| Literature DB >> 35147675 |
Aleksandra Tuleja1,2,3, Dante Salvador2,3,4, Taulant Muka2, Sarah Bernhard1, Armando Lenz5, Iris Baumgartner1, Marc Schindewolf1.
Abstract
Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) is a life-threatening complication associated with high medical costs. Factor Xa inhibitors gradually replace approved treatment with intravenous direct thrombin inhibitors despite their off-label indication, because of easier management and favorable economic profile. Whether they are cost-effective remains unclear. We evaluated the cost-effectiveness of approved and off-label anticoagulants in patients with suspected HIT, based on census data from the largest Swiss hospital between 2015 and 2018. We constructed a decision tree model that reflects important clinical events associated with HIT. Relevant cost data were obtained from the finance department or estimated based on the Swiss-wide cost tariff. We estimated averted adverse events (AEs) and incremental cost-effectiveness ratio as primary outcome parameters. We performed deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analyses with 2000 simulations to assess the robustness of our results. In the base-case analysis, the total cost of averting 1 AE was 49 565 Swiss francs (CHF) for argatroban, 30 380 CHF for fondaparinux, and 30 610 CHF for rivaroxaban; after adjusting for 4Ts score: 41 152 CHF (argatroban), 27 710 CHF (fondaparinux), and 37 699 CHF (rivaroxaban). Fondaparinux and rivaroxaban were more clinically effective than argatroban, with AEs averted of 0.820, 0.834, and 0.917 for argatroban, fondaparinux, and rivaroxaban, respectively. Treatment with fondaparinux resulted in less cost and more AEs averted, hence dominating argatroban. Results were most sensitive to AE rates and prolongation of stay. Monte Carlo simulations affirmed our base-case analysis. This is the first cost-effectiveness analysis comparing argatroban with fondaparinux and rivaroxaban using primary data. Fondaparinux and rivaroxaban resulted in more averted AEs, but fondaparinux had greater cost savings. Fondaparinux could be a viable alternative to argatroban.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35147675 PMCID: PMC9131923 DOI: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2022007017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood Adv ISSN: 2473-9529
Figure 2.Analytical decision tree model used in this economic evaluation. The decision tree model depicts the most important clinical and cost considerations in patients suspected of having HIT in whom heparins have been suspended. At the decision point, 3 nonheparin anticoagulants were considered: argatroban, fondaparinux, and rivaroxaban. Patients who received any of these medications underwent laboratory HIT diagnostics. Differences in the eventual costs and outcomes (ie, complications or no complications) per drug form the basis of this analysis. All model inputs and their references are explained in the Supplementary Table 1. p, standardized probability of event; r, incidence rate; VTE, venous thromboembolism.
Figure 1.Flowchart of study population. *One case refers to 1 hospital admission; some patients had >1 admission with HIT suspicion in a year. A, argatroban; F, fondaparinux; R, rivaroxaban.
Costs of drugs and hospitalization in the patients with suspected HIT
| Argatroban (n = 11) | Fondaparinux (n = 13) | Rivaroxaban (n = 22) | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Total costs of drugs per patient | 1 884 | 43.2 (9.30; 43.2) | 15.4 (6.60; 30.6) |
| Total costs of hospitalization | 92 280 (32 296; 113 844) | 65 507 (44 862; 100 652) | 59 316 (32 309; 126 008) |
| Daily costs of hospitalization | 4 292 (3 797; 6 325) | 3 586 (2 054; 4 874) | 3 106 (2 437; 4 624) |
|
| |||
| Total costs of drugs per patient | 1 884 | 43.2 (43.2; 43.4) | 24.2 (15.3; 41.8) |
| Total costs of hospitalization | 102 531 (58 331;114 547) | 103 994 (44 862;171 506) | 111 586 (71 533; 148 504) |
| Daily costs of hospitalization | 4 292 (4 037; 4 564) | 3 657 (2 991; 5 039) | 3 491 (2 840; 4 624) |
Costs are in CHF. We estimated the costs of adverse events using TARMED Tariff.[32]
Approximates for 1 ampule (250 mg/2.5 mL) of argatroban per day for an 80 kg patient.
Distribution of treatment allocation according to clinical probability of HIT assessed using 4Ts score in patients with available 4Ts score (43 of 46 patients)
| Clinical probability of HIT | A | F | R |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low 4Ts <4 | 2 | 2 | 8 |
| < medium 4Ts 4-5 | 7 | 7 | 7 |
| High 4Ts >5 | 2 | 4 | 4 |
Base case and adjusted costs and outcomes of 3 comparator drugs used to treat patients suspected of having HIT
| Unadjusted | Adjusted | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Drugs | Total costs | Total benefits (adverse events averted) | Total costs | Total benefits (adverse events averted) |
| Fondaparinux | CHF 24 923 | 0.820 | CHF 23 097 | 0.834 |
| Argatroban | CHF 39 207 | 0.791 | CHF 33 749 | 0.820 |
| Rivaroxaban | CHF 28 542 | 0.932 | CHF 34 585 | 0.917 |
Deterministic sensitivity analysis results
| Scenario | Fondaparinux vs Argatroban | Fondaparinux vs Rivaroxaban | Rivaroxaban vs Argatroban |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Dominant | Trade-off | Trade-off |
| Incremental Cost (CHF) | −10 653 | −11 488 | 835 |
| Incremental Effectiveness (AEA) | 0.013 | −0.084 | 0.097 |
| ICER (CHF/AEA) | 136 968 | 8 586 | |
|
| Dominant | Trade-off | Dominant |
| Incremental Cost (CHF) | −7 010 | −15 230 | −8 219 |
| Incremental Effectiveness (AEA) | 0.007 | −0.043 | 0.050 |
| ICER (CHF/AEA) | 351 595 | ||
|
| Dominant | Trade-off | Dominant |
| Incremental Cost (CHF) | −14 144 | −7 988 | −6 156 |
| Incremental Effectiveness (AEA) | 0.019 | −0.122 | 0.141 |
| ICER (CHF/AEA) | 65 606 | ||
|
| Dominant | Rivaroxaban was not assessed in the study | |
| Incremental Cost (CHF) | −18 142 | ||
| Incremental Effectiveness (AEA) | 0.061 | ||
| ICER (CHF/AEA) | |||
| Trade-off | Dominant | Dominated | |
| Incremental Cost (CHF) | −881 | −15 963 | 15 081 |
| Incremental Effectiveness (AEA) | −0.042 | 0.029 | −0.071 |
| ICER (CHF/AEA) | 21 107 | ||
Dominant = the first drug (ie, before "vs") costed less and was more effective in preventing adverse events than the comparator.
Dominated = the first drug (ie, before "vs") costed more and was less effective in preventing adverse events than the comparator.
AEA, adverse events averted.
Trade-off indicates “less costly but also less effective”; interpretation of cost-effectiveness depends on threshold: costs of averting 1 adverse event
Trade-off indicates “more costly but also more effective”; interpretation of cost-effectiveness depends on threshold: costs of averting 1 adverse event
Figure 3.Probabilistic sensitivity analyses (2000 Monte Carlo simulations). Each dot in the plot represents the results of 1 Monte Carlo simulation. X-axes represent incremental benefits (adverse events averted), and y-axes represent incremental costs in CHF. Dots on the southeast quadrant means the drug in bold typeface is dominant (ie, less costs and more benefits). Dots on the northwest means the drug in bold typeface is dominated (more costs and less benefits). Dots on either northeast and southwest quadrants mean that trade-offs between costs and benefits of the drugs being compared exist, and dots below the threshold (slope of line from the origin) are considered cost-effective.
Figure 4.Cost-effectiveness acceptability curve of fondaparinux and rivaroxaban compared with argatroban.