Cost-effectiveness of nirmatrelvir/ritonavir in COVID-19 patient groups at high risk for progression to severe COVID-19 in the Netherlands.

IF 1.7 4区 医学 Q3 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES
Carlos H Arteaga Duarte, Michel L Peters, Michelle H M de Goeij, Roy Spijkerman, Maarten J Postma
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Nirmatrelvir/ritonavir is indicated for the treatment of COVID-19 in symptomatic adults with increased risk for severe illness, not requiring supplemental oxygen yet. From a Dutch societal perspective, a cost-utility assessment of nirmatrelvir/ritonavir versus best supportive care (BSC) was conducted in three patient groups: (a) immunocompromised patients, (b) patients aged at least 60 years with one comorbidity, (c) patients aged at least 70 years. Groups were selected considering their relevance as high-risk groups, as described in Dutch and international guidelines and recommendations.

Methods: A one-year decision-tree, estimating costs and outcomes associated with a COVID-19 infection was coupled to a lifetime two-state Markov component simulating subsequent life-time survival and quality of life. Effectiveness estimates, informing the intervention preventing hospital admission or death, were based on real-world evidence by Lewnard and colleagues (2023) in a vaccinated population during a timeframe with predominance of the Omicron variant. Epidemiology relies on publicly available data, primarily sourced during the Omicron variant's era. In the decision tree, clinically relevant event-related disutilities per disease course were applied to adjusted age-dependent Dutch-specific utility levels. In the Markov component, a disutility was considered for post-ICU patients. Costs rely on Dutch pharmacoeconomic guidelines and public data sources. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) was analysed as the main outcome, with a positive ICER indicating the cost associated with each additional quality-adjusted life year (QALY) gained by adopting the intervention.

Results: Nirmatrelvir/ritonavir was associated with an ICER of € 395 in the immunocompromised group (per patient: + 0.125 QALYs gained; + 0.130 life-years [LYs] gained; € 49 incremental cost), with an ICER of € 8700 in 60-plus patients with comorbidity (+ 0.054 QALYs; + 0.055 LYs; € 474 incremental cost), and with an ICER of € 13,021 among 70-plus patients (+ 0.053 QALYs; + 0.045 LYs; € 689 incremental cost). Results were most sensitive to the baseline hospitalization rates among high-risk individuals. Probabilistic sensitivity analyses indicate a high probability of being cost-effective (100, 94, 85% respectively), considering a willingness-to-pay threshold of € 20,000 per QALY.

Conclusions: From a Dutch societal perspective, over a lifetime horizon, nirmatrelvir/ritonavir is cost-effective versus BSC in the three groups analysed.

尼马特利韦/利托那韦在荷兰进展为严重COVID-19的高风险患者群体中的成本效益
背景:尼马特利韦/利托那韦适用于有症状且严重疾病风险增加的成人COVID-19治疗,尚不需要补充氧气。从荷兰社会的角度来看,在三个患者组中进行了nirmatrelvir/ritonavir与最佳支持治疗(BSC)的成本效用评估:(a)免疫功能低下患者,(b)年龄至少60岁且有一种合并症的患者,(c)年龄至少70岁的患者。如荷兰和国际准则和建议所述,选择的群体考虑到其作为高危群体的相关性。方法:采用为期一年的决策树,估算与COVID-19感染相关的成本和结果,并将其与终身双状态马尔可夫分量相结合,模拟随后的终身生存和生活质量。对干预措施预防住院或死亡的有效性估计是基于Lewnard及其同事(2023年)在一段欧米克隆变异占优势的时间框架内接种疫苗人群的真实证据得出的。流行病学依赖于可公开获得的数据,这些数据主要来自于欧米克隆变异时代。在决策树中,每个病程的临床相关事件相关负效用应用于调整后的年龄相关荷兰特定效用水平。在马尔可夫分量中,考虑了icu后患者的负效用。费用依赖于荷兰药物经济学指南和公共数据来源。增量成本-效果比(ICER)作为主要结果进行分析,ICER为正表明通过采用干预措施获得的每一个额外的质量调整生命年(QALY)相关的成本。结果:尼马特利韦/利托那韦与免疫功能低下组的ICER相关,为395欧元(每名患者:增加+ 0.125 qaly;增加+ 0.130 life-year [LYs];49欧元的增量成本),60多名合并合并症患者的ICER为8700欧元(+ 0.054 QALYs; + 0.055 LYs;在70多名患者中,ICER为13,021欧元(+ 0.053 QALYs; + 0.045 LYs;增量成本689欧元)。结果对高危人群的基线住院率最为敏感。概率敏感性分析表明,考虑到每个QALY的支付意愿阈值为20,000欧元,成本效益的可能性很高(分别为100,94,85%)。结论:从荷兰社会的角度来看,在三组分析中,nirmatrelvir/ritonavir与BSC相比具有成本效益。
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来源期刊
Cost Effectiveness and Resource Allocation
Cost Effectiveness and Resource Allocation HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES-
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
4.30%
发文量
59
审稿时长
34 weeks
期刊介绍: Cost Effectiveness and Resource Allocation is an Open Access, peer-reviewed, online journal that considers manuscripts on all aspects of cost-effectiveness analysis, including conceptual or methodological work, economic evaluations, and policy analysis related to resource allocation at a national or international level. Cost Effectiveness and Resource Allocation is aimed at health economists, health services researchers, and policy-makers with an interest in enhancing the flow and transfer of knowledge relating to efficiency in the health sector. Manuscripts are encouraged from researchers based in low- and middle-income countries, with a view to increasing the international economic evidence base for health.
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