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1.
Injury ; 55(4): 111445, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38428102

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Recent clinical studies have shown favorable outcomes for cement augmentation for fixation of trochanteric fracture. We assessed the cost-utility of cement augmentation for fixation of closed unstable trochanteric fractures from the US payer's perspective. METHODS: The cost-utility model comprised a decision tree to simulate clinical events over 1 year after the index fixation surgery, and a Markov model to extrapolate clinical events over patients' lifetime, using a cohort of 1,000 patients with demographic and clinical characteristics similar to that of a published randomized controlled trial (age ≥75 years, 83 % female). Model outputs were discounted costs, quality-adjusted life years (QALYs), and incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) over a lifetime. Deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analyses were performed to assess the impact of parameter uncertainty on results. RESULTS: Fixation with augmentation reduced per-patient costs by $754.8 and had similar per-patient QALYs, compared to fixation without augmentation, resulting in an ICER of -$130,765/QALY. The ICER was most sensitive to the utility of revision surgery, mortality risk ratio after the second revision surgery, mortality risk ratio after successful index surgery, and mortality rate in the decision tree model. The probability that fixation with augmentation was cost-effective compared with no augmentation was 63.4 %, 58.2 %, and 56.4 %, given a maximum acceptable ceiling ratio of $50,000, $100,000, and $150,000 per QALY gained, respectively. CONCLUSION: Fixation with cement augmentation was the dominant strategy, driven mainly by reduced costs. These results may support surgeons in evidence-based clinical decision making and may be informative for policy makers regarding coverage and reimbursement.


Subject(s)
Hip Fractures , Surgeons , Humans , United States , Aged , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Reoperation , Bone Cements , Hip Fractures/surgery , Quality-Adjusted Life Years
2.
Interv Neuroradiol ; : 15910199231191034, 2023 Jul 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37499196

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Balloon guide catheters (BGCs) can be used adjunctively during mechanical thrombectomy (MT) for acute ischemic stroke (AIS). Evaluating the potential economic impact associated with adjunctive BGC use is an important consideration for resource allocation. METHODS: Decision tree models were used to estimate the economic value of BGC use in MT through its impact on functional outcomes. Healthcare utilization cost estimates in the short- and long-term for patients with different 90-day mRS scores were analyzed for MT-only and MT + BGC scenarios. Deterministic (one-way) and probabilistic sensitivity analyses were performed to evaluate the robustness and uncertainty of model parameters. RESULTS: Per-patient index hospitalization cost was estimated at $65,260 for MT-only and $62,883 for MT + BGC scenarios. Per-patient one-year post-index hospitalization cost was estimated at $27,569 for MT-only and $24,830 for MT + BGC. MT + BGC had a total cost savings of $5117 compared with MT-only. Deterministic (one-way) sensitivity analysis demonstrated that cost saving per patient was most sensitive to the proportion of patients in the mRS 0-2 category in both MT + BGC and MT-only. In a probabilistic sensitivity analysis, mean per-patient costs for the index hospitalization were estimated at $63,737 for MT-only and $61,425 for MT + BGC. Mean per-patient cost estimates one-year post-index hospitalization was $27,445 for MT-only and $24,715 for MT + BGC. MT + BGC had a total cost savings of $5043 compared with MT-only. CONCLUSION: Mechanical thrombectomy with adjunctive BGC use may reduce short-term and long-term patient costs due to improved functional outcomes when compared to MT treatment alone for AIS.

3.
Expert Rev Med Devices ; 20(9): 779-789, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37466357

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: The study evaluates the technology of fluoroscopy-based hip navigation that has shown to improve implant positioning in total hip arthroplasty (THA). METHODS: Premier Healthcare data for patients undergoing manual THA or fluoroscopy-based hip navigation THA between 1 January 2016-30 September 2021, were analyzed 90- and 365-day post-THA. The primary outcome was inpatient readmission. Secondary outcomes were operating room (OR) time, length of stay, discharge status, and hospital costs. Baseline covariate differences were balanced using fine stratification and analyzed using generalized linear models. RESULTS: Among 4,080 fluoroscopy-based hip navigation THA and 429,533 manual THA balanced patients, hip-related readmission rates were statistically significantly lower for the fluoroscopy-based hip navigation THA cohort vs. manual THA for both 90-day (odd ratio [95% CI]: 0.69 [0.52 to 0.91] and 365-day (0.63 [0.49 to 0.81] follow-up. OR time was higher with fluoroscopy-based hip navigation THA vs. manual THA (134.65 vs. 132.04 minutes); however, fluoroscopy-based hip navigation THA patients were more likely to be discharged to home (93.73% vs. 90.11%) vs. manual THA. Hospital costs were not different between cohorts at 90- and 365-day post-operative. CONCLUSIONS: Fluoroscopy-based hip navigation THA resulted in fewer readmissions, greater discharge to home, and similar hospital costs compared to manual THA.


Computer-assisted solutions are becoming more ubiquitous in surgical procedures. However, most of the current research is limited to small sample size and limited economic endpoints. The current study utilizes hospital billing data and fine stratification methodology to address the issue around sample size and covariate balancing. Hospital billing data provide a large sample across the US along with hospital costs that can be broken into different categories. Fine stratification methodology allows for covariate balancing while keeping all the samples. It is particularly advantageous when the treated or exposed group represents less than 5% of the entire cohort for a given study, as was observed in this study. Covariate balancing was done on patient, provider (hospital) and surgeon characteristics to minimize confounding. Furthermore, a generalized linear model was utilized to minimize any residual confounding. The study evaluated both short term (3-month) and long term (1-year) outcomes. Study suggested clinical benefits in using computer-assisted fluoroscopy-based hip navigation system in THA compared to manual THA as well as showed cost parity between computer-assisted fluoroscopy-based hip navigation system in THA and manual THA.


Subject(s)
Arthroplasty, Replacement, Hip , Humans , Patient Readmission , Length of Stay , Postoperative Complications , Risk Factors , Patient Acceptance of Health Care , Fluoroscopy , Computers , Retrospective Studies
4.
Circ Arrhythm Electrophysiol ; 16(4): e011237, 2023 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36891899

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Radiofrequency catheter ablation (RFCA) is an established treatment for atrial fibrillation (AF) refractory to antiarrhythmic drugs. The economic value of RFCA in delaying disease progression has not been quantified. METHODS: An individual-level, state-transition health economic model estimated the impact of delayed AF progression using RFCA versus antiarrhythmic drug treatment for a hypothetical sample of patients with paroxysmal AF. The model incorporated the lifetime risk of progression from paroxysmal AF to persistent AF, informed by data from the ATTEST (Atrial Fibrillation Progression Trial). The incremental effect of RFCA on disease progression was modeled over a 5-year duration. Annual crossover rates were also included for patients in the antiarrhythmic drug group to mirror clinical practice. Estimates of discounted costs and quality-adjusted life years asssociated with health care utilization, clinical outcomes, and complications were projected over patients' lifetimes. RESULTS: From the payer's perspective, RFCA was superior to antiarrhythmic drug treatment with an estimated mean net monetary benefit per patient of $8516 ($148-$16 681), driven by reduced health care utilization, cost, and improved quality-adjusted life years. RFCA reduced mean (95% CI) per-patient costs by $73 (-$2700 to $2200), increased mean quality-adjusted life years by 0.084 (0.0-0.17) and decreased the mean number of cardiovascular-related health care encounters by 24%. CONCLUSIONS: RFCA is a dominant (less costly and more effective) treatment strategy for patients with AF, especially those with early AF for whom RFCA could delay progression to advanced AF. Increased utilization of RFCA-particularly among patients earlier in their disease progression-may provide clinical and economic benefits.


Subject(s)
Atrial Fibrillation , Catheter Ablation , Humans , Atrial Fibrillation/diagnosis , Atrial Fibrillation/surgery , Atrial Fibrillation/drug therapy , Anti-Arrhythmia Agents/therapeutic use , Treatment Outcome , Catheter Ablation/adverse effects , Disease Progression , Recurrence
5.
J Bone Joint Surg Am ; 104(22): 2026-2034, 2022 11 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36053020

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: A previous randomized controlled trial (RCT) demonstrated a trend toward a reduced risk of implant-related revision surgery following fixation with use of a Proximal Femoral Nail Antirotation (PFNA) with TRAUMACEM V+ Injectable Bone Cement augmentation versus no augmentation in patients with unstable trochanteric fractures. To determine whether this reduced risk may result in long-term cost savings, the present study assessed the cost-effectiveness of TRAUMACEM V+ cement augmentation versus no augmentation for the fixation of unstable trochanteric fractures from the German health-care payer's perspective. METHODS: The cost-effectiveness model comprised 2 stages: a decision tree simulating clinical events, costs, and utilities during the first year after the index procedure and a Markov model extrapolating clinical events, costs, and utilities over the patient's lifetime. Sources of model parameters included the previous RCT, current literature, and administrative claims data. Outcome measures were incremental costs (in 2020 Euros), incremental quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs), and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs). Model uncertainty was assessed with deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analyses. RESULTS: The base-case analysis showed that fixation with cement augmentation was the dominant strategy as it was associated with cost savings (€50.3/patient) and QALY gains (0.01 QALY/patient). Major influential parameters for the ICER were the utility of revision, rates of revision surgery within the first year after fixation surgery, and the costs of augmentation and revision surgery. Probabilistic sensitivity analyses demonstrated that estimates of cost savings were more robust than those of increased QALYs (66.4% versus 52.7% of the simulations). For a range of willingness-to-pay thresholds from €0 to €50,000, the probability of fixation with cement augmentation being cost-effective versus no augmentation remained above 50%. CONCLUSIONS: Fixation with use of cement augmentation dominated fixation with no augmentation for unstable trochanteric fractures, resulting in cost savings and QALY gains. Given the input parameter uncertainties, future analyses are warranted when long-term costs and effectiveness data for cement augmentation are available. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Economic and Decision Analysis Level II . See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.


Subject(s)
Bone Cements , Hip Fractures , Humans , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Quality-Adjusted Life Years , Hip Fractures/surgery , Reoperation
6.
Surg Obes Relat Dis ; 17(11): 1897-1904, 2021 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34452846

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: People living with obesity have been among those most disproportionately impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, highlighting the urgent need for increased provision of bariatric and metabolic surgery (BMS). OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the possible clinical and economic benefits of BMS compared with nonsurgical treatment options in the UK, considering the broader impact that COVID-19 has on people living with obesity. SETTING: Single-payer healthcare system (National Health Service, England). METHODS: A Markov model compared lifetime costs and outcomes of BMS and conventional treatment among patients with body mass index (BMI) ≥ 40 kg/m2, BMI ≥ 35 kg/m2 with obesity-related co-morbidities (Group A), or BMI ≥ 35 kg/m2 with type 2 diabetes (T2D; Group B). Inputs were sourced from clinical audit data and literature sources; direct and indirect costs were considered. Model outputs included costs and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs). Scenario analyses whereby patients experienced COVID-19 infection, BMS was delayed by five years, and BMS patients underwent endoscopy were conducted. RESULTS: In both groups, BMS was dominant versus conventional treatment, at a willingness-to-pay threshold of £25,000/QALY. When COVID-19 infections were considered, BMS remained dominant and, across 1000 patients, prevented 117 deaths, 124 hospitalizations, and 161 intensive care unit admissions in Group A, and 64 deaths, 65 hospitalizations, and 90 intensive care unit admissions in Group B. Delaying BMS by 5 years resulted in higher costs and lower QALYs in both groups compared with not delaying treatment. CONCLUSION: Increased provision of BMS would be expected to reduce COVID-19-related morbidity and mortality, as well as obesity-related co-morbidities, ultimately reducing the clinical and economic burden of obesity.


Subject(s)
Bariatric Surgery , COVID-19 , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/epidemiology , Humans , Pandemics , SARS-CoV-2 , State Medicine , United Kingdom
7.
Inquiry ; 58: 46958021990516, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33511897

ABSTRACT

While substantial public health investment in anti-smoking initiatives has had demonstrated benefits on health and fiscal outcomes, similar investment in reducing obesity has not been undertaken, despite the substantial burden obesity places on society. Anti-obesity medications (AOMs) are poorly prescribed despite evidence that weight loss is not sustained using other strategies alone.We used a simulation model to estimate the potential impact of 100% uptake of AOMs on Medicare and Medicaid spending, disability payments, and taxes collected relative to status quo with negligible AOM use. Relative to status quo, AOM use simulation would result in Medicare and Medicaid savings of $231.5 billion and $188.8 billion respectively over 75 years. Government tax revenues would increase by $452.8 billion. Overall, the net benefit would be $746.6 billion. Anti-smoking efforts have had substantial benefits for society. A similar investment in obesity reduction, including broad use of AOMs, should be considered.


Subject(s)
Medicare , Taxes , Aged , Humans , Income , Obesity/prevention & control , Public Health , United States
8.
Obesity (Silver Spring) ; 28(2): 429-436, 2020 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31869002

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Obesity and its complications place an enormous burden on society. Yet antiobesity medications (AOM) are prescribed to only 2% of the eligible population, even though few individuals can sustain weight loss using other strategies alone. This study estimated the societal value of greater access to AOM. METHODS: By using a well-established simulation model (The Health Economics Medical Innovation Simulation), the societal value of AOM for the cohort of Americans aged ≥ 25 years in 2019 was quantified. Four scenarios with differential uptake among the eligible population (15% and 30%) were modeled, with efficacy from current and next-generation AOM. Societal value was measured as monetized quality of life, productivity gains, and savings in medical spending, subtracting the costs of AOM. RESULTS: For the 217 million Americans aged ≥ 25 years, AOM generated $1.2 trillion in lifetime societal value under a conservative scenario (15% annual uptake using currently available AOM). The introduction of next-generation AOM increased societal value to $1.9 to $2.5 trillion, depending on uptake. Finally, societal value was higher for younger individuals and Black and Hispanic individuals compared with White individuals. CONCLUSIONS: This study suggests that AOM provide substantial gains to patients and society. Policies promoting broader clinical access to and use of AOM warrant consideration to reach national goals to reduce obesity.


Subject(s)
Anti-Obesity Agents/therapeutic use , Health Services Accessibility , Obesity/prevention & control , Social Change , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Anti-Obesity Agents/economics , Cohort Studies , Cost Savings/statistics & numerical data , Ethnicity/statistics & numerical data , Female , Health Services Accessibility/standards , Health Services Accessibility/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Obesity/economics , Obesity/epidemiology , Obesity/ethnology , Quality of Life , Sickness Impact Profile , United States/epidemiology
9.
Am J Manag Care ; 25(10): 486-493, 2019 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31622064

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Febrile neutropenia (FN) is a life-threatening complication of chemotherapy that can lead to hospitalizations, chemotherapy dose reductions or delays, and mortality. Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) prophylaxis reduces the incidence of FN, enabling patients to undergo and remain on myelosuppressive chemotherapy. We estimate the benefits of continuing current G-CSF use patterns and an alternative that aligns prophylactic G-CSF use with guideline recommendations. STUDY DESIGN: Using The Health Economics Medical Innovation Simulation microsimulation, we estimated lifetime social value (SV) of prophylactic G-CSF for a nationally representative US population with breast, lung, and gynecological cancers and non-Hodgkin lymphoma. METHODS: SV estimates included the cost of G-CSF, FN, chemotherapy relative dose intensity (RDI) less than 85% (RDI<85%), medical spending, and deaths for 3 scenarios: current use (current G-CSF use), targeted use (100% G-CSF use among patients with high FN risk), and reduced use (current G-CSF use reduced by 20% across all FN risk categories). RESULTS: Over 10 years, current use, compared with no G-CSF use, would decrease cases of FN by 3.3 million, prevent 354,000 cases of RDI<85%, and generate $96 billion in SV. Compared with current use, targeted use would decrease cases of FN by an additional 3.3 million, prevent 355,000 more cases of RDI<85%, and generate another $119 billion in SV. Reduced use would increase FN and RDI<85%, lowering SV by $18 billion compared with current use. CONCLUSIONS: Current use of G-CSF prophylaxis would provide $96 billion in SV over the next 10 years. Targeting G-CSF prophylaxis to align with guidelines would more than double SV, highlighting the substantial value of appropriate FN risk assessment and targeted G-CSF prophylaxis.


Subject(s)
Chemotherapy-Induced Febrile Neutropenia/prevention & control , Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor/administration & dosage , Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor/economics , Neoplasms/epidemiology , Computer Simulation , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Health Expenditures/statistics & numerical data , Health Services/economics , Health Services/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Models, Econometric , Neoplasms/drug therapy , Quality-Adjusted Life Years , Severity of Illness Index
10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31067679

ABSTRACT

Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) effectively reduces human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) transmission. We aimed to estimate the impact of different PrEP prioritization strategies among Black and Latino men who have sex with men (MSM) in the United States, populations most disproportionately affected by HIV. We developed an agent-based simulation to model the HIV epidemic among MSM. Individuals were assigned an HIV incidence risk index (HIRI-MSM) based on their sexual behavior. Prioritization strategies included PrEP use for individuals with HIRI-MSM ≥10 among all MSM, all Black MSM, young (≤25 years) Black MSM, Latino MSM, and young Latino MSM. We estimated the number needed to treat (NNT) to prevent one HIV infection, reductions in prevalence and incidence, and subsequent infections in non-PrEP users avoided under these strategies over 5 years (2016-2020). Young Black MSM eligible for PrEP had the lowest NNT (NNT = 10) followed by all Black MSM (NNT = 33) and young Latino MSM (NNT = 35). All Latino MSM and all MSM had NNT values of 63 and 70, respectively. Secondary infection reduction with PrEP was the highest among young Latino MSM (53.2%) followed by young Black MSM (37.8%). Targeting all MSM had the greatest reduction in prevalence (14.7% versus 2.9%-3.9% in other strategies) and incidence (49.4% versus 9.4%-13.9% in other groups). Using data representative of the United States MSM population, we found that a strategy of universal PrEP use by MSM was most effective in reducing HIV prevalence and incidence of MSM. Targeted use of PrEP by Black and Latino MSM, however, especially those ≤25 years, had the greatest impact on HIV prevention.


Subject(s)
HIV Infections/prevention & control , Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis , Sexual and Gender Minorities , Adolescent , Adult , Black or African American , HIV Infections/ethnology , Hispanic or Latino , Homosexuality, Male/ethnology , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Safe Sex , United States , Young Adult
11.
Am J Manag Care ; 24(8 Spec No.): SP322-SP328, 2018 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30020747

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: To model the impacts of restrictive formulary designs on outcomes for patients with HIV and to demonstrate the costs of restricting access to novel HIV regimens with better safety and efficacy profiles. STUDY DESIGN: We modified an epidemiological model of HIV incidence, progression, and treatment to simulate the effects of 5 formulary scenarios on patient outcomes in the United States. METHODS: Using a cohort of HIV-susceptible individuals, we followed patients through HIV infection, disease progression, and death. Patients transitioned in and out of treatment states once infected. Treatment discontinuation, efficacy, and the rate of adverse events (AEs; renal failure and bone fracture) in each formulary scenario depended on the treatment path and regimens included. Outcomes of interest included all-cause cumulative deaths, annual rates of AEs, and costs associated with treating those AEs. RESULTS: All outcomes of interest were more favorable in less restrictive formulary scenarios that provided fewer barriers to appropriate treatments. By 2025, more restrictive formularies would have resulted in 171,500 more cumulative bone and renal events among treated patients with HIV compared with an open formulary. This corresponds to AE treatment costs of $3.65 billion in more restrictive formularies compared with $1.43 billion in an open formulary. Finally, compared with an open formulary, there would be an additional 16,200 cumulative deaths in more restrictive formularies. CONCLUSIONS: Less restrictive formulary designs, which allow patients with HIV to initiate potentially safer and more efficacious regimens based on their proclivity to AEs, yield better outcomes and reduce costs.


Subject(s)
Anti-HIV Agents/economics , Anti-HIV Agents/therapeutic use , Cause of Death , HIV Infections/drug therapy , HIV Infections/epidemiology , Anti-HIV Agents/pharmacology , Cohort Studies , Disease Progression , Disease-Free Survival , Drug Therapy, Combination , Female , HIV Infections/diagnosis , Humans , Male , Managed Care Programs/economics , Models, Educational , Prognosis , Risk Assessment , Survival Analysis , Time Factors , Treatment Failure , Treatment Outcome , United States
12.
Value Health ; 21(7): 792-798, 2018 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30005751

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Mobility impairments have substantial physical and mental health consequences, resulting in diminished quality of life. Most studies on the health economic consequences of mobility limitations focus on short-term implications. OBJECTIVES: To examine the long-term value of improving mobility in older adults. METHODS: Our six-step approach used clinical trial data to calibrate mobility improvements and estimate health economic outcomes using a microsimulation model. First, we measured improvement in steps per day calibrated with clinical trial data examining hylan G-F 20 viscosupplementation treatment. Second, we created a cohort of patients 51 years and older with osteoarthritis. In the third step, we estimated their baseline quality of life. Fourth, we translated steps-per-day improvements to changes in quality of life using estimates from the literature. Fifth, we calibrated quality of life in this cohort to match those in the trial. Last, we incorporated these data and parameters into The Health Economic Medical Innovation Simulation model to estimate how mobility improvements affect functional status limitations, medical expenditures, nursing home utilization, employment, and earnings between 2012 and 2030. RESULTS: In our sample of 12.6 million patients, 66.7% were female and 70% had a body mass index of more than 25 kg/m2. Our model predicted that a 554-step-per-day increase in mobility would reduce functional status limitations by 5.9%, total medical expenditures by 0.9%, and nursing home utilization by 2.8%, and increase employment by 2.9%, earnings by 10.3%, and monetized quality of life by 3.2% over this 18-year period. CONCLUSIONS: Interventions that improve mobility are likely to reduce long-run medical expenditures and nursing home utilization and increase employment.


Subject(s)
Aging , Health Care Costs , Health Status , Mobility Limitation , Osteoarthritis/economics , Osteoarthritis/therapy , Viscosupplementation/economics , Absenteeism , Activities of Daily Living , Age Factors , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Computer Simulation , Cost Savings , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Female , Geriatric Assessment , Health Expenditures , Humans , Income , Male , Middle Aged , Models, Economic , Nursing Homes/economics , Osteoarthritis/physiopathology , Osteoarthritis/psychology , Quality of Life , Recovery of Function , Sick Leave/economics , Time Factors , Treatment Outcome , United States , Viscosupplementation/adverse effects
13.
Healthc (Amst) ; 5(3): 105-111, 2017 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27932263

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Several highly effective but costly therapies for hepatitis C virus (HCV) are available. As a consequence of their high price, 36 state Medicaid programs limited treatment coverage to patients with more advanced HCV stages. States have only limited information available to predict the long-term impact of these decisions. METHODS: We adapted a validated hepatitis C microsimulation model to the Pennsylvania Medicaid population to estimate the existing HCV prevalence in Pennsylvania Medicaid and estimate the impact of various HCV drug coverage policies on disease outcomes and costs. Outcome measures included rates of advanced-stage HCV outcomes and treatment and disease costs in both Medicaid and Medicare. RESULTS: We estimated that 46,700 individuals in Pennsylvania Medicaid were infected with HCV in 2015, 33% of whom were still undiagnosed. By expanding treatment to include mild fibrosis stage (Metavir F2), Pennsylvania Medicaid will spend an additional $273 million on medications in the next decade with no substantial reduction in the incidence of liver cancer or liver-related death. Medicaid patients who are not eligible for treatment under restricted policies would get treatment once they transition to the Medicare program, which would incur 10% reduction in HCV-related costs due to early treatment in Medicaid. Further expanding treatment to patients with early fibrosis stages (F0 or F1) would cost Medicaid an additional $693 million during the next decade but would reduce the number of individuals in need of treatment in Medicare by 46% and decrease Medicare treatment costs by 23%. In some scenarios, outcomes could worsen with eligibility expansion if there is inadequate capacity to treat all patients. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Expansion of HCV treatment coverage to less severe stages of liver disease may not substantially improve liver related outcomes for patients in Pennsylvania Medicaid in scenarios in which coverage through Medicare is widely available.


Subject(s)
Hepatitis C/drug therapy , Hepatitis C/economics , Medicaid/trends , Treatment Outcome , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Antiviral Agents/economics , Antiviral Agents/therapeutic use , Costs and Cost Analysis , Female , Hepacivirus/pathogenicity , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Pennsylvania , United States
14.
Hepatology ; 64(5): 1442-1450, 2016 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27015107

ABSTRACT

Oral direct-acting antivirals (DAAs) represent a major advance in hepatitis C virus (HCV) treatment. Along with recent updates in HCV screening policy and expansions in insurance coverage, treatment demand in the United States is changing rapidly. Our objective was to project the characteristics and number of people needing antiviral treatment and HCV-associated disease burden in the era of oral DAAs. We used a previously developed and validated Hepatitis C Disease Burden Simulation model (HEP-SIM). HEP-SIM simulated the actual clinical management of HCV from 2001 onward, which included antiviral treatment with pegylated interferon (Peg-IFN)-based therapies as well as the recent oral DAAs, risk-based and birth-cohort HCV screening, and the impact of the Affordable Care Act. We also simulated two hypothetical scenarios-no treatment and treatment with Peg-IFN-based therapies only. We estimated that in 2010, 2.5 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.9-3.1) million noninstitutionalized people were viremic, which dropped to 1.9 (95% CI, 1.4-2.6) million in 2015, and projected to drop below 1 million by 2020. A total of 1.8 million HCV patients will receive HCV treatment from the launch of oral DAAs in 2014 until 2030. Based on current HCV management practices, it will take 4-6 years to treat the majority of patients aware of their disease. However, 560,000 patients would still remain unaware by 2020. Even in the oral DAA era, 320,000 patients will die, 157,000 will develop hepatocellular carcinoma, and 203,000 will develop decompensated cirrhosis in the next 35 years. CONCLUSIONS: HCV-associated disease burden will still remain substantial in the era of oral DAAs. Increasing HCV screening and treatment capacity is essential to further decreasing HCV burden in the United States. (Hepatology 2016;64:1442-1450).


Subject(s)
Antiviral Agents/administration & dosage , Hepatitis C, Chronic/drug therapy , Hepatitis C, Chronic/epidemiology , Administration, Oral , Cost of Illness , Humans , Prevalence , United States/epidemiology
15.
Ann Intern Med ; 161(3): 170-80, 2014 Aug 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25089861

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection causes a substantial health and economic burden in the United States. With the availability of direct-acting antiviral agents, recently approved therapies and those under development, and 1-time birth-cohort screening, the burden of this disease is expected to decrease. OBJECTIVE: To predict the effect of new therapies and screening on chronic HCV infection and associated disease outcomes. DESIGN: Individual-level state-transition model. SETTING: Existing and anticipated therapies and screening for HCV infection in the United States. PATIENTS: Total HCV-infected population in the United States. MEASUREMENTS: The number of cases of chronic HCV infection and outcomes of advanced-stage HCV infection. RESULTS: The number of cases of chronic HCV infection decreased from 3.2 million in 2001 to 2.3 million in 2013. One-time birth-cohort screening beginning in 2013 is expected to identify 487,000 cases of HCV infection in the next 10 years. In contrast, 1-time universal screening could identify 933,700 cases. With the availability of highly effective therapies, HCV infection could become a rare disease in the next 22 years. Recently approved therapies for HCV infection and 1-time birth-cohort screening could prevent approximately 124,200 cases of decompensated cirrhosis, 78,800 cases of hepatocellular carcinoma, 126,500 liver-related deaths, and 9900 liver transplantations by 2050. Increasing the treatment capacity would further reduce the burden of HCV disease. LIMITATION: Institutionalized patients with HCV infection were excluded, and empirical data on the effectiveness of future therapies and on the future annual incidence and treatment capacity of HCV infection are lacking. CONCLUSION: New therapies for HCV infection and widespread implementation of screening and treatment will play an important role in reducing the burden of HCV disease. More aggressive screening recommendations are needed to identify a large pool of infected patients. PRIMARY FUNDING SOURCE: National Institutes of Health.


Subject(s)
Antiviral Agents/therapeutic use , Hepacivirus , Hepatitis C, Chronic/epidemiology , Models, Biological , Genotype , Hepacivirus/genetics , Hepatitis C, Chronic/diagnosis , Hepatitis C, Chronic/drug therapy , Humans , Mass Screening , Treatment Outcome , United States/epidemiology
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