSN: 0741-238X Impact factor: 3.845
Fig. 1Simplified description of the discrete-event simulation model (DESM). AED antiepileptic drug, TEAE early or late onset treatment-emergent adverse event. Dashed lines denote the decisions and states excluded from the base case analysis. 1. Patient characteristics included, e.g., age, sex, seizure frequency, and ethnicity. 2. Included only in a sensitivity analysis scenario; in the base case modeling patients were assumed to have been assessed for surgery earlier based on the Finnish practice. Patients will only be assessed for the surgery once. 3. The base case modeling was initiated here, when brivaracetam or perampanel was added as a third AED on top of two base AEDs. 4. Acceptable response was seizure free or having at least a 50% reduction in seizure frequency. 5. Only relevant for a sensitivity analysis scenario. In the base case scenario, patients always had at least three concomitant AEDs. 6. Transition to death could happen at any time (absorbing, i.e., patients exit the model)
Efficacy and safety probabilities of AEDs based on the comprehensive BNMA of 63 trials and the different dosing schemes of perampanel based on the FEMA of five brivaracetam and five perampanel trials
| BNMA outcome | Seizure freedom (%) | ≥ 50% seizure reduction (%) | Discontinuation due to adverse event (%) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AED | Median | Mean (2.5–97.5 percentile)a | Median | Mean (2.5–97.5 percentile)a | Median | Mean (2.5–97.5 percentile)a |
| Brivaracetam | 9.38 | 12.55 (1.8–41.44) | 32.18 | 32.99 (15.58–55.25) | 7.92 | 8.59 (3.55–17.51) |
| Carbamazepine | 6.08b | 7.56 (1.4–22.05)b | 35.03b | 35.74 (17.78–57.59)b | 17.10b | 17.78 (8.57–30.73)b |
| Eslicarbazepine | 3.71 | 4.88 (0.76–15.94) | 33.14 | 33.92 (16.24–56.02) | 12.55 | 13.31 (5.97–24.99) |
| Lacosamide | 4.20 | 6.38 (0.74–24.37) | 30.86 | 31.79 (14.36–54.65) | 14.43 | 15.50 (6.59–30.38) |
| Lamotrigine | 5.00 | 6.22 (1.23–18.51) | 28.18 | 29.15 (12.68–51.11) | 10.32 | 10.95 (4.90–20.75) |
| Levetiracetam | 6.64 | 8.10 (1.65–22.99) | 44.38 | 44.58 (24.11–66.56) | 9.74 | 10.34 (4.67–19.56) |
| Oxcarbazepine | 7.89 | 10.23 (1.59–32.11) | 36.75 | 37.56 (17.54–61.53) | 21.33 | 13.31 (5.97–24.99) |
| Perampanel | 4.50 | 6.20 (0.85–21.93) | 29.45 | 30.45 (13.93–52.19) | 10.77 | 11.56 (4.71–23.08) |
| Pregabalin | 3.50 | 4.39 (0.83–13.08) | 40.96 | 41.35 (21.57–63.75) | 12.97 | 13.68 (6.54–24.58) |
| Sodium valproate | 6.08b | 7.56 (1.4–22.05)b | 35.03b | 35.74 (17.78–57.59)b | 17.10b | 17.78 (8.57–30.73)b |
| Topiramate | 7.23 | 8.99 (1.61–27.09) | 35.30 | 35.98 (16.74–59.06) | 12.72 | 13.49 (5.72–26.18) |
| Zonisamide | 1.90 | 2.56 (0.38–8.68) | 33.73 | 34.39 (16.73–56.99) | 11.61 | 12.38 (5.19–24.14) |
See Electronic Appendix 1 for more details regarding BNMA and FEMA
AED antiepileptic drug, BNMA Bayesian network meta-analysis, FEMA fixed-effect meta-analysis
aPercentiles of posterior distribution produced by BNMA
bAssumed to be equal to the average of eslicarbazepine and oxcarbazepine (lack or limitations of evidence)
cRelative effects estimated from FEMA and anchored to BNMA mean placebo rates of 1.48%, 18.56%, and 5.33% for seizure freedom, ≥ 50% reduction in seizures and discontinuation due to adverse events, respectively
dBased on the linear interpolation of effects from the neighbor doses (no trial data available)
Resource use and costs
| Phase | Titration perioda | Maintenanceb | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AED | Duration, scheme, and dosing | Drug costc | Daily dosage | Daily drug costc |
| Drug use patterns and associated costs | ||||
| Brivaracetam | No titration required; titration not modeled | N/A | 2 × 50 mg | €5.53 |
| Carbamazepined | Only as base-AED in the model; titration not modeled | N/A | 2 × 400 mg | €0.39 |
| Eslicarbazepinee | Total 30 days: 2 × 200 mg 15 days → 1 × 800 mg 15 days | €76.47 | 1000 mg | €7.42 |
| Lacosamidee | Total 21 days: 2 × 50 mg 7 days → 2 × 100 mg 14 days → 2 × 150 mg 7 days | €78.04 | 2 × 200 mg | €6.40 |
| Lamotrigine | Total 70 days: 25 mg 14 days → 2 × 25 mg 14 days → 2 × 50 mg 14 days → 100 + 50 mg 14 days → 2 × 100 mg 7 days → 100 + 150 mg 7 days | €48.04 | 200 + 100 mg | €1.32 |
| Levetiracetamd,e | Total 28 days: 2 × 500 mg 28 days | €37.53 | 2 × 1000 mg | €2.52 |
| Oxcarbazepine | Only as base-AED in the model; titration not modeled | N/A | 2 × 600 mg | €1.09 |
| Perampanel | Total 28 days: 2 mg 7 days → 4 mg 7 days → 2 + 4 mg 7 days → 2 × 4 mg 7 days | €222.74 | 8 mg | €5.61 |
| Pregabalin | Total 14 days: 2 × 75 mg 7 days → 2 × 150 mg 7 days | €14.22 | 2 × 225 mg | €1.06 |
| Sodium valproated,e | Total 28 days: 2 × 300 mg for 14 days → increased by 300 mg every 7 days up to 5 × 300 mg | €17.43 | 3 × 500 mg | €0.75 |
| Topiramated,e | Total 56 days: 25 mg 7 days → 50 mg 7 days → 75 mg 7 days → 100 mg 7 days → 150 mg 7 days → 200 mg 7 days → 250 mg 7 days → 300 mg 7 days | €61.34 | 200 + 150 mg | €2.62 |
| Zonisamide | Total 28 days: 2 × 25 mg 7 days → 2 × 50 mg 7 days → 2 × 100 mg 7 days → 2 × 125 mg 7 days | €101.74 | 200 + 150 mg | €4.52 |
A&E Accident and Emergency, AED antiepileptic drug, d days, DDD defined daily dose, GP general practitioner (primary care), SPC summary of product characteristics, → followed by
aTitration adapted based on SPC and Fishman et al. [54]
bMaintenance dosing based on published Finnish data by Mäkinen et al. [17] as well as SPC and DDD where feasible and needed
cCalculated using cheapest doses and pack sizes. For titration, wastage was avoided by using full packages. Drug costs represent those valid as of January 2019
dAED is only included in sensitivity analysis
eAED titration is only included in the sensitivity analysis, otherwise a base AED
fAll costs other than drug purchase prices represented at 2017 level [55]
Base case results (5-year time horizon, 3% discount per year) per patient
| Treatment | Brivaracetam pathway | Perampanel pathway | Increment in |
|---|---|---|---|
| Investment | Average costs (€) | Average costs (€) | Costs (€) |
| AEDs | €17,148 | €16,151 | €997 |
| Monitoring, seizures | €10,166 | €10,788 | – €622 |
| Traveling | €983 | €1041 | – €58 |
| Sum | €28,297 | €27,979 | €318 |
| Outcome | QALYs | QALYs | QALYs |
| Brivaracetam/perampanel | 1.619 | 1.283 | 0.336 |
| First subsequent AED | 0.748 | 0.876 | – 0.128 |
| Reserve AED | 1.304 | 1.452 | – 0.148 |
| Sum | 3.671 | 3.611 | 0.059 |
| Outcome | ICER: brivaracetam vs. perampanel, €/QALY gained | €5345 | |
AED antiepileptic drug, QALY quality-adjusted life-year, ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio
One- and multi-way sensitivity analysis results
| Scenario | Cost (€) | QALYs | ICER (€ per QALY) | NMB (€) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BRV | PER | Δ | BRV | PER | Δ | |||
| Base case | €28,297 | €27,979 | €318 | 3.671 | 3.611 | 0.059 | €5345 | €1190 |
| Patient | ||||||||
| Mean age 20% lower: 30.8 years | €27,850 | €27,526 | €324 | 3.614 | 3.549 | 0.066 | €4947 | €1339 |
| Mean age 20% higher: 46.2 years | €28,387 | €27,981 | €406 | 3.684 | 3.615 | 0.069 | €5850 | €1353 |
| Male proportion 20% lower: 39.5% | €28,298 | €27,955 | €343 | 3.670 | 3.611 | 0.059 | €5848 | €1145 |
| Male proportion 20% higher: 59.3% | €28,297 | €27,976 | €321 | 3.670 | 3.611 | 0.060 | €5373 | €1193 |
| Seizure frequency 20% lower: 8.0/month | €28,297 | €27,979 | €318 | 3.671 | 3.611 | 0.059 | €5347 | €1189 |
| Seizure frequency 20% higher: 12.0/month | €28,523 | €28,201 | €322 | 3.702 | 3.643 | 0.059 | €5486 | €1167 |
| Comparatora | ||||||||
| Specific perampanel dose: 4 mg daily | €28,530 | €28,027 | €504 | 3.668 | 3.621 | 0.047 | €10,632 | €697 |
| Specific perampanel dose: 6 mg daily | €28,525 | €28,110 | €415 | 3.668 | 3.618 | 0.050 | €8266 | €858 |
| Specific perampanel dose: 8 mg daily | €28,520 | €28,117 | €404 | 3.660 | 3.609 | 0.051 | €7930 | €887 |
| Specific perampanel dose: 10 mg daily | €28,481 | €28,023 | €459 | 3.660 | 3.607 | 0.053 | €8701 | €878 |
| Specific perampanel dose: 12 mg daily | €28,455 | €27,920 | €535 | 3.661 | 3.597 | 0.064 | €8344 | €1091 |
| Placebo comparison: no drug costs; efficacy and safety based on BNMA placebo rates. Means: SF: 1.48%, ≥ 50% reduction: 18.56%, discontinuation due to adverse events: 5.33%; no perampanel as subsequent AED in the brivaracetam arm | €27,550 | €27,851 | –€301 | 3.658 | 3.592 | 0.067 | BRV dominant | €1991 |
| Setting | ||||||||
| Perampanel omitted from the brivaracetam arm | €27,550 | €27,979 | − €429 | 3.658 | 3.611 | 0.047 | BRV dominant | €1627 |
| Brivaracetam added to perampanel arm subsequent treatment alternatives | €28,297 | €28,599 | − €302 | 3.671 | 3.650 | 0.020 | BRV dominant | €822 |
| Brivaracetam and perampanel added on top of only one base AED, both are used for model duration, with subsequent AEDs added. Brivaracetam and perampanel not used together | €25,157 | €26,223 | − €1067 | 3.686 | 3.640 | 0.046 | BRV dominant | €2230 |
| Brivaracetam and perampanel added on top of only one base AED, both are used for model duration, with subsequent AEDs added. Brivaracetam and perampanel may be used together | €25,464 | €26,448 | − €984 | 3.687 | 3.656 | 0.031 | BRV dominant | €1764 |
| Sodium valproate, topiramate, lacosamide, and eslicarbazepine included as additional reserve AEDs to second (last) subsequent treatment line | €28,319 | €28,063 | €256 | 3.683 | 3.634 | 0.049 | €5223 | €987 |
| Sodium valproate, topiramate, lacosamide, and eslicarbazepine included as additional AEDs to both subsequent treatment lines | €28,188 | €28,110 | €78 | 3.682 | 3.636 | 0.045 | €1724 | €1075 |
| Base AEDs and subsequent therapies based on wider variety and including concomitant use of brivaracetam with levetiracetam | €25,420 | €25,320 | €99 | 3.691 | 3.645 | 0.047 | €2130 | €1082 |
| Time | ||||||||
| Discounting not applied | €30,193 | €29,838 | €354 | 3.938 | 3.875 | 0.062 | €5675 | €1229 |
| Discounting applied with higher rate: 5% p.a. | €27,162 | €26,866 | €296 | 3.511 | 3.453 | 0.058 | €5134 | €1166 |
| Time horizon shorter: 3 years | €18,445 | €18,307 | €139 | 2.268 | 2.221 | 0.047 | €2960 | €1050 |
| Time horizon longer: 10 years | €50,677 | €49,452 | €1225 | 6.741 | 6.657 | 0.084 | €14,616 | €900 |
| Effects | ||||||||
| Epilepsy-specific NEWQOL-6D scores: 0.849 for SF, 0.805 for ≥ 50%, 0.692 for < 50% reduction | €28,297 | €27,979 | €318 | 3.679 | 3.642 | 0.037 | €8584 | €621 |
| EQ-5D scores based on Selai et al. [ | €28,297 | €27,979 | €318 | 4.128 | 4.103 | 0.026 | €12,317 | €336 |
| AEDs HRQoL effect starts at the AED initiation | €28,297 | €27,979 | €318 | 3.683 | 3.631 | 0.052 | €6092 | €1005 |
| Medians for the efficacy and safety parameters | €28,743 | €28,205 | €539 | 3.655 | 3.593 | 0.061 | €8783 | €1016 |
| Epileptic surgery included in the DESM | €28,730 | €28,405 | €325 | 3.682 | 3.620 | 0.062 | €5260 | €1242 |
| Seizure free patient mortality assumed to be same as in the Finnish general population: SMR = 1 | €28,326 | €27,963 | €364 | 3.676 | 3.612 | 0.064 | €5685 | €1258 |
| NSF monitoring costs 20% lower: €5.13/day | €26,546 | €26,103 | €443 | 3.671 | 3.611 | 0.059 | €7456 | €1064 |
| NSF monitoring costs 20% higher: €7.70/day | €30,048 | €29,856 | €192 | 3.671 | 3.611 | 0.059 | €3234 | €1315 |
| SF monitoring costs 20% lower: €0.73/day | €28,241 | €27,941 | €300 | 3.671 | 3.611 | 0.059 | €5050 | €1207 |
| SF monitoring costs 20% higher: €1.09/day | €28,353 | €28,018 | €335 | 3.671 | 3.611 | 0.059 | €5640 | €1172 |
| Treatment switching costs 20% lower: €665.79 | €27,874 | €27,528 | €346 | 3.671 | 3.611 | 0.059 | €5814 | €1162 |
| Treatment switching costs 20% higher: €998.68 | €28,720 | €28,431 | €290 | 3.671 | 3.611 | 0.059 | €4876 | €1218 |
| Perspective | ||||||||
| Only direct medical: Travel expenses excluded | €27,314 | €26,939 | €375 | 3.671 | 3.611 | 0.059 | €6301 | €1133 |
| Direct non-medical costs included based on Sillanpää et al. [ | €42,594 | €42,511 | €84 | 3.688 | 3.636 | 0.052 | €1614 | €1231 |
| Traditional societal perspective: Based on Sillanpää et al. [ | €71,059 | €73,316 | − €2257 | 3.671 | 3.611 | 0.059 | BRV dominant | €3764 |
| Wider societal perspective: Traditional societal cost NSF and SF monitoring costs multiplied by 4.13 [ | €233,258 | €245,268 | − €12,010 | 3.671 | 3.611 | 0.059 | BRV dominant | €13,517 |
AED antiepileptic drug, BNMA Bayesian network meta-analysis, BRV brivaracetam, Dominant more effective and also cost saving, HRQoL health-related quality of life, ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, Δ difference, NMB net monetary benefit with willingness to pay of €25,358 per QALY (purchasing parity adjusted 2017 value corresponding to £20,000 per QALY), NSF non-seizure-free, p.a. per annum, PER perampanel, QALY quality-adjusted life-year, SF seizure free
aIn comparator sensitivity analyses varying specific perampanel doses, both brivaracetam's and perampanel's relative efficacy and safety are based on fixed-effect meta-analysis anchored to BNMA placebo rates
bApplied as relative difference, assuming the same ratio for NSF and SF monitoring costs. Ratios between total direct costs: 2.86 = 28 + 52/€28 million annually in Finland, total costs 6.29 = 28 + 52 + 96/€28 million annually in Finland [15], and between wider societal and traditional perspectives 4.13 = 1570/380 € per patient annually [51]
Fig. 2Results of the probabilistic sensitivity analysis. a Cost-effectiveness plane (CEP) and b cost-effectiveness acceptability curves (CEACs). Probabilistic sensitivity analysis results were generated using 2000 DESM iterations with cohorts of 500 patients. Marked point in CEP denotes the average results, and the line denotes the plausible willingness-to-pay threshold of €25,358 per quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) gained. Marked points in CEAC denote the willingness to pay of €25,358 and €38,036 per QALY gained
| While published evidence on benefits and costs of different treatment strategies is lacking, there is a significant unmet need for well-tolerated, effective, and affordable antiepileptic drugs for focal seizure epilepsy |
| Authors examined whether adjunctive treatment brivaracetam would provide acceptable additional effectiveness for potential additional costs compared with treatment with adjunctive perampanel |
| Brivaracetam had a high probability of being cost-effective and providing acceptable additional benefit for additional costs compared with perampanel |
| With earlier brivaracetam initiation resulting in more health benefits at lower costs than achieved with later brivaracetam initiation, treatment with brivaracetam also has potential to be more affordable than treatment with perampanel |
| Indirect costs, such as work absenteeism and early retirement, associated with poorly managed epilepsy have an enormous burden for epilepsy patients and society alike and should be examined and addressed in future studies |