| Literature DB >> 35230652 |
Anton L V Avanceña1,2, James G Kahn2,3,4,5, Elliot Marseille6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35230652 PMCID: PMC8930905 DOI: 10.1007/s40261-022-01122-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Drug Investig ISSN: 1173-2563 Impact factor: 2.859
Fig. 1Cumulative proportion of eligible patients with chronic and severe PTSD who received with MDMA-AT over 10 years under three treatment targets. MDMA-AT 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine assisted-therapy, PTSD post-traumatic stress disorder
Model inputs
| Base value (range) | Distribution in PSA | Source | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Asymptomatic | 33.3 | NA | [ |
| Mild | 26.2 | NA | [ |
| Moderate | 26.2 | NA | [ |
| Severe | 11.9 | NA | [ |
| Extreme | 2.4 | NA | [ |
| Dead | 0 | NA | [ |
| Asymptomatic | 0 | NA | [ |
| Mild | 0 | NA | [ |
| Moderate | 0 | NA | [ |
| Severe | 71.4 | NA | [ |
| Extreme | 28.3 | NA | [ |
| Dead | 0 | NA | [ |
| MDMA-AT (one-time) | 11,537 (8076–14,998) | Gamma | [ |
| Standard of care | 0 (0–13,256) | Gamma | [ |
| Medical care for asymptomatic PTSD | 5032 (3608–6456) | Gamma | [ |
| Medical care for mild PTSD | 10,118 (7250–12,986) | Gamma | [ |
| Medical care for moderate PTSD | 15,177 (10,855–19,469) | Gamma | [ |
| Medical care for severe PTSD | 20,236 (14,512–25,960) | Gamma | [ |
| Medical care for extreme PTSD | 24,283 (17,415–31,151) | Gamma | [ |
| Asymptomatic | 0.90 (0.81–0.99) | Beta | [ |
| Mild | 0.83 (0.75–0.91) | Beta | [ |
| Moderate | 0.74 (0.67–0.81) | Beta | [ |
| Severe | 0.61 (0.55–0.67) | Beta | [ |
| Extreme | 0.37 (0.33–0.41) | Beta | [ |
| Dead | 0 | NA | Assumed |
| Cohort size (range) | 3,523,049 (2,110,743–4,735,640) | Normal | [ |
| Annual discount rate (%) | 3 (0.23–0.38) | Beta | Assumed |
| Time horizon (years) | 30 (10–40) | Uniform | Assumed |
| Mean age of cohort | 41 | NA | [ |
| Probability of death from all causes | 0.002 (0.0018–0.0022) | Beta | [ |
MDMA-AT 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine assisted-therapy, NA not applicable, PSA probabilistic sensitivity analysis, PTSD post-traumatic stress disorder
aBase-case value and range calculated by authors using the references listed
bCosts are annual unless otherwise noted
Fig. 2Flow diagram summarizing the process for estimating the number of patients with chronic and severe PTSD who are eligible for MDMA-AT based on the eligibility criteria used in the Phase 3 trials of MDMA-AT. MDMA-AT methylenedioxymethamphetamine-assisted psychotherapy, PTSD post-traumatic stress disorder
Fig. 3Root of the schematic shows the four decision alternatives or scenarios—standard of care and the three MDMA-AT treatment targets (25%, 50%, and 75% of eligible patients). The shaded purple circle denotes the common Markov node, and the ovals are the PTSD states that simulated patients transition to. Each PTSD state is associated with a cost and health utility. Arrows represent transitions and are associated with an annual probability. Asym asymptomatic, Ext extreme, MDMA-AT methylenedioxymethamphetamine-assisted psychotherapy, Mod moderate, PTSD post-traumatic stress disorder, Sev severe
Summary of main results
| 25% target | 50% target | 75% target | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard of care | MDMA-AT | Standard of care | MDMA-AT | Standard of care | MDMA-AT | |
| Deaths | 191,199 | 147,581 | 347,618 | 268,850 | 475,175 | 368,243 |
| QALYs | 6,491,139 | 9,818,489 | 11,723,620 | 17,736,175 | 15,917,517 | 24,085,168 |
| Costs (billions US$) | 256 | 147 | 462 | 266 | 628 | 361 |
| Incremental deaths averted | 43,618 | 78,768 | 106,932 | |||
| Incremental QALYs | 3,327,350 | 6,012,555 | 8,167,652 | |||
| Incremental cost-savings (US$) | $109 billion | $196 billion | $266 billion | |||
Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios were not calculated because MDMA-AT was lower in cost and produced more health benefits than standard of care for three MDMA-AT treatment targets. Costs are in billions US$
MDMA-AT methylenedioxymethamphetamine-assisted psychotherapy, QALY quality-adjusted life year
| MDMA-AT has been shown in Phase 3 clinical trials to substantially reduce PTSD symptoms compared to psychotherapy with placebo. |
| Increasing access to MDMA-AT to 25–75% of eligible patients with chronic and severe PTSD over 10 years would avert between 43,000 and 106,000 deaths, produce 3.3–8.2 million discounted quality-adjusted life years, and lead to $109–$266 billions in discounted net savings for the healthcare system. |
| Increased access to MDMA-AT can save lives and improve the health of patients with chronic and severe PTSD, while reducing healthcare costs. |