| Literature DB >> 33866457 |
Takahiro Mori1,2,3, Carolyn J Crandall4, Tomoko Fujii5, David A Ganz6,7,8.
Abstract
Using a Markov microsimulation model among hypothetical cohorts of community-dwelling older osteoporotic Japanese women with prior vertebral fracture over a lifetime horizon, we found that daily subcutaneous teriparatide for 2 years followed by weekly oral alendronate for 8 years was not cost-effective compared with alendronate monotherapy for 10 years.Entities:
Keywords: Biosimilar; Cost-effectiveness analysis; Fracture prevention; Osteoporosis; Teriparatide
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33866457 PMCID: PMC8053143 DOI: 10.1007/s11657-021-00891-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Osteoporos Impact factor: 2.617
Model parameters
| Value | Range for deterministic sensitivity analysis | Distribution and range for probabilistic sensitivity analysis | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Teriparatide | ||||
| Relative risk of hip fracture | 0.35 | 0.15–0.73a | Beta: 0.15–0.73a | [ |
| Relative risk of clinical vertebral fracture | 0.23 | 0.16–0.32a | Beta: 0.16–0.32a | [ |
| Adherence rate (first year) | 0.70 | 0.6–0.8b, c | Triangular: 0.6–0.8b, c | [ |
| Persistence rate (first year) | 0.68 | ± 15%b for annual rate | Triangular: ± 15%b for annual rate | [ |
| Treatment duration (years) | 2 | N/A | N/A | [ |
| Offset effect (years) | 2 | 3d | N/A | [ |
| Alendronate | ||||
| Relative risk of hip fracture | 0.64 | 0.45–0.88a | Beta: 0.45–0.88a | [ |
| Relative risk of clinical vertebral fracture | 0.50 | 0.40–0.64a | Beta: 0.40–0.64a | [ |
| Adherence rate (first year) | 0.71 | 0.62–0.8b, c | Triangular: 0.62–0.8b, c | [ |
| Persistence rate (first year) | 0.55 | ± 15%b for annual rate | Triangular: ± 15%b for annual rate | [ |
| Treatment duration (years) | 8 or 10 | N/A | N/A | [ |
| Offset effect (years) | Same as above | N/A | N/A | [ |
| Costs, ¥ (US dollars, $1=¥105) | ||||
| Annual medication costs and costs of prescription charges at pharmacy | ||||
| Teriparatide | ¥333,400 ($3180) | decreased in 5% increments | N/A | [ |
| Alendronate | ¥8700 ($83) | N/A | N/A | [ |
| Prescription charge for teriparatide | ¥1100 ($10) | N/A | N/A | [ |
| Prescription charge for alendronate | ¥1700 ($16) | N/A | N/A | [ |
| Costs for physician visits, blood test and DXA scan | ||||
| First physician visit, teriparatide | ¥18,300 ($174) | N/A | N/A | [ |
| Subsequent physician visit, teriparatide | ¥9400 ($90) | N/A | N/A | [ |
| First physician visit, alendronate | ¥3600 ($34) | N/A | N/A | [ |
| Subsequent physician visit, alendronate | ¥1900 ($18) | N/A | N/A | [ |
| Blood test | ¥2900 ($28) | N/A | N/A | [ |
| DXA scan | ¥4500 ($43) | N/A | N/A | [ |
| Medical costs | ||||
| Hip fracture | ¥1,726,000 ($16,440) | ± 50%b | Triangular: ± 50%b | [ |
| First clinical vertebral fracture | ¥420,000 ($4000) | ± 50%b | Triangular: ± 50%b | [ |
| Subsequent clinical vertebral fracture | ¥842,000 ($8020) | [ | ||
| Annual long-term care costs | ||||
| For the “post-hip fracture” state | ¥876,000 ($8340) | ± 50%b | Triangular: ± 50%b | [ |
| For the “post-vertebral fracture” state | ¥213,000 ($2030) | ± 50%b | [ | |
| Utilities | ||||
| Age 65–69 | 0.862 | N/A | Triangular: ± 15%b | [ |
| Age 70–74 | 0.810 | N/A | ||
| Age 75–79 | 0.771 | N/A | ||
| Age 80–84 | 0.769 | N/A | ||
| Age 85+ | 0.684 | N/A | ||
| Disutilities (multiplier) | ||||
| Hip fracture, first year | 0.776 | N/A | Beta: 0.720–0.844a | [ |
| Hip fracture, beyond first year | 0.855 | N/A | Beta: 0.800–0.909a | [ |
| Clinical vertebral fracture, first year | 0.724 | N/A | Beta: 0.667–0.779a | [ |
| Clinical vertebral fracture, beyond first year | 0.868 | N/A | Beta: 0.827–0.922a | [ |
| Annual hip fracture incidence rates per 100,000 persons (without intervention) | ||||
| Age 70–74 | 158.1 | ± 50%b | Triangular: ± 10%b | [ |
| Age 75–79 | 362.2 | |||
| Age 80–84 | 851.1 | |||
| Age 85–89 | 1580.2 | |||
| Age 90–94 | 2466.0 | |||
| Age 95–99 | 2961.7 | |||
| Age 100+ | 2471.0 | |||
| Annual clinical vertebral fracture incidence rates per 100,000 persons (without intervention) | ||||
| Age 70–74 | 514 | ± 50%b | Triangular: ± 25%b | [ |
| Age 75–79 | 1106 | |||
| Age 80–84 | 2034 | |||
| Age 85–89 | 2331 | |||
| Age 90–95 | 3638 | |||
| Age 95–100 | 4369 | |||
| Age 100+ | 3645 | |||
| Relative risks of subsequent fractures associated with prior vertebral fractures | ||||
| Hip fracture | 2.3 | N/A | Gamma: 2.0–2.8a | [ |
| Clinical vertebral fracture | 4.4 | N/A | Gamma: 3.6–5.4a | [ |
| Relative hazards for mortality after a hip fracture | ||||
| Within a year | 2.87 | N/A | Gamma: 2.52–3.27a | [ |
| Second year and beyond | 1.73 | N/A | Gamma: 1.56-1.90a | [ |
| Proportions of excess mortality attributable to a fracture | ||||
| Hip fracture | 0.25 | N/A | Triangular: 0–0.5b | [ |
| Clinical vertebral fracture | 0 | 0.25 (Same as hip fracture) | N/A | [ |
| Discount rates (%) | ||||
| Costs | 2 | N/A | Triangular: 0–4e | [ |
| Quality-adjusted life-years | 2 | N/A | ||
aBased on 95% confidence intervals from meta-analyses
bBased on our own assumptions
cThe upper bound of sensitivity analyses for adherence rates during the first year of treatment was set to be 0.8 and the lower bound was set symmetrically. For example, the adherence rate for teriparatide during the first year was 0.7 and the upper and lower bounds for sensitivity analyses were set to be 0.8 and 0.6, respectively. The ratio of upper bound to base case value (0.8/0.7) and lower bound to base case value (0.6/0.7) used in the first year were applied to the second year and beyond to obtain the upper and lower bounds for sensitivity analyses. The same principle was applied to alendronate. Estimated adherence or persistence rates exceeding 1.0 were considered to be 1.0
dBased on a previous cost-effectiveness analysis
eBased on the guideline
Results of Base-Case Analyses at Various Ages of Therapy Initiation (ages 70, 75, and 80)
| Lifetime cost | Quality-adjusted life-years (QALY) | Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio | |
|---|---|---|---|
| From public healthcare and long-term care payer’s perspective (primary analysis) | |||
| Age 70 | |||
| Alendronate monotherapy | $35,540 | 11.292 | Comparator |
| Teriparatide/alendronate | $38,440 | 11.302 | $282,300/QALY |
| Age 75 | |||
| Alendronate monotherapy | $35,340 | 8.846 | Comparator |
| Teriparatide/alendronate | $37,890 | 8.867 | $120,600/QALY |
| Age 80 | |||
| Alendronate monotherapy | $32,630 | 6.599 | Comparator |
| Teriparatide/alendronate | $34,580 | 6.633 | $56,900/QALY |
| From public healthcare payer’s perspective (sub analysis) | |||
| Age 70 | |||
| Alendronate monotherapy | $11,900 | See above | Comparator |
| Teriparatide/alendronate | $15,070 | See above | $289,000/QALY |
| Age 75 | |||
| Alendronate monotherapy | $12,420 | See above | Comparator |
| Teriparatide/alendronate | $15,490 | See above | $138,700/QALY |
| Age 80 | |||
| Alendronate monotherapy | $12,240 | See above | Comparator |
| Teriparatide/alendronate | $15,130 | See above | $84,500/QALY |
Fig. 1Results of deterministic sensitivity analyses varying the costs of teriparatide at ages 70, 75, and 80
Fig. 2Results of probabilistic sensitivity analyses, a: age 70, b: age 75, c: age 80