Cost-Effectiveness of Medical Cannabis Versus Opioids for Chronic Noncancer Pain.

IF 3.1 4区 医学 Q2 PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY
Cannabis and Cannabinoid Research Pub Date : 2025-06-01 Epub Date: 2025-04-30 DOI:10.1089/can.2024.0120
Haron M Jeddi, Jason W Busse, Behnam Sadeghirad, Mitchell Levine, Caroline MacCallum, Li Wang, Rachel J Couban, Jean-Eric Tarride
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Chronic noncancer pain (CNCP) affects one in five adults and is commonly managed with long-term opioid therapy. Concerns regarding rare but catastrophic harms associated with opioids, including overdose and death, have generated interest in alternatives including cannabis; however, the comparative cost-effectiveness of these management options is uncertain. Methods: We used findings from a network meta-analysis of 90 randomized trials to develop a 1-year microsimulation model to compare costs and quality-adjusted life years (QALY) between oral medical cannabis and opioids for CNCP. We used a publicly funded health care payer perspective for our analyses and obtained cost and utility data from publicly available sources. All costs are reported in 2023 Canadian dollars. All analyses were probabilistic, and we conducted sensitivity and scenario analyses to assess robustness. Results: Total mean annual cost per patient was $1,980 for oral medical cannabis and $1,851 for opioids, a difference of $129 (95% confidence interval [CI]: -$723 to $525). Mean QALYs were 0.582 for both oral medical cannabis and opioids (95% CI: -0.007 to 0.015). Cost-effectiveness acceptability curves showed that oral medical cannabis was cost-effective in 31% of iterations at willingness-to-pay thresholds up to $50,000/QALY gained. Use of opioids is associated with nonfatal and fatal overdose, whereas medical cannabis is not. Discussion: Our findings suggest that medical cannabis as an alternative to opioids for chronic pain may confer similar, but modest, benefits to patients, and reduce the risk of opioid overdose without substantially increasing costs.

医用大麻与阿片类药物治疗慢性非癌性疼痛的成本效益
背景:慢性非癌性疼痛(CNCP)影响五分之一的成年人,通常通过长期阿片类药物治疗来控制。对与类阿片有关的罕见但灾难性危害(包括过量服用和死亡)的关切,促使人们对包括大麻在内的替代品产生了兴趣;然而,这些管理办法的相对成本效益是不确定的。方法:我们利用90项随机试验的网络荟萃分析结果,建立了一个为期1年的微观模拟模型,比较口服医用大麻和阿片类药物治疗CNCP的成本和质量调整生命年(QALY)。我们使用公共资助的医疗保健支付者视角进行分析,并从公开来源获得成本和效用数据。所有费用以2023年加元计算。所有的分析都是概率分析,我们进行了敏感性和情景分析来评估稳健性。结果:每位患者口服医用大麻的总平均年费用为1980美元,阿片类药物的总平均年费用为1851美元,相差129美元(95%置信区间[CI]: - 723美元至525美元)。口服医用大麻和阿片类药物的平均质量aly均为0.582 (95% CI: -0.007至0.015)。成本效益可接受曲线显示,在高达50 000美元/质量质量的支付意愿阈值下,31%的迭代中口服医用大麻具有成本效益。类阿片的使用与非致命性和致命性过量有关,而医用大麻则与此无关。讨论:我们的研究结果表明,医用大麻作为阿片类药物治疗慢性疼痛的替代品可能会给患者带来类似但适度的益处,并在不大幅增加成本的情况下降低阿片类药物过量的风险。
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来源期刊
Cannabis and Cannabinoid Research
Cannabis and Cannabinoid Research PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY-
CiteScore
6.80
自引率
7.90%
发文量
164
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