| Literature DB >> 34374962 |
Tomoyuki Takura1, Akira Yuasa2, Naohiro Yonemoto3, Sven Demiya4, Hiroyuki Matsuda4, Nozomi Ebata5, Koichi Fujii5, Muneaki Ishijima6.
Abstract
AIM: The aim of this study was to evaluate the cost effectiveness of treatment strategies without opioid medications (non-opioid treatment strategy) versus strategies with opioid medications (opioid treatment strategy) among surgery-eligible patients with osteoarthritis (OA) of the knee or hip in Japan.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34374962 PMCID: PMC8807819 DOI: 10.1007/s41669-021-00292-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacoecon Open ISSN: 2509-4262
Fig. 1Model structure. A Opioid treatment strategy; B non-opioid treatment strategy. OA osteoarthritis
Base-case transition probabilities used in the opioid and non-opioid treatment strategies
| Probabilities | Base case (%) | Source for base case |
|---|---|---|
| Probability of remaining non-opioid | 56.030 | [ |
| Probability of non-opioids to opioids (monotherapy) | 6.230 | [ |
| Probability of non-opioids to opioids (combination therapy) | 35.320 | [ |
| Probability of non-opioid to surgery | 2.410 | [ |
| Probability of opioids to non-opioids | 25.980 | [ |
| Probability of (any) opioids to opioids (monotherapy) | 8.500 | [ |
| Probability of (any) opioids to opioids (combination therapy) | 48.150 | [ |
| Probability of opioids to surgery | 17.370 | [ |
| Probability of surgery to post-surgery | 100.000 | Assumption |
| Probability of post-surgery to surgery (reoperation), knee | 0.001 | [ |
| Probability of post-surgery to surgery (reoperation), hip | 0.004 | [ |
| Probability of remaining non-opioid | 90.110 | [ |
| Probability of non-opioid to surgery | 9.890 | [ |
| Probability of surgery to post-surgery | 100.000 | Assumption |
| Probability of post-surgery to surgery (reoperation), knee | 0.001 | [ |
| Probability of post-surgery to surgery (reoperation), hip | 0.004 | [ |
Probabilities of AEs for the opioid and non-opioid strategies, and all-causes of death
| AEs | Three-month probabilities (literature, %) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| First year | Subsequent year | Type of distributions | References | |
| Non-opioid | ||||
| Major CV events | 0.19 | 0.09 | Beta | [ |
| Major GI events | 0.20 | 0.10 | Beta | [ |
| Opioid | ||||
| Fractures | 1.33 | 0.67 | Beta | [ |
| Minor toxicities, opioid | ||||
| Nausea/vomiting | 2.95 | 2.95 | Beta | [ |
| Constipation | 5.05 | 5.05 | Beta | [ |
| Somnolence | 22.98 | 22.98 | Beta | [ |
| Non-opioid | ||||
| Major CV events | 0.19 | 0.09 | Beta | [ |
| Major GI events | 0.20 | 0.10 | Beta | [ |
| Major CV events | 6.89 | 6.89 | Beta | [ |
| Major GI events | 2.81 | 2.81 | Beta | [ |
| Fractures | 2.12 | 2.12 | Beta | [ |
Literature-based AE estimates were based on ibuprofen and celecoxib for the non-opioid treatment strategy, and tramadol for the opioid treatment strategy. Clinical expert-based AE estimates were based on loxoprofen for the non-opioid treatment strategy, and tramadol and a combination of tramadol and acetaminophen for the opioid treatment strategy
AEs adverse events, CV cardiovascular, GI gastrointestinal
Key cost inputs (osteoarthritis of the knee or hip)
| Cost category | Cost per 3 months (JPY)a | Type of distribution | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Treatment | 5059 | Gamma | |
| AEs | |||
| Major CV events | 318,482 | Gamma | |
| Major GI events | 31,198 | Gamma | |
| Healthcare resource use in non-opioid state | 3870 | Gamma | |
| Drug treatment | |||
| Treatment (non-opioid treatments in non-opioid state) | 5059 | Gamma | |
| Treatment (monotherapy in opioid state) | 9826 | Gamma | |
| Treatment (combination therapy in opioid state) | 14,794 | Gamma | |
| AEs (non-opioid treatments) | |||
| Major CV events | 318,482 | Gamma | |
| Major GI events | 31,198 | Gamma | |
| AEs (opioid treatments) | |||
| Nausea/vomiting | 862 | Gamma | |
| Constipation | 911 | Gamma | |
| Somnolence | 0 | Gamma | |
| Fractures (tramadol) | 213,853 | Gamma | |
| Healthcare resource use (non-opioid state) | |||
| Non-opioid state | 3870 | Gamma | |
| With opioid treatments | 3517 | Gamma | |
| Cost intervention, knee | 518,429 | Gamma | |
| Cost intervention, hip | 522,129 | Gamma | |
| Cost post-surgery, knee | 6424 | Gamma | |
| Cost post-surgery, hip | 5538 | Gamma | |
Medication costs were accounted for in the non-opioid and opioid health states and procedure costs were accounted for in the surgery and post-surgical health states. This is because there were no differences in the post-surgery treatment state dependent on pre-surgery treatment. Hence, the treatments in the post-surgery state for both strategies cancelled out in the model. All medication and procedure costs of the non-opioid, surgery and post-surgical health states were assumed to be the same in the non-opioid and opioid treatment strategies
AEs adverse events, CV cardiovascular, GI gastrointestinal, NSAIDs nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
aMedical Data Vision Co. Ltd (MDV; Tokyo, Japan)
bThe same costs are applied here for both the opioid and non-opioid treatment strategies
Utility values
| Health state | Knee | Hip | Type of distribution | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Base case | Scenario case | Base case | Scenario case | ||
| Non-opioids | 0.546 | Same as base case | 0.503 | Same as base case | Beta |
| Only opioids | 0.538 | 0.333 | 0.498 | 0.435 | Beta |
| Non-opioid/opioid combination | 0.539 | Same as base case | 0.516 | Same as base case | Beta |
| Surgery | 0.480 | 0.489 | Beta | ||
| Rehabilitation/physiotherapy | 0.559 | 0.596 | Beta | ||
| Waiting for prosthesis | 0.400 | 0.379 | Beta | ||
| Post-surgery (normal) | 0.683 | 0.730 | Beta | ||
| Post-surgery (with complications) | 0.424 | 0.556 | Beta | ||
Utility values were derived from García-Pérez et al. [33]
Cost-effectiveness results of base-case analysis
| Knee | Hip | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-opioid | Opioid | Non-opioid | Opioid | |
| Total cost, JPY | 951,456 | 1,005,334 | 902,739 | 956,868 |
| Incremental costs, JPY | 53,878 | 54,129 | ||
| QALY | 11.53 | 11.50 | 12.14 | 12.12 |
| Incremental QALY | − 0.03 | − 0.02 | ||
| ICER, JPY per QALY | Dominated | Dominated | ||
ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, JPY Japanese yen, QALY quality-adjusted life-years
Fig. 2Tornado diagrams, ICER, opioid treatment strategy versus non-opioid treatment strategy: A patients with OA of the knee; B patients with OA of the hip. Utilities were adjusted to a quarter value due to three-month cycles representing one cycle. Time horizon of variables was changed from 10 to 30 years (40–120 cycles). AE adverse events, CV cardiovascular, GI gastrointestinal, HCRU healthcare resource use, ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, OA osteoarthritis
Fig. 3Incremental cost-effectiveness plane for the base-case analysis, opioid treatment strategy versus non-opioid treatment strategy: A patients with OA of the knee; B patients with OA of the hip. WTP = 5 million JPY/QALY. JPY Japanese yen, OA osteoarthritis, WTP willingness-to-pay, QALY quality-adjusted life-years
Fig. 4Cost-effectiveness acceptability curves (CEACs) for A patients with OA of the knee; B patients with OA of the hip. OA osteoarthritis, QALY quality-adjusted life-years
Cost-effectiveness results of the scenario using lower utility for opioids
| Knee | Hip | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-opioid | Opioid | Non-opioid | Opioid | |
| Total cost, JPY | 951,456 | 1,005,334 | 902,739 | 956,868 |
| Incremental costs, JPY | 53,878 | 54,129 | ||
| QALY | 11.53 | 11.46 | 12.14 | 12.11 |
| Incremental QALY | −0.07 | −0.03 | ||
| ICER, JPY per QALY | Dominated | Dominated | ||
ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, JPY Japanese yen, QALY quality-adjusted life-years
| This study suggests that the non-opioid treatment strategy is cost effective compared with the opioid treatment strategy in patients with osteoarthritis of the knee or hip, although the results are associated with considerable uncertainty. |
| In the case of higher utility with opioid treatments, the treatment strategy for opioids was cost effective and the incremental cost-effectiveness ratios remained within the cost-effectiveness threshold. |