口服伊维菌素单独或联合氯菊酯与氯菊酯在菲律宾治疗经典疥疮中的经济评价

Q4 Medicine
Acta Medica Philippina Pub Date : 2025-01-15 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.47895/amp.vi0.8650
Rowena F Genuino, Mac Ardy J Gloria, Clarence Pio Rey S Yacapin, Maria Christina Filomena R Batac, Fernando B Garcia, Francis R Capule, Mary Ann J Ladia, Malaya P Santos, Ailyn M Yabes, Ma Stephanie Fay S Cagayan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景和目的:在日本、欧洲和CDC-STI治疗经典疥疮的指南中,口服伊维菌素被推荐作为局部氯菊酯的替代品。在某些情况下,也使用口服伊维菌素和外用氯菊酯的组合。在印度和埃及进行的部分经济评估得出了相互矛盾的结果,在菲律宾也没有进行成本效益分析,将基于伊维菌素的方案与氯菊酯的疥疮治疗方案进行比较。我们的目的是确定口服伊维菌素单独或与氯菊酯联合治疗菲律宾成年典型疥疮患者的成本效益,与氯菊酯相比。方法:我们使用决策树模型来评估两种方案的成本-效果,口服伊维菌素单独或联合氯菊酯,比较氯菊酯在菲律宾家庭门诊治疗成人和5岁及以上儿童的典型疥疮。我们在一个月的随访中估计了总成本和残疾调整生命年(DALYs)。输入参数从辅助数据中获得,例如网络荟萃分析对临床结果概率的影响估计,2019年全球疾病负担的DALYs,以及截至2022年8月菲律宾的现行市场成本(dpi 2022,卫生部和主要药店推荐加价)。我们计算了增量成本效益比(ICER)和净货币效益(NMB),以确定哪些干预措施具有成本效益。通过单变量和概率敏感性分析以及情景分析来评估参数和结构不确定性的影响。结果:与氯菊酯相比,以伊维菌素为基础的方案可能在菲律宾门诊环境中节省成本。基础病例分析显示,口服伊维菌素具有更高的成本节约(成本变化,- 1039.31;而口服伊维菌素/氯菊酯联合使用可避免更高的DALYS(成本变化,PhP -1,019.78;与氯菊酯相比,DALYs变化0.00045)。通过概率敏感性分析,伊维菌素/氯菊酯联合用药的成本效益最高(56%),其次是口服伊维菌素(44%),而氯菊酯的成本效益为0%。使用单向确定性敏感性分析,伊维菌素的估计值对伊维菌素与氯菊酯的治愈风险敏感。在成本-效果可接受曲线上,口服伊维菌素优于口服伊维菌素/氯菊酯联合用药。结论:与氯菊酯相比,两种以伊维菌素为基础的方案在菲律宾门诊治疗经典疥疮方面似乎都节省了成本。临床医生可能会考虑口服伊维菌素单独或联合氯菊酯作为一线或二线治疗的替代方案,这取决于患者的偏好、不良事件风险概况、可获得性和经济能力。这需要使用来自菲律宾患者的原始数据来证实,以增强研究结果的稳健性,并支持在不同环境下基于证据的地方决策。模型参数的不确定性越小,结果的可信度越高,可用于预算影响分析,使资源配置更加合理。可以进行信息价值分析,以确定将来在菲律宾进行随机对照试验或调查以收集原始数据的费用是否值得。减少不确定性的费用,如果认为值得进一步研究的费用,可以促进人口一级的决策和预算规划。研究结果可以通过提供最具成本效益的疥疮干预措施,进一步为实践指南的制定、覆盖范围的决定和国家控制规划规划提供信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Economic Evaluation of Oral Ivermectin, Alone or in Combination with Permethrin, versus Permethrin, in the Treatment of Classic Scabies in the Philippine Setting.

Background and objective: Oral ivermectin is recommended as an alternative to topical permethrin in Japanese, European, and CDC-STI guidelines for treating classic scabies. The combination of oral ivermectin and topical permethrin is also used in some settings. Partial economic evaluations conducted in India and Egypt have conflicting results, and no cost-effectiveness analysis in the Philippines has compared ivermectin-based regimens to permethrin for scabies treatment. We aimed to determine the cost-effectiveness of oral ivermectin, alone or in combination with permethrin, compared to permethrin, in the treatment of Filipino adult patients with classic scabies.

Methods: We used a decision tree model to estimate the cost-effectiveness of two regimens, oral ivermectin alone or in combination with permethrin, compared with permethrin to treat adults and children aged five years and older with classic scabies in the outpatient setting from the household perspective in the Philippines. We estimated total costs and disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) over a one-month follow-up. Input parameters were obtained from secondary data, such as effect estimates for probabilities of clinical outcomes from a network meta-analysis, DALYs from the Global Burden of Disease 2019, and prevailing market cost in the Philippines (DPRI 2022 with recommended markup by DOH, and leading drugstores) as of August 2022. We computed for incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) and net monetary benefit (NMB) to determine which of the interventions are cost-effective. Univariate and probabilistic sensitivity analyses, and scenario analyses were conducted to assess the impact of parameter and structural uncertainty.

Results: Ivermectin-based regimens are suggested to be likely cost-saving compared to permethrin in the Philippine outpatient setting. Base case analysis showed that oral ivermectin had higher cost-savings (change in cost, -1,039.31; change in DALYS, 0.00027), while combination oral ivermectin/permethrin had higher DALYs averted (change in cost, PhP -1,019.78; change in DALYs, 0.00045), compared to permethrin. Combination oral ivermectin/permethrin (56%) was the most cost-effective, followed by oral ivermectin (44%) compared to permethrin (0%) through probabilistic sensitivity analysis. Estimates for ivermectin were sensitive to risk of cure for ivermectin vs permethrin using 1-way deterministic sensitivity analysis. Oral ivermectin was favored over combination oral ivermectin/permethrin at all thresholds based on the cost-effectiveness acceptability curve.

Conclusion: Both ivermectin-based regimens seem to be cost-saving compared to permethrin in the treatment of classic scabies in the Philippine outpatient setting. Clinicians may consider oral ivermectin, alone or in combination with permethrin as an alternative first-line or second-line treatment depending on patient preference, adverse event risk profile, availability, and economic capacity. This needs to be confirmed using primary data from Filipino patients to enhance the robustness of the findings and support evidence-based local decision-making in different settings. Less uncertainty in modelled parameters can give greater confidence in the results, which can be adopted for budget impact analysis and allow more rational resource allocation. Value of information analysis can be done to determine whether the expense of future RCTs or surveys in Filipinos to collect primary data is worth it. The cost of reducing uncertainty, if deemed worth the cost of further studies, may facilitate population-level decision-making and budget planning. Findings may further inform practice guideline development, coverage decisions, and national control program planning by providing the most cost-effective scabies intervention.

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Acta Medica Philippina
Acta Medica Philippina Medicine-Medicine (all)
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