J. FitzGerald, S. Arnetorp, C. Smare, D. Gibson, K. Coulton, K. Hounsell, M. Sadatsafavi
{"title":"根据需要布地奈德/福莫特罗与低剂量ICS维持治疗对轻度哮喘患者的成本效益:英国的观点","authors":"J. FitzGerald, S. Arnetorp, C. Smare, D. Gibson, K. Coulton, K. Hounsell, M. Sadatsafavi","doi":"10.1183/13993003.congress-2019.pa1964","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Objective: To estimate the cost-effectiveness of as-needed budesonide/formoterol (BUD/F; Symbicort® Turbuhaler®) vs daily low-dose inhaled budesonide (BUD) + short-acting s2-agonist (SABA) as reliever in mild asthma patients for whom low-dose ICS maintenance therapy is appropriate. Methods: This analysis was based on SYGMA 2 (NCT02224157), a 52-week, double-blind trial of patients aged ≥12 years with mild asthma, using a Markov model (weekly cycles) and a UK healthcare (lifetime) perspective. Comparisons were as-needed BUD/F 200/6µg or BUD 200µg twice daily (bid) + terbutaline 0.5mg as needed. Health states in the model were exacerbation (≥3 days of oral steroid alone or combined with hospitalisation and/or ER visit), death and non-exacerbation. Quality adjusted life years (QALY) gained was based on EQ-5D-5L (mapped to 3L). Extrapolation was based on UK published literature and cost estimates were based on NHS unit cost values (£). Probabilistic results are presented to control for parameter uncertainty. Results: Over a patient’s lifetime, as-needed BUD/F was dominant with a small cost saving of £290/patient and marginal QALY gains of 0.0011; key drivers were lower total medication cost (0.52 vs. 2 inhalations/day) and lower exacerbation rate (0.11 vs 0.12) with as-needed BUD/F vs daily BUD, respectively. Cost-effectiveness acceptability curve showed that, across a wide range of willingness to pay for QALY (including £20,000/QALY threshold), likelihood of as-needed BUD/F being cost-effective vs daily BUD therapy + SABA was >90%. Conclusion: From a UK perspective, as-needed BUD/F offers an economic benefit for the treatment of patients with mild asthma.","PeriodicalId":243267,"journal":{"name":"Ethics and Economics","volume":"35 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-09-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Late Breaking Abstract - Cost effectiveness of as-needed budesonide/formoterol vs low-dose ICS maintenance therapy in mild asthma patients: A UK perspective\",\"authors\":\"J. FitzGerald, S. Arnetorp, C. Smare, D. Gibson, K. Coulton, K. Hounsell, M. Sadatsafavi\",\"doi\":\"10.1183/13993003.congress-2019.pa1964\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Objective: To estimate the cost-effectiveness of as-needed budesonide/formoterol (BUD/F; Symbicort® Turbuhaler®) vs daily low-dose inhaled budesonide (BUD) + short-acting s2-agonist (SABA) as reliever in mild asthma patients for whom low-dose ICS maintenance therapy is appropriate. Methods: This analysis was based on SYGMA 2 (NCT02224157), a 52-week, double-blind trial of patients aged ≥12 years with mild asthma, using a Markov model (weekly cycles) and a UK healthcare (lifetime) perspective. Comparisons were as-needed BUD/F 200/6µg or BUD 200µg twice daily (bid) + terbutaline 0.5mg as needed. Health states in the model were exacerbation (≥3 days of oral steroid alone or combined with hospitalisation and/or ER visit), death and non-exacerbation. Quality adjusted life years (QALY) gained was based on EQ-5D-5L (mapped to 3L). Extrapolation was based on UK published literature and cost estimates were based on NHS unit cost values (£). Probabilistic results are presented to control for parameter uncertainty. Results: Over a patient’s lifetime, as-needed BUD/F was dominant with a small cost saving of £290/patient and marginal QALY gains of 0.0011; key drivers were lower total medication cost (0.52 vs. 2 inhalations/day) and lower exacerbation rate (0.11 vs 0.12) with as-needed BUD/F vs daily BUD, respectively. Cost-effectiveness acceptability curve showed that, across a wide range of willingness to pay for QALY (including £20,000/QALY threshold), likelihood of as-needed BUD/F being cost-effective vs daily BUD therapy + SABA was >90%. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
目的:评估按需布地奈德/福莫特罗(BUD/F)的成本-效果;在适合低剂量ICS维持治疗的轻度哮喘患者中,Symbicort®Turbuhaler®)与每日低剂量吸入布地奈德(BUD) +短效s2激动剂(SABA)作为缓解剂的比较方法:本分析基于SYGMA 2 (NCT02224157),这是一项为期52周的双盲试验,患者年龄≥12岁,患有轻度哮喘,采用马尔可夫模型(每周周期)和英国医疗保健(终生)视角。对照是按需服用BUD/F 200/6µg或每日两次(bid) +特布他林0.5mg按需服用。模型中的健康状态为恶化(单独口服类固醇或合并住院和/或急诊室就诊≥3天)、死亡和非恶化。获得的质量调整生命年(QALY)基于EQ-5D-5L(映射到3L)。外推法基于英国发表的文献,成本估算基于NHS单位成本值(£)。给出了控制参数不确定性的概率结果。结果:在患者的一生中,按需BUD/F占主导地位,节省了290英镑/患者的小成本,边际质量收益为0.0011;主要驱动因素是总用药成本较低(0.52 vs. 2次吸入/天),按需BUD/F与每日BUD相比,加重率较低(0.11 vs. 0.12)。成本效益可接受曲线显示,在广泛的愿意支付QALY的范围内(包括20,000英镑/QALY阈值),按需BUD/F与每日BUD治疗+ SABA相比具有成本效益的可能性>90%。结论:从英国的角度来看,按需BUD/F为轻度哮喘患者的治疗提供了经济效益。
Late Breaking Abstract - Cost effectiveness of as-needed budesonide/formoterol vs low-dose ICS maintenance therapy in mild asthma patients: A UK perspective
Objective: To estimate the cost-effectiveness of as-needed budesonide/formoterol (BUD/F; Symbicort® Turbuhaler®) vs daily low-dose inhaled budesonide (BUD) + short-acting s2-agonist (SABA) as reliever in mild asthma patients for whom low-dose ICS maintenance therapy is appropriate. Methods: This analysis was based on SYGMA 2 (NCT02224157), a 52-week, double-blind trial of patients aged ≥12 years with mild asthma, using a Markov model (weekly cycles) and a UK healthcare (lifetime) perspective. Comparisons were as-needed BUD/F 200/6µg or BUD 200µg twice daily (bid) + terbutaline 0.5mg as needed. Health states in the model were exacerbation (≥3 days of oral steroid alone or combined with hospitalisation and/or ER visit), death and non-exacerbation. Quality adjusted life years (QALY) gained was based on EQ-5D-5L (mapped to 3L). Extrapolation was based on UK published literature and cost estimates were based on NHS unit cost values (£). Probabilistic results are presented to control for parameter uncertainty. Results: Over a patient’s lifetime, as-needed BUD/F was dominant with a small cost saving of £290/patient and marginal QALY gains of 0.0011; key drivers were lower total medication cost (0.52 vs. 2 inhalations/day) and lower exacerbation rate (0.11 vs 0.12) with as-needed BUD/F vs daily BUD, respectively. Cost-effectiveness acceptability curve showed that, across a wide range of willingness to pay for QALY (including £20,000/QALY threshold), likelihood of as-needed BUD/F being cost-effective vs daily BUD therapy + SABA was >90%. Conclusion: From a UK perspective, as-needed BUD/F offers an economic benefit for the treatment of patients with mild asthma.