| Literature DB >> 34658008 |
Noman Paracha1, Pollyanna Hudson2, Stephen Mitchell2, C Simone Sutherland3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a rare, progressive neuromuscular disease that affects individuals with a broad age range. SMA is typically characterised by symmetrical muscle weakness but is also associated with cardiac defects, life-limiting impairments in respiratory function and bulbar function defects that affect swallowing and speech. Despite the advent of three innovative disease-modifying therapies (DMTs) for SMA, the cost of DMTs in addition to the costs of standard of care can be a barrier to treatment access for patients. Health Technology Assessment (HTA) decision makers evaluate the cost effectiveness of a new treatment before making a reimbursement decision.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34658008 PMCID: PMC8994739 DOI: 10.1007/s40273-021-01095-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacoeconomics ISSN: 1170-7690 Impact factor: 4.981
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram of the selection process that identified nine publications, reporting economic evaluations in SMA that were included in this SLR. aOne full publication and one conference abstract were linked studies; both have been retained in the current report as they each report unique relevant data. EBM Evidence-Based Medicine Reviews, HTA Health Technology Assessment, SLR systematic literature review, SMA spinal muscular atrophy
Summary of the economic evaluation models used to estimate cost and health outcomes (N = 9)
| Source | CADTH | US ICER Group | NICE (TA588) | Malone et al. 2019 | Thokala et al. 2019 | Zuluaga-Sanchez et al. 2019 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| References | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ |
| Publication type | HTA submission | HTA submission | HTA submission | Full-text publication | Abstract | Abstract | Full-text publication | Abstract | Abstract |
| Population | Patients with q5 SMA | Patients with SMA of all ages and types | Patients with infantile-(Type 1) and later-onset (Types 2/3) SMA | Paediatric patients with genetically confirmed Type 1 SMA and two copies of | Patients with Type 1 SMA | Patients with infantile-onset SMA | Patients with infantile‑ and later‑onset SMA | Later-onset SMA | Patients with infantile-onset SMA (most likely to develop Type 1 or Type 2 SMA) |
| Perspective | Canadian public health care system | USA health care sector | Payer (UK NHS and PSS)a | USA commercial payer | NR | USA health care sector | Swedish societal | USA: Third-party payer | USA: Third-party payer |
| Model structure: model type | Three Markov models: 1. Type 1 SMA 2. Type 2 SMA 3. Type 3 SMA | Three partitioned survival approach models each containing a) a short-term model concordant with clinical study data and b) a long-term extrapolation model: 1. Infantile-onset (Type 1) SMA 2. Later-onset (Types 2 and 3) SMA 3. Presymptomatic SMA | Two Markov models: 1. Early-onset SMA 2. Later-onset SMA | Markov model | Markov model | De novo economic model | Two Markov models: 1. Infantile-onset SMA 2. Later-onset SMA | Markov model | Markov model |
| Model structure: cycle length | Variedb | 1 month | Variedc | Variedd | NR | NR | 4 months | NR | NR |
| Model structure: health states | Baseline clinical status Status improved Status worsened or had no improvement Milestones consistent with Type 2 SMAe Death Baseline clinical status Status worsened Status did not improve Status had mild improvement Status had moderate improvement Whether patient can stand/walk with assistance Milestones consistent with Type 3 SMAf Death Non-ambulatory Ambulatory Death | Relative to baseline status Permanent ventilation Not sitting Sitting Walking Death Sitting Walking Death | No milestone achieved Mild milestones Moderate milestones Sits without support Stands with assistance Walks with assistance Stands/walks unaided Dead Sits without support but does not roll Sits and rolls independently Sits and crawls with hands and knees Stands/walks with assistance Stands unaided Walks unaided Dead | Within a broad range of normal development Walking functionally equivalent to Type 3 SMA Sitting functionally equivalent to Type 2 SMA Not sitting and living ventilation-free Not sitting and requiring permanent assisted ventilation Death | Milestone attainment | Permanent ventilation Not sitting Sitting Walking Death | Relative to baseline status Worsened Stabilised Improved Sits without support Stands with assistance Walks with assistance Stands/walks unaided Loss of later-onset motor function Death: from any health state Worsened motor function Stabilised motor function Mildly improved HFMSE score Moderately improved HFMSE score Motor milestones (consistent with later-onset [Type 3] SMA): Stands/walks with assistance Stands unaided Walks unaided Loss of ambulation with/without assistance (milestones consistent with Type 3 SMA: Stands/walks with assistance Stands unaided Walks unaided Death: from any health state | Consistent with later-onset SMA | Consistent with infantile-onset SMA |
| Model structure: scales used | Unspecified | HFMSE and WHO motor milestones | CHOP-INTEND | From published clinical trials (unspecified) | Data sourced from ENDEAR and CHERISH (no further information) | WHO motor milestones, HFMSE | HINE motor abilities scale | ||
| Intervention vs comparator | Nus vs SOCj | Nus vs SOCk OA vs SOCl | Nus vs SOCm | OA vs Nus + SOC | OA vs Nus as SOC | Nus vs SOCn OA vs SOCn | Nus + SOC vs SOC | Nus vs SOC | Nus vs SOC |
| Time horizon | Type 1 SMA: 25 y Type 2 SMA: 50 y Type 3 SMA: 80 y | Lifetime (all models) | Lifetime | Lifetime | 80 y | 60 y | |||
| Discount rate per annum | 1.5% costs and benefits | 3.0% costs and benefits | 3.5% costs and benefits | 3.0% costs and benefits | 3.0% costs and benefits | 3.0% costs and benefits | 3.0% costs and benefits | NR | NR |
| Costs (currency, year) | CAD, 2017 | USD, 2017 | GBP, 2016 | USD, NR | NR | NR | SEK, 2018 | NR | NR |
| Intervention price (model input) | Nus: $118,000 per 5-mL vial; $354,000 maintenance treatment to $708,000 in the first year | OA: placeholder cost of $2 million per dose (base-case analysis) Nus: $2,231,000 and $7,634,000 for base-case analysis (including hospital costs) for early-onset and later-onset SMA, respectively | Nus: £75,000 per 12-mg vial; administration costs range from £606 to £1359 depending on age of patient | OA: hypothetical price range from $3 million to $6 million per dose Nus: $125,000 per dose | OA: hypothetical price points from $2 million to $3 million per dose Nus: estimated discounted lifetime costs: $6.33 million | OA: assumed placeholder price: $2 million Nus: NR | OA: list price $2,125,000 Nus: NR | NR | NR |
| Healthcare resource utilisation (source) | Health costs appear to be derived from a study of SMA costs in Germany [ | Costs sourced from claims analysis of US commercial health plans comprising infantile-, childhood- and later-onset SMA based on a published study [ | NHS reference costs for lumbar puncture and general healthcare management costs from a study of four European countries, including the UK [ | Costs were estimated from an analysis of medical and pharmacy claims for patients with SMA enrolled in US commercial health plans | Costs were sourced from published claims analysis data and literature, and expert opinion (unspecified) | Costs were sourced from US healthcare sector perspective | Economic inputs for model informed by SLR reviewed by UK and Swedish clinical experts | From literature; no further information | From literature; no further information |
| Utilities (source) | Types 1 and 3 SMA: unpublished utility value analyses by five experts in SMA Type 2 SMA: QoL data from CHERISH mapped to EQ-5D | Adopted for early-onset model based on assumed correspondence of health states ERG-preferred analysis of patient and caregiver utilities from the following published sources: patient [ | 1. PedsQL scores from CHERISH mapped to EQ-5D-Y utilities using a published algorithm [ 2. Five clinical experts assessed Types 1 and 2 SMA case studies using EQ-5D-Y and PedsQL-NMM (baseline states only) [ 3. Parent proxy-assessed QoL using EQ-5D-3L [ | NR | From literature; no further information | From literature; no further information | |||
| Costs | Total costs: Nus: $3,534,854 RWC: $339,683 Nus: $8,336.271 RWC: $708,620 Nus: $5,554,707 RWC: $1,091,307 | Total costs: Nus: $3,884,000 BSC: $789,000 OA: $3,657,000 BSC: $789,000 Nus: $9,148,000 BSC: $1,442,000 Nus: $11,929,000 BSC: $801,000 | RWC: £71,540 Nus: £2,258,852 RWC: £184,312 Nus: £3,148,754 RWC: £71,540 Nus: £2,258,852 RWC: £184,312 Nus: £3,148,754 | Total average cost per year per patient: OA (reported by hypothetical cost): $2.5M: $4,214,379 $3M: $4,699,816 $4M: $5,670,690 $5M: $6,641,564 Nus: $6,316,711 | NR | NR | Nus + SOC: 23,920,567 SEK SOC: 2,066,516 SEK Incremental: 21,854,051 SEK Nus + SOC: 66,053,350 SEK SOC: 28,029,941 SEK Incremental: 38,023,409 SEK | NR | NR |
| QALYs | Total QALYs: Nus: 3.919 RWC: –0.881 Nus: 23.278 RWC: 19.602 Nus: 12.053 RWC: 10.490 | Total QALYs: Nus: 3.24 BSC: 0.46 OA: 12.23 BSC: 0.46 Nus: 12.28 BSC: 11.34 Nus: 21.94 BSC: 6.25 | Total QALYs: RWC: 2.49 Nus: 7.86 Nus: 14.52 RWC: 16.88 RWC: 2.17 Nus: 7.61 Nus: 12.36 RWC: 15.66 | Total patient QALYs: OA: 15.65 Nus: 5.29 OA: 29.86 Nus: 7.21 | Total QALYs: OA: 30.3 Nus: 7.2 OA: 15.9 Nus: 5.3 | NR | Total patient QALYs (discounted): Nus + SOC: 3.65 SOC: −0.20 Nus + SOC: 9.25 SOC: –0.29 Total caregiver QALYs (discounted): Nus + SOC: −0.10 SOC: −0.12 Nus + SOC: −1.37 SOC: −3.76 | Total QALYs (discounted): Nus: 13.89 SOC: 12.71 | Total QALYs (discounted): Nus: 2.05 SOC: 0.41 |
| LYs | Total LYs: Nus: 8.373 RWC: 3.583 Nus: 28.527 RWC: 26.348 Nus: 44.155 RWC: 44.155 | Total LYs: Nus: 7.64 BSC: 2.40 OA: 18.17 BSC: 2.40 Nus: 18.90 BSC: 18.90 Nus: 26.58 BSC: 9.51 | Total LYs: RWC: 3.39 Nus: 9.34 Nus: 19.61 RWC: 20.99 RWC: 3.39 Nus: 9.33 RWC: 19.61 Nus: 20.99 | Total LYs: OA: 37.20 Nus: 9.68 OA: 19.81 Nus: 7.11 | NR | NR | Total LYs (discounted): Nus + SOC: 7.23 SOC: 1.01 Nus + SOC: 23.13 SOC: 21.28 | Total LYs (discounted): Nus: 21.39 SOC: 21.04 | Total LYs (discounted): Nus: 4.37 SOC: 2.15 |
| ICERs | ICER/QALY: Nus vs RWC: $665,570 Nus vs RWC: $2,075,435 Nus vs RWC: $2,855,818 | ICER/LY: Nus vs BSC: $590,000 OA vs BSC: $182,000 Nus vs BSC: dominatedo Nus vs BSC: $652,000 ICER/QALY (USD, 2002): Nus vs BSC: $1,112,000 OA vs BSC: $243,000 Nus vs BSC: $8,156,000 Nus vs BSC: $709,000 | ICER/QALY: Nus vs RWC: £407,605 Nus vs RWC: £1,252,991 Nus vs RWC: £402,361 Nus vs RWC: £898,164 | ICER/QALY: OA vs Nus (reported by hypothetical costs; USD, reference year NR): $2.5M: OA dominates $3M: OA dominates $4M: OA dominates $5M: $31,379 | ICER/QALY: OA vs Nus: OA dominates | ICER/QALY: Nus vs SOC: did not fall below $1 million OA vs SOC at assumed placeholder price of $2 million: $205,000–$412,000 | ICER/QALY (patients and caregivers): Nus + SOC vs SOC: | ICER/QALY: Nus vs SOC: exceeded $500,000/QALY | ICER/QALY: Nus vs SOC: exceeded $500,000/QALY |
| Uncertainty (i.e. PSA, OWSA, scenario analyses) | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | NR | Yesp | Yes | NR | NR |
BSC best supportive care, CAD Canadian dollar, CADTH Canadian Agency for Drugs and Technologies in Health, CHOP-INTEND Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Infant Test of Neuromuscular Disorders, EQ-5D European Quality of Life, EQ-5D-3L EQ-5D–3 Dimensions, EQ-5D-Y EQ-5D–Youth version, ERG Evidence Review Group, ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, HINE Hammersmith Infant Neurological Examination, HFMSE Hammersmith Functional Motor Scale-Expanded, HTA Health Technology Assessment, GBP Great British pounds, LY life-year, NHS National Health Service, NICE National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, NR not reported, Nus nusinersen, OA onasemnogene abeparvovec, OWSA one-way sensitivity analysis, PedsQL Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory, PedsQL-NMM PedsQL–Neuromuscular Module, PSA probabilistic sensitivity analysis, PSS Personal Social Services, QALY quality-adjusted life-year, QoL quality of life, RWC real-world care, SEK Swedish krona, SLR systematic literature review, SMA spinal muscular atrophy, SMN survival of motor neuron, SOC standard of care, USD United States dollar, US ICER Group United States Institute for Clinical and Economic Review Group, WHO World Health Organization
aIncluding caregiver burden; societal perspective considered in scenario analysis
bType 1 SMA: patients could transition between health states at 2, 6, 10, 13 and 14 months, Type 2 SMA: 3 months conforming to CHERISH clinical trial, subsequent cycles every 4 months; Type 3 SMA: 3 months (for the first 27 months, subsequent cycles every 4 months)
cEarly-onset SMA: 2, 6, 10, 13, 14, and 18 months, and every 4 months thereafter; later-onset SMA: 3, 6, 9, 12, 15, 19, and 23 months, and every 4 months thereafter
dSix months for the first 3 years, then 12 months for all cycles thereafter
eFor example, sits without support, stands with assistance, walks with assistance and stands/walks unaided
fFor example, stands unaided and walks unaided
gENDEAR clinical trial (NCT02193074)
hSHINE clinical trial (NCT02594124)
iCHERISH clinical trial (NCT02292537)
jComparator described as SOC or RWC (which includes supportive treatment of respiratory, nutritional and orthopaedic function decline) in cited publication
kComparator described as BSC in cited publication
lComparator described as BSC in cited publication. There is no trial examining OA versus BSC, so data from the BSC arm in ENDEAR were used to inform this comparison
mComparator described as RWC (which includes respiratory, nutritional, gastrointestinal and orthopaedic interventions) in cited publication
nComparator described as BSC in cited publication; no description of BSC given
oA dominant treatment costs less and yields better health outcomes with respect to the comparator treatment
pUncertainty analysis reported for nusinersen only
| The advent of three innovative disease-modifying therapies for spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) has led to a recent increase in economic evaluations, yet a lack of long-term clinical trial data remains a challenge. |
| Nine economic evaluations of SMA showed inconsistent methodological approaches, and recommendations by Health Technology Assessment bodies were generally not met. |
| Consensus for future economic evaluations in SMA should include standardised intervention efficacy endpoints and consideration of revised classification of SMA types. |