José Ramón Azanza, Juan María González Del Castillo, Raúl Ferrando, José María Molero, Alex Soriano, Carmen Peral, Alfonso de Lossada, Alba Bellmunt, Carla Garí, Tendai Mugwagwa, Vanessa López-Gómez
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The objective was to estimate the cost-effectiveness of nirmatrelvir/ritonavir (NMV/r) in treating adults with COVID-19 at high-risk of developing severe COVID-19 who do not require supplemental oxygen, compared to no treatment, from the Spanish National Health System (NHS) perspective. A decision-tree for the first year followed by a two-state Markov model with annual cycles for a lifetime horizon was developed. A cohort of 1000 high-risk, symptomatic COVID-19 patients entered the decision-tree for each comparator, divided into hospitalized patients, considering their level of care, and outpatients, for whom only symptom duration was considered. Vaccination status of patients and COVID-19-specific mortality for hospitalized patients were considered. NMV/r efficacy in reducing hospitalizations, deaths and symptom days was applied. Patient quality of life and costs were included (€2024). All the parameters and assumptions were validated by experts. The model reported outputs including costs, quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) and cost per QALY gained. NMV/r was dominant compared to no treatment, with a decrease in cost per patient of €169.69 and an increase in QALYs of 0.05. NMV/r is a dominant option compared to no treatment in high-risk adult patients with symptomatic COVID-19 not requiring supplemental oxygen, from the Spanish NHS perspective.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Medical Virology focuses on publishing original scientific papers on both basic and applied research related to viruses that affect humans. The journal publishes reports covering a wide range of topics, including the characterization, diagnosis, epidemiology, immunology, and pathogenesis of human virus infections. It also includes studies on virus morphology, genetics, replication, and interactions with host cells.
The intended readership of the journal includes virologists, microbiologists, immunologists, infectious disease specialists, diagnostic laboratory technologists, epidemiologists, hematologists, and cell biologists.
The Journal of Medical Virology is indexed and abstracted in various databases, including Abstracts in Anthropology (Sage), CABI, AgBiotech News & Information, National Agricultural Library, Biological Abstracts, Embase, Global Health, Web of Science, Veterinary Bulletin, and others.