Comparison of real-world healthcare resource utilization and costs among patients with hereditary angioedema on lanadelumab or berotralstat long-term prophylaxis.
Nicole Princic, Kristin A Evans, Chintal H Shah, Krystal Sing, Salomé Juethner, Bob G Schultz
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Aim: Hereditary angioedema (HAE) is a rare and chronic genetic condition. Lanadelumab and berotralstat, two plasma kallikrein inhibitors, have both been approved for long-term prophylaxis in patients with HAE; however, real-world data comparing costs and healthcare resource utilization (HCRU) are lacking. Materials & methods: This retrospective study used administrative healthcare insurance claims data (Merative™ MarketScan® Commercial, Medicare and Early View Research Databases; 1 July 2017-31 July 2023) to identify patients with HAE who initiated lanadelumab or berotralstat and were persistent for ≥18 months or 6 months, respectively. Sex, baseline healthcare costs and baseline number of on-demand treatment/short-term prophylaxis medication claims were used to calculate covariate balancing propensity scores for inverse probability of treatment weighting. Following weighting, outcomes during the 6-month follow-up period in patients receiving berotralstat were compared with those during months 0-6, 7-12 and 13-18 in lanadelumab-treated patients. Results: Fifty-seven lanadelumab- and 32 berotralstat-treated patients were included. After weighting, more berotralstat-treated patients had an all-cause inpatient admission (berotralstat, 9.4%; lanadelumab, months 0-6, 4.0%, 7-12, 1.8%, months 13-18, 2.0%) and emergency room visit (berotralstat, 21.9%; lanadelumab, months 0-6, 14.0%, 7-12, 8.0%, months 13-18, 17.9%). Total HAE treatment costs were similar during months 0-6 (lanadelumab, $377,326 vs berotralstat, $373,010), but decreased in months 7-12 ($319,967) and 13-18 ($283,241) of lanadelumab. On-demand treatment/short-term prophylaxis costs were lower for lanadelumab across the three follow-up periods than for berotralstat during months 0-6 (berotralstat, $60,451; lanadelumab, months 0-6, $46,336, months 7-12, $37,578, months 13-18, $23,968). The proportion of lanadelumab-treated patients who reduced dosing frequency was 24.8% during months 7-12 and 21.6% during months 13-18. Conclusion: Patients with HAE initiating lanadelumab versus berotralstat may require less on-demand and supportive HAE treatments and incur lower treatment-related and total healthcare costs. The ability to reduce lanadelumab dosing frequency after an attack-free period may be key in treatment selection, given the combination of cost savings and lower healthcare resource utilization.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Comparative Effectiveness Research provides a rapid-publication platform for debate, and for the presentation of new findings and research methodologies.
Through rigorous evaluation and comprehensive coverage, the Journal of Comparative Effectiveness Research provides stakeholders (including patients, clinicians, healthcare purchasers, and health policy makers) with the key data and opinions to make informed and specific decisions on clinical practice.