| Literature DB >> 34333742 |
Pier Paolo Mangia1, Ottavio Gallo2, Daniela Ritrovato2, Lorenzo Pradelli3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34333742 PMCID: PMC8390398 DOI: 10.1007/s40261-021-01067-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Drug Investig ISSN: 1173-2563 Impact factor: 2.859
Fig. 1Markov model structure. ED emergency department, OCS oral corticosteroid
Exacerbation rate
| Treatment | IRIDIUM | ARGON |
|---|---|---|
| Severe exacerbations | ||
| IND/GLY/MF | 0.26 (0.22–0.31) | 0.36 (0.28–0.47) |
| MF/IND | 0.33 (0.28–0.39) | – |
| SAL/FLU | 0.45 (0.39–0.53) | – |
| SAL/FLU + TIO | – | 0.32 (0.25–0.42) |
| Moderate exacerbations | ||
| IND/GLY/MF | 0.48 (0.42–0.54) | 0.34 (0.30–0.38) |
| MF/IND | 0.60 (0.54–0.67) | – |
| SAL/FLU | 0.78 (0.69–0.86) | – |
| SAL/FLU + TIO | – | 0.54 (0.47–0.61) |
CI confidence interval, FLU fluticasone, GLY glycopyrronium, IND indacaterol, MF mometasone furoate, SAL salmeterol, TIO tiotropium
Utility values associated with the “day-to-day symptoms” status
| Treatment | IRIDIUM | ARGON |
|---|---|---|
| IND/GLY/MF | 0.775 | 0.755 |
| MF/IND | 0.759 | – |
| SAL/FLU | 0.766 | – |
| SAL/FLU + TIO | – | 0.742 |
FLU fluticasone, GLY glycopyrronium, IND indacaterol, MF mometasone furoate, SAL salmeterol, TIO tiotropium
Duration and disutility of exacerbations
| Type of exacerbation | Disutility | Duration | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| OCS burst | − 0.1 | Assumed to be equal to cycle length | [ |
| ED visit | − 0.1 | ||
| Hospital admission | − 0.2 |
ED emergency department, OCS oral corticosteroid
Drug cost and dosage
| Treatment | Package cost, € | Doses | Daily dose | Daily cost, € |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Enerzair 150/50/320 μg | 48.74 | 30 | 1 | 1.63 |
| MF/IND 150/320 μg | 28.43 | 30 | 1 | 0.95 |
| SAL/FLU 50/500 µg bid | 35.33 | 60 | 2 | 1.18 |
| TIO 5 µg o.d. | 26.67 | 60 | 2 | 0.89 |
FLU fluticasone, GLY glycopyrronium, IND indacaterol, MF mometasone furoate, o.d. once daily, bid twice daily, SAL salmeterol, TIO tiotropium
Cost per type of exacerbation
| Type of exacerbation | Cost, € | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Exacerbation with hospital admission | 2182.69 | [ |
| Exacerbation with ED visit | 200.00 | [ |
| Exacerbation with OCS burst | 36.49 | [ |
| Moderate exacerbation | 36.49 |
ED emergency department, OCS oral corticosteroid
Fig. 2Probabilistic sensitivity analysis scatterplot, indacaterol/glycopyrronium/mometasone furoate vs salmeterol/fluticasone plus tiotropium. QALY quality-adjusted life-year
Fig. 3Probabilistic sensitivity analysis for indacaterol/glycopyrronium/mometasone furoate vs salmeterol/fluticasone. A Scatterplot, B cost-effectiveness acceptability curve. QALY quality-adjusted life-year
Fig. 4Probabilistic sensitivity analysis for indacaterol/glycopyrronium/mometasone furoate vs mometasone furoate/indacaterol. A scatterplot, B cost-effectiveness acceptability curve. QALY quality-adjusted life-year
| It is established that in patients with asthma, symptom control is a primary goal, as it leads to reduced burden to the patient and the healthcare system. |
| The first commercially available fixed-dose combination of a long-acting beta-agonist, an inhaled corticosteroid, and a long-acting muscarinic antagonist, a single inhaler of indacaterol/glycopyrronium/mometasone furoate, has been compared to both inhaled corticosteroid/long-acting beta-agonist fixed combinations and to the use of an inhaled corticosteroid/long-acting beta-agonist plus long-acting muscarinic antagonist (separate inhalers). |
| On the basis of the clinical results, a Markov model has been fed with local Italian economic inputs. |
| Under the assumptions of the model, it is predicted that the new option is cost effective against existing alternatives. |