Projecting direct medical costs and productivity benefits of improving access to advanced therapy for rheumatoid arthritis: a projection modelling study.

Q2 Medicine
Chee Yoong Foo, Nurul Azwani Nadia Mansor, Shereen Suyin Ch'ng, Mollyza Mohd Zain
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Abstract

Introduction: To ensure the sustainability of the AT access improvement, it is important that health system stakeholders have timely, analyzed information accessible for reference and decision-making support. In this study, we projected the direct costs required as well as the expected direct medical cost-offset and productivity benefits resulting from improving the disease control.

Methods: We implemented a deterministic, prevalence-based mathematical model to project the annual cost of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) management within the public healthcare system in Malaysia. We also calculated the annual productivity loss due to uncontrolled RA in monetary value. Using the projection model, we compared the projected costs of the status quo scenario vs. several scenarios of improved advanced therapy (AT) access over a 5-year period.

Results: We projected that between 10,765 and 11,024 RA patients in Malaysia over the period of 2020-2024 will need access to AT due to treatment failure with conventional synthetic disease modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs). The projected net total medical cost under the status quo scenario were 163.5 million annually on average (approximately MYR 15,000 per patient per year). Cost related to health service utilization represented the heaviest component, amounting to 71.8% followed by drug cost (24.7%). Under the access improvement scenarios, drug cost constituted a higher proportion of the total medical, ranging from 25.6% to 30.4%. In contrast, the cost of health service utilization shown a reverse pattern (reducing to between 66.3% and 70.1%). Productivity costs were also expected to reduce as AT access improved leading to better outcomes. Treatment shifts to targeted synthetic DMARDs in anticipation of price adjustment appeared to have a cost saving advantage to the health system if all other parameters remain unchanged.

Discussion: Improving AT access for RA patients towards the aspirational target appeared to be feasible given the current health budget in Malaysia. Broader socio-economic consequences of productivity and income loss should be included as an important part of the policy consideration. The financial implication of different AT utilization mixes and the anticipated price adjustment will likely result in some cost saving to the health system.

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预测改善获得类风湿性关节炎先进疗法的直接医疗费用和生产力效益:一项预测模型研究。
导言:为确保可持续性地改善辅助医疗服务的可及性,重要的是卫生系统利益攸关方应及时获得经分析的信息,以供参考和决策支持。在本研究中,我们预测了所需的直接成本,以及预期的直接医疗成本抵消和改善疾病控制所带来的生产力效益。方法:我们实施了一个确定性的,基于患病率的数学模型来预测马来西亚公共医疗保健系统内类风湿性关节炎(RA)管理的年度成本。我们还计算了由于不受控制的RA造成的年度生产力损失。使用预测模型,我们比较了现状方案与改进的先进疗法(AT)获得的几种方案在5年期间的预计成本。结果:我们预计,在2020-2024年期间,马来西亚有10765至11024名RA患者由于常规合成疾病调节抗风湿药物(DMARDs)治疗失败,将需要获得AT。在目前情况下,预计每年的净医疗费用总额平均为1.635亿马币(每位患者每年约15,000马币)。与卫生服务利用有关的费用占最大比重,达71.8%,其次是药品费用(24.7%)。在可及性改善情景下,药品费用占总医疗费用的比例较高,介于25.6%至30.4%之间。相比之下,保健服务的使用成本呈现相反的模式(降至66.3%至70.1%之间)。随着AT的使用改善,生产成本也有望降低,从而带来更好的结果。如果所有其他参数保持不变,治疗转向预期价格调整的靶向合成dmard似乎对卫生系统具有节省成本的优势。讨论:考虑到马来西亚目前的卫生预算,改善类风湿性关节炎患者获得辅助治疗的机会以实现理想目标似乎是可行的。生产力和收入损失的更广泛的社会经济后果应作为政策考虑的一个重要部分加以考虑。不同的辅助药物利用组合和预期的价格调整所涉的财务问题可能会使卫生系统节省一些费用。
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CiteScore
4.90
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