| Literature DB >> 34044819 |
A Padilla-Galo1, A J García-Ruiz2, R Ch Levy Abitbol3, C Olveira4,5, F Rivas-Ruiz6, N García-Agua Soler2, M Pérez Morales7, B Valencia Azcona7, B Tortajada-Goitia8, I Moya-Carmona9, A Levy-Naon10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Availability of clinically effective and cost-effective treatments for severe asthma would be beneficial to patients and national healthcare systems. The aim of this study was to evaluate clinical outcomes and healthcare expenditure after incorporating benralizumab into the standard treatment of refractory eosinophilic asthma.Entities:
Keywords: Asthma; Benralizumab; Biologics; Cost-effectiveness; Economic impact; Eosinophils; Real-life; Severe asthma
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34044819 PMCID: PMC8155800 DOI: 10.1186/s12931-021-01758-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Respir Res ISSN: 1465-9921
Classification based on the response to a biologic treatment for severe asthma.
Reproduced from [36]
| Exacerbationsa | ACT | FEV1 | Systemic corticosteroids | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No response | Identical or increased number | < 3-point increase | < 10% and 100 mL increase | < 50% decrease |
| Partial response | < 50% reduction ≥ 2 severe exacerbations in 12 months | < 3-point increase Total score < 20 | > 10% and 100 mL increase FEV1 < 80% | > 50% dose decrease No OCS discontinuation |
| Controlled asthma | ≤ 1 severe exacerbation in 12 months | Total score ≥ 20 | FEV1 < 80% | OCS discontinuation |
| Complete response | No exacerbations in 12 months | Total score ≥ 20 | FEV1 ≥ 80% | OCS discontinuation |
aTaking into account the number of exacerbations during the preceding year
Costs of healthcare resources used [38–40]
| Healthcare resource used | Unit cost in € |
|---|---|
| Emergency visit | 144.24 |
| Emergency visit + observation | 392.03 |
| Hospital stay/day | 495.59 |
| Hospital stay pneumology/day | 386.65 |
| Spirometry | 40.57 |
| Spirometry + bronchodilation | 60.49 |
| Ig E determination | 21.50 |
| FeNO determination | 39.00 |
| Prick test | 134.70 |
| Haemogram | 5.30 |
| Biochemistry | 83.50 |
| Non-contrast CT | 55.38 |
Fig. 1Decision rules for cost effectiveness analysis
Baseline patient characteristics
| Parameter | n = 44 |
|---|---|
| Age, years (mean ± SD) | 53.8 ± 10.4 |
| Women, n (%) | 35 (79.5) |
| BMI (mean ± SD) | 28.7 ± 6 |
| Smoking | |
| Never smoker, n (%) | 23 (52.3) |
| Ex-smoker, n (%) | 21 (47.7) |
| Former smoker, n (%) | 0 (0) |
| Age at diagnosis, years (mean ± SD) | 28.95 ± 12.4 |
| Dyspnoea | |
| Degree 0–2, n (%) | 22 (50) |
| Degree 3–4, n (%) | 22 (50) |
| Atopy, n (%) | 15 (34.1) |
| Corticosteroid-dependent, n (%) | 18 (40.9) |
| Nasal polyps, n (%) | 14 (31.8) |
| AERD, n (%) | 6 (13.6) |
| ACT (mean ± SD) | 13.7 ± 4 |
| ED visits in the previous year, (mean ± SD) | 4.1 ± 2.6 |
| Number of severe exacerbations in the previous year, (mean ± SD) | 5.50 ± 2.63 |
| Number of asthma admissions in the previous year, (mean ± SD) | 0.59 (1.1) |
| Courses of OCS in the previous year, (mean ± SD) | 5.8 ± 3.3 |
| Oral prednisone (or equivalent) dose, mg/day (mean ± SD) | 19.3 ± 8.8 |
| Inhaled budesonide (or equivalent) dose, μg/day (mean ± SD) | 993 ± 485 |
| Post-BD FEV1, mL (mean ± SD) | 1455.8 ± 495.7 |
| Post-BD FEV1, % (mean ± SD) | 65.7 ± 14.1 |
| FeNO, ppb (mean ± SD) | 56.6 ± 26.2 |
| Blood eosinophil count, cells/μL (mean ± SD) | 718.3 ± 287.5 |
| IgE, IU/mL (mean ± SD) | 223.6 ± 394.9 |
| Prior treatment with a biologic agent, n (%) | 23 (52.3) |
| Omalizumab, n (%) | 16 (36.4) |
| Mepolizumab, n (%) | 5 (11.4) |
| Omalizumab + Mepolizumab, n (%) | 2 (4.5) |
| Time with previous biological treatment, months (mean ± SD) | 20.7 ± 23.3 |
ACT asthma control test, AERD aspirin-exacerbated respiratory disease, BD bronchodilator, BMI body mass index, ED emergency department, FeNO fractional exhaled nitric oxide, FEV forced expiratory volume in 1 s, ppb parts per billion, OCS oral corticosteroids, SD standard deviation
Clinical, functional, and laboratory data at baseline and at 3, 6, and 12 months of treatment
| Variables | Baseline | 3 months | 6 months | 12 months | p* |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ACT, mean (SD) | 13.7 (4.1) | 20.1 (3.6) | 20.8 (2.9) | 21.3 (2.2) | |
| Controlled asthma (ACT ≥ 20), n (%) | 2 (4.5) | 25 (56.8) | 36 (81.8) | 39 (92.9) | |
| Number of ED visits in the previous year, mean (SD) | 4.1 (2.6) | – | – | 0.7 (1.6) | |
| Number of severe exacerbations in the previous year, mean (SD) | 5.50 ± 2.63 | – | – | 0.66 ± 0.94 | |
| Corticosteroid-dependent, n (%) | 18 (40.9) | 16 (36.4) | 9 (20.5) | 8 (18.2) | |
| Inhaled budesonide (or equivalent) dose, μg/day, mean (SD) | 993 (485) | 853 (446) | 773 (408) | 693 (343) | |
| Oral prednisone dose, mg/day, mean (SD) | 19.3 (8.8) | 10 (8.6) | 5.3 (7.8) | 3.9 (7.2) | |
| Number of courses of OCS (previous year), mean (SD) | 5.8 (3.3) | – | – | 1 (1.6) | |
| FEV1 mL, mean (SD) | 1459 (509) | 1697 (495) | 1732 (621) | 1833 (556) | |
| FEV1%, mean (SD) | 66.1 (14) | 74.3 (12.2) | 77 (14.5) | 78.3 (15) | |
| Blood eosinophil count, cells/μL, mean (SD) | 730.9 (288) | 18 (18) | 14.9 (13.7) | 2.7 (4) |
ACT asthma control test, ED emergency department, FEV forced expiratory volume in 1 s, OCS oral corticosteroids, SD standard deviation
*Comparison between data at baseline and at 12 months
Fig. 2Clinical, functional, and laboratory data at baseline and at 3, 6, and 12 months of treatment. a FEV1 mL; b FEV1%; c ACT (asthma control test); d No. of emergency department visits: e No. of oral corticosteroid courses; f Oral prednisone dose (mg/day); g Inhaled budesonide dose (μg/day); h Blood eosinophils (cells/μL). Data expressed as means. *p < 0.001
Fig. 3Classification based on response at one year of benralizumab treatment
Cost of healthcare resources used
| Resources | Cost per patient, mean (SD) | p (Wilcoxon test) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Previous 12 months (baseline) | At 12 months on benralizumab | ||
| Diagnosis and complementary tests | 962.71 (44.87) | 218.62 (43.84) | |
| Corticosteroids | |||
| Oral | 60.79 (32.97) | 4.54 (9.40) | |
| Inhaled | 183.44 (89.62) | 105.62 (50.23) | |
| Emergency Department visits | 1585.94 (1003.78) | 267.29 (596.48) | |
| Admissions | 1599.33 (2937.06) | 615.13 (2601.51) | |
| Biological treatment for asthma | 7151.63 (7778) | 12,832.04 (2020.17) | |
| Total, cost per patient | 11,544 (9137) | 14,043 (3822) | |
At baseline and at 12-months of benralizumab treatment
Cost-effectiveness analysis of benralizumab treatment based on severe exacerbations
| Mean (SD) per patient | Previous 12 months (baseline) | At 12 months on benralizumab |
|---|---|---|
| No. of exacerbations | 5.50 (2.63) | 0.66 (0.94) |
| Direct healthcare costs (in €) | 10,292 (7885) | 13,204 (2145) |
| Difference in | ||
| % reduction of exacerbations | 88.14 | |
| Costs (€) | 2912 | |
| Total cost to reduce 1 exacerbation (€) | 602 | |
| p value | < 0.001 | |
| Cost-effectiveness ratio | 3304 | |
| Cohen’s d | 2.00 (1.49–2.51) | |
Fig. 4Cost-effectiveness plane for benralizumab versus baseline treatment periods. Confidence ellipses using bootstrap statistics
Cost-effectiveness analysis (ACT score) of benralizumab treatment
| Period | Mean (SD) per patient | Increase | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Direct healthcare costs (in €) | Asthma control test | Costs | ACT score | % effectiveness | ||
| Score | Effectiveness rate | |||||
| Previous 12 months (baseline) | 11,544 (9137) | 13.71 (4.01) | 0.549 (0.151) | 2499 | 7.62 | 0.305 |
| At 12 months on benralizumab | 14,043 (3822) | 21.33 (2.21) | 0.853 (0.087) | |||
| Cost/effectiveness (per point gained in the ACT) | 327.95 | |||||
| Cost of a 3-point increase in the ACT [ | 983.86 | |||||
| Cost of a 7-point increase (from 13 to 20 in the ACT) | 2295.67 | |||||
| Cost-effectiveness (% increase in the ACT score) | 8201 | |||||
Fig. 5Cost-effectiveness plane (based on the ACT scores) for benralizumab versus baseline treatment periods. Monte Carlo simulation
Cost-utility analysis of benralizumab at 1 year of treatment
| Period | Mean utility (SD) | Mean total cost (Euros) | Increase | Incremental cost utility ratio | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Utility | Costs | ||||
| Previous 12 months (baseline) | 0.729 (0.071) | 11,544 (9137) | 0.138 | 2499 | 18,177 |
| At 12 months on benralizumab | 0.867 (0.039) | 14,043 (3822) | |||
Fig. 6Cost-utility plane (QALY gain) for benralizumab versus baseline treatment periods. Monte Carlo simulation