Cost-effectiveness of semaglutide in people with obesity and cardiovascular disease without diabetes.

IF 2.9 4区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Journal of Medical Economics Pub Date : 2025-12-01 Epub Date: 2025-02-12 DOI:10.1080/13696998.2025.2459529
Phil McEwan, Martin Bøg, Mads Faurby, Volker Foos, Ildiko Lingvay, Christopher Lübker, Ryan Miller, Joshua C Toliver, Florian Yeates, A Michael Lincoff
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Aims: The cardioprotective effects of semaglutide 2.4 mg reported in the SELECT cardiovascular (CV) outcomes trial (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03574597) provide clinical benefit for subjects with overweight or obesity and established CV disease without type 2 diabetes (T2D). We assessed cost-effectiveness of semaglutide 2.4 mg in this population against the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association value framework.

Materials and methods: A cohort-level Markov-state cost-effectiveness model using trial-derived data with outcomes from a healthcare sector perspective measured over a lifetime horizon was developed. Treatment costs were based on US list prices; scenario analyses used literature-reported estimated rebates. Healthcare costs and benefits were discounted at 3.0%. A simulated cohort of 100,000 subjects was aligned to the SELECT trial population baseline characteristics and time-on-treatment. Subjects received either semaglutide 2.4 mg or placebo in addition to standard of care (SoC). Modelled outcomes included clinical events (CV events, progression to T2D, chronic kidney disease [CKD]) and health economic measures, including direct costs and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs).

Results: Mean semaglutide 2.4 mg treatment duration was 2.79 years. Per 100,000 subjects, treatment avoided 2,791 non-fatal myocardial infarctions, 3,000 coronary revascularizations, 487 non-fatal strokes, and 115 CV deaths over the modeled lifetime horizon. Average per-subject lifetime treatment costs were $47,353; savings arose from avoided T2D ($14,431), CKD ($2,074), and CV events ($1,512). Semaglutide 2.4 mg was associated with increased lifetime costs ($29,767), additional QALYs gained (0.218) and an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of $136,271/QALY at list price; a scenario using an empirically estimated 48% rebate predicted $32,219/QALY.

Limitations: The generalizability of observations from SELECT to a broader US population is unknown. Our model does not capture all outcomes nor costs that may be affected by weight loss. Modeling assumptions may present limitations.

Conclusions: Semaglutide 2.4 mg use as in SELECT is cost-effective at list price, using a $150,000/QALY willingness-to-pay threshold.

西马鲁肽在无糖尿病的肥胖和心血管疾病患者中的成本-效果
目的:在SELECT心血管(CV)结局试验(ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03574597)中报道的西马鲁肽2.4 mg的心脏保护作用为超重或肥胖和无2型糖尿病(T2D)的心血管疾病患者提供了临床益处。我们根据美国心脏病学会/美国心脏协会的价值框架评估了西马鲁肽2.4 mg在该人群中的成本-效果。材料和方法利用从医疗保健部门角度出发的试验数据,开发了一个队列水平的马尔可夫状态成本效益模型,该模型的结果是在整个生命周期内测量的。治疗费用按美国目录价格计算;情景分析使用文献报道的估计回扣。医疗成本和福利的折现率为3.0%。100,000名受试者的模拟队列与SELECT试验人群的基线特征和治疗时间一致。在标准治疗(SoC)的基础上,受试者接受了semaglutide 2.4 mg或安慰剂。建模结果包括临床事件(CV事件、进展为T2D、慢性肾脏疾病[CKD])和健康经济措施,包括直接成本和质量调整生命年(QALYs)。结果西马鲁肽2.4 mg的平均治疗时间为2.79年。每10万名受试者中,治疗避免了2,791例非致死性心肌梗死,3,000例冠状动脉血管重建术,487例非致死性中风和115例CV死亡。平均每位受试者终身治疗费用为47,353美元;由于避免了T2D(14431美元)、CKD(2074美元)和CV事件(1512美元),节省了费用。Semaglutide 2.4 mg与终生成本增加(29,767美元)、额外QALY增加(0.218美元)和按目录价格计算的增量成本-效果比为136,271美元/QALY相关;使用经验估计的48%回扣的情景预测为32,219美元/QALY。局限性:从SELECT观察到更广泛的美国人群的普遍性尚不清楚。我们的模型并没有涵盖所有可能受减肥影响的结果和成本。建模假设可能存在局限性。结论采用$150,000/QALY的支付意愿阈值,使用SELECT中使用的semaglutide 2.4 mg具有成本效益。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Medical Economics
Journal of Medical Economics HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES-MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
4.20%
发文量
122
期刊介绍: Journal of Medical Economics'' mission is to provide ethical, unbiased and rapid publication of quality content that is validated by rigorous peer review. The aim of Journal of Medical Economics is to serve the information needs of the pharmacoeconomics and healthcare research community, to help translate research advances into patient care and be a leader in transparency/disclosure by facilitating a collaborative and honest approach to publication. Journal of Medical Economics publishes high-quality economic assessments of novel therapeutic and device interventions for an international audience
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