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1.
Arthritis Care Res (Hoboken) ; 73(10): 1537-1543, 2021 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32558298

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Colchicine prophylaxis to prevent gout flares when commencing urate-lowering therapy is recommended by international rheumatology society guidelines. Whether this is a cost-effective intervention is currently unknown. Our objective was to perform a cost-effectiveness analysis using both a US cost input model and an Australian cost input model. METHODS: This cost-effectiveness analysis was completed from the point of view of the third-party payer. We used a 2-arm decision tree with 1 arm commencing allopurinol with no colchicine prophylaxis and the other with colchicine prophylaxis. Model inputs were drawn from published literature where available. We completed a univariate and probabilistic sensitivity analysis to confirm the robust nature of the modeling. The time frame for the model was 6 months. RESULTS: The colchicine prophylaxis arm resulted in a cost of $1,276 and 0.49 quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs), while in the placebo arm the cost was $516 and 0.47 QALYs, with an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of $34,004 per QALY gained. In Australia, where cost of colchicine was much lower, the colchicine arm dominated the placebo ($208 [Australian] in the colchicine arm versus $415 [Australian] in the placebo). Univariate and probability sensitivity analysis demonstrated that results were robust to changes in input parameters. In the probabilistic sensitivity analysis, the probability of colchicine prophylaxis being the most cost-effective option was 93% in the US and 100% in the Australian setting. CONCLUSION: Colchicine prophylaxis to prevent gout flares while commencing allopurinol in gout is very cost-effective.


Subject(s)
Allopurinol/economics , Allopurinol/therapeutic use , Colchicine/economics , Colchicine/therapeutic use , Drug Costs , Gout Suppressants/economics , Gout Suppressants/therapeutic use , Gout/drug therapy , Gout/economics , Allopurinol/adverse effects , Australia , Colchicine/adverse effects , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Disease Progression , Gout/diagnosis , Gout Suppressants/adverse effects , Humans , Quality-Adjusted Life Years , Time Factors , Treatment Outcome , United States
2.
CPT Pharmacometrics Syst Pharmacol ; 10(1): 75-83, 2021 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33314752

ABSTRACT

The Bayesian decision-analytic approach to trial design uses prior distributions for treatment effects, updated with likelihoods for proposed trial data. Prior distributions for treatment effects based on previous trial results risks sample selection bias and difficulties when a proposed trial differs in terms of patient characteristics, medication adherence, or treatment doses and regimens. The aim of this study was to demonstrate the utility of using pharmacometric-based clinical trial simulation (CTS) to generate prior distributions for use in Bayesian decision-theoretic trial design. The methods consisted of four principal stages: a CTS to predict the distribution of treatment response for a range of trial designs; Bayesian updating for a proposed sample size; a pharmacoeconomic model to represent the perspective of a reimbursement authority in which price is contingent on trial outcome; and a model of the pharmaceutical company return on investment linking drug prices to sales revenue. We used a case study of febuxostat versus allopurinol for the treatment of hyperuricemia in patients with gout. Trial design scenarios studied included alternative treatment doses, inclusion criteria, input uncertainty, and sample size. Optimal trial sample sizes varied depending on the uncertainty of model inputs, trial inclusion criteria, and treatment doses. This interdisciplinary framework for trial design and sample size calculation may have value in supporting decisions during later phases of drug development and in identifying costly sources of uncertainty, and thus inform future research and development strategies.


Subject(s)
Clinical Trials, Phase III as Topic , Models, Biological , Models, Economic , Allopurinol/administration & dosage , Allopurinol/economics , Allopurinol/pharmacokinetics , Bayes Theorem , Computer Simulation , Decision Theory , Drug Development , Economics, Pharmaceutical , Febuxostat/administration & dosage , Febuxostat/economics , Febuxostat/pharmacokinetics , Gout/blood , Gout/drug therapy , Gout/economics , Humans , Hyperuricemia/blood , Hyperuricemia/drug therapy , Hyperuricemia/economics , Investments , Reimbursement Mechanisms , Research Design , Sample Size , Uncertainty , Uric Acid/blood
3.
J Med Econ ; 23(8): 838-847, 2020 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32301360

ABSTRACT

Aims: Allopurinol is the most common urate lowering therapy (ULT) used to treat gout but may cause life-threatening severe cutaneous adverse reactions (SCAR) in a small number of patients. Risk of SCAR is increased for patients with the HLA-B*58:01 genotype. When alternative ULT is required, febuxostat or probenecid are recommended. The aim of this study was to conduct a cost-utility analysis of sequential ULT treatment strategies for gout, including strategies with and without HLA-B*58:01 genotyping prior to treatment initiation, with a view to inform optimal gout management in Singapore.Materials and methods: A Markov model was developed from the Singapore healthcare payer perspective. Reflecting local practice, 12 different treatment strategies containing at least one ULT (allopurinol, febuxostat, probenecid) were evaluated in adults with gout. Response rates (SUA < 6mg/dL) were derived from an in-house network meta-analysis and from published literature. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) were calculated over a 30-year time horizon, with costs and benefits discounted at 3% per annum. Sensitivity analyses were conducted to explore uncertainties.Results: Sequential treatment of allopurinol 300 mg/day-allopurinol 600 mg/day-probenecid ("standard of care") was cost-effective compared to no ULT, with an ICER of SGD1,584/QALY. Allopurinol300-allopurinol600-probenecid-febuxostat sequence compared to allopurinol300-allopurinol600-probenecid had an ICER of SGD11,400/QALY. All other treatment strategies were dominated by preceding strategies. Treatment strategies incorporating HLA-B*58:01 genotyping before ULT use were dominated by the corresponding non-genotyping strategy.Conclusions: Current standard of care (allopurinol300-allopurinol 600-probenecid) for gout is cost-effective compared with no ULT in the local context. Febuxostat is unlikely to be cost-effective in Singapore at current prices unless it is used last-line.


Subject(s)
Gout Suppressants/economics , Gout Suppressants/therapeutic use , Gout/drug therapy , Gout/genetics , HLA-B Antigens/genetics , Allopurinol/economics , Allopurinol/therapeutic use , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Febuxostat/economics , Febuxostat/therapeutic use , Genotype , Gout/ethnology , Gout Suppressants/administration & dosage , Gout Suppressants/adverse effects , Humans , Kidney Function Tests , Markov Chains , Models, Econometric , Models, Statistical , Probenecid/economics , Probenecid/therapeutic use , Quality-Adjusted Life Years , Singapore , Uric Acid/blood
4.
Clin Rheumatol ; 38(12): 3521-3528, 2019 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31420811

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION/OBJECTIVES: Lesinurad, in combination with allopurinol, has been approved for treatment of patients with gout which do not reach therapeutic serum urate target with xanthine oxidase inhibitors monotherapy. The study aimed to assess the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of adding lesinurad to allopurinol as second-line therapy, compared to febuxostat for patients with gout in Spain. METHOD: A Markov model representing disease evolution was used to estimate the lifetime accumulated cost and benefits in terms of quality-adjusted-life-year (QALY). Patients could either continue with second-line treatment with lesinurad (200 mg/daily) plus allopurinol (400 mg/daily) or febuxostat (80 mg/daily) switch to allopurinol monotherapy (271 mg/daily) in case of intolerance or discontinue treatment. The treatment's efficacy captured in the transition probabilities between health states were derived from CLEAR and EXCEL trials. Quality of life related to gout severity and flare frequency was considered by means of utilities. The total cost estimation (€, 2019) included drug acquisition cost, disease monitoring, and flare management cost. Unitary local costs derived from databases and literature. A 3% annual discount rate was applied for cost and outcomes. RESULTS: Lesinurad plus allopurinol provided higher QALYs (14.79) than febuxostat (14.69). Total accrued cost/patient was lower with lesinurad and allopurinol (€50,631.51) versus febuxostat (€56,698.64). Lesinurad plus allopurinol resulted more effective and less costly (dominant option) versus febuxostat. CONCLUSIONS: Lesinurad plus allopurinol therapy compared with febuxostat seems an effective option for the management of hyperuricemia in patients who did not reach serum urate target to previous allopurinol monotherapy, associated to cost-savings for the Spanish Health System.Key Points• Lesinurad, in combination with allopurinol, has been recently authorized as second-line treatment of hyperuricemia in gout patients.• Lesinurad plus allopurinol provided higher effectiveness in terms of quality-adjusted-life-years (14.79) than febuxostat (14.69).• Lesinurad plus allopurinol resulted less costly (total cost/per patient) compared with febuxostat.• Lesinurad plus allopurinol resulted a dominant option compared with febuxostat.


Subject(s)
Allopurinol/therapeutic use , Febuxostat/therapeutic use , Gout Suppressants/therapeutic use , Hyperuricemia/drug therapy , Thioglycolates/therapeutic use , Triazoles/therapeutic use , Allopurinol/economics , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Febuxostat/economics , Gout Suppressants/economics , Humans , Hyperuricemia/economics , Markov Chains , Spain , Thioglycolates/economics , Triazoles/economics
5.
Clin Pharmacol Ther ; 106(3): 652-660, 2019 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30993686

ABSTRACT

Linked pharmacometric and pharmacoeconomic models provide a structured approach for assessing the value of candidate drugs in development. The aim of this study was to assess the utility of such an approach for identifying the properties of xanthine oxidase inhibitors (XOi) providing improved forgiveness to nonadherence and estimate the maximum reimbursement price. The pharmacometric and pharmacoeconomic models were used to simulate the time course of serum uric acid concentrations and estimate quality-adjusted life years and costs for the XOi febuxostat and a range of hypothetical analogues. Compounds with reduced clearance or increased potency were more forgiving to missed doses, however, even following relatively large changes in these properties the predicted maximum reimbursement prices represented an increase of only 19% above febuxostat 80 mg. Linked pharmacometric and pharmacoeconomic modeling methods have the potential to inform early drug development by providing an indication of pricing options that may permit reimbursement.


Subject(s)
Febuxostat/pharmacokinetics , Gout Suppressants/pharmacokinetics , Gout/drug therapy , Medication Adherence/statistics & numerical data , Xanthine Oxidase/antagonists & inhibitors , Allopurinol/economics , Allopurinol/therapeutic use , Computer Simulation , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Costs and Cost Analysis , Drug Monitoring , Economics, Pharmaceutical , Febuxostat/economics , Febuxostat/therapeutic use , Gout Suppressants/economics , Gout Suppressants/therapeutic use , Humans , Insurance, Health, Reimbursement/statistics & numerical data , Quality-Adjusted Life Years , Uric Acid/blood
6.
Int J Rheum Dis ; 22(4): 545-554, 2019 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30556300

ABSTRACT

AIM: Medication non-adherence influences outcomes of therapies for chronic diseases. Allopurinol is a cornerstone therapy for patients with gout; however, non-adherence to allopurinol is prevalent in Singapore and limits its effectiveness. Between 2008-2010, an adherence-enhancing program was implemented at the rheumatology division of a public tertiary hospital. The cost-effectiveness of this program has not been fully evaluated. With healthcare resources being finite, the value of investing in adherence-enhancing interventions should be ascertained. This study aims to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of this adherence-enhancing program to inform optimal resource allocation toward better gout management. METHOD: Adopting a real-world data approach, we utilized patient clinical and financial records generated in their course of routine care. Intervention and control groups were identified in a standing database and matched on nine risk factors through propensity score matching. Cost and effect data were followed through 1-2 years. A decision tree was developed in TreeAge using a societal perspective. Deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analyses were performed to assess parameter uncertainty. RESULTS: At an assumed willingness-to-pay threshold of $50 000 USD ($70 000 SGD) per quality-adjusted life year (QALY), the intervention had an 85% probability of being cost-effective compared to routine care. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio was $12 866 USD per QALY for the base case and ranged from $4 139 to $21 593 USD per QALY in sensitivity analyses. CONCLUSION: The intervention is cost-effective in the short-term, although its long-term cost-effectiveness remains to be evaluated.


Subject(s)
Allopurinol/therapeutic use , Gout Suppressants/therapeutic use , Gout/drug therapy , Gout/economics , Health Care Costs , Medication Adherence , Patient Education as Topic/economics , Adult , Aged , Allopurinol/adverse effects , Allopurinol/economics , Cost of Illness , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Decision Trees , Drug Costs , Female , Gout/diagnosis , Gout/psychology , Gout Suppressants/adverse effects , Gout Suppressants/economics , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Models, Economic , Program Evaluation , Quality-Adjusted Life Years , Retrospective Studies , Singapore , Time Factors , Treatment Outcome
7.
Value Health ; 21(12): 1373-1381, 2018 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30502780

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Dual urate-lowering therapy (ULT) with lesinurad in combination with either allopurinol or febuxostat is an option for patients with gout unsuccessfully treated on either monotherapy. Treatment failure is often a result of poor medication adherence. Imperfect adherence in clinical trials may lead to biased estimates of treatment effect and confound the results of cost-effectiveness analyses. OBJECTIVES: To estimate the impact of varying medication adherence on the cost effectiveness of lesinurad dual therapy and estimate the value-based price of lesinurad at which the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio is equal to £20,000 per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY). METHODS: Treatment effect was simulated using published pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic models and scenarios representing adherence in clinical trials, routine practice, and perfect use. The subsequent cost and health impacts, over the lifetime of a patient cohort, were estimated using a bespoke pharmacoeconomic model. RESULTS: The base-case incremental cost-effectiveness ratios comparing lesinurad dual ULT with monotherapy ranged from £39,184 to £78,350/QALY gained using allopurinol and £31,901 to £124,212/QALY gained using febuxostat, depending on the assumed medication adherence. Results assuming perfect medication adherence imply a per-quarter value-based price of lesinurad of £45.14 when used in dual ULT compared with allopurinol alone and £57.75 compared with febuxostat alone, falling to £25.41 and £3.49, respectively, in simulations of worsening medication adherence. CONCLUSIONS: The estimated value-based prices of lesinurad only exceeded that which has been proposed in the United Kingdom when assuming both perfect drug adherence and the eradication of gout flares in sustained treatment responders.


Subject(s)
Allopurinol/economics , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Febuxostat/economics , Gout/economics , Medication Adherence , Thioglycolates/economics , Triazoles/economics , Uric Acid/blood , Allopurinol/therapeutic use , Cohort Studies , Drug Therapy, Combination , Economics, Pharmaceutical , Febuxostat/therapeutic use , Gout/blood , Gout/drug therapy , Gout Suppressants/economics , Gout Suppressants/therapeutic use , Health Care Costs , Humans , Models, Biological , Models, Economic , Quality of Life , Quality-Adjusted Life Years , Thioglycolates/therapeutic use , Treatment Outcome , Triazoles/therapeutic use , United Kingdom
8.
J Comp Eff Res ; 7(8): 807-816, 2018 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29792516

ABSTRACT

Aim: To estimate budget impact of adopting lesinurad as add-on to allopurinol for urate-lowering therapy in gout. Methods: A budget impact model was developed for a US payer perspective, using a Markov model to estimate costs, survival and discontinuation in a one-million-member health plan. The population included patients failing first-line gout therapy, followed for 5 years. Results: Incremental costs of adding lesinurad versus no lesinurad were US$241,907 and US$1,098,220 in first and fifth years, respectively. Cumulative 5-year incremental cost was US$3,633,440. Estimated incremental mean cost per treated patient with gout per year was US$112. The mean per-member per-month cost increased by US$0.06. Conclusion: Initiating lesinurad would result in an incremental per-member per-month cost of US$0.06 over 5 years.


Subject(s)
Allopurinol/economics , Budgets/statistics & numerical data , Gout Suppressants/economics , Gout/drug therapy , Thioglycolates/economics , Triazoles/economics , Allopurinol/therapeutic use , Gout Suppressants/therapeutic use , Humans , Markov Chains , Models, Econometric , Thioglycolates/therapeutic use , Triazoles/therapeutic use , United States
9.
Pharmacogenet Genomics ; 28(5): 117-124, 2018 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29642234

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Hyperuricemia and gout have become increasingly prevalent in China. Allopurinol is an effective urate-lowering therapy, but it has severe side effects. HLA-B*5801 is highly associated with the allopurinol-induced toxic epidermal necrolysis and Stevens-Johnson syndrome. PATIENTS AND METHODS: In this retrospective report, we had genotyped HLA-B*5801 in 253 cases of hyperuricemia and gout patients in a Han population in Shenzhen and analyzed the clinical management of medications. RESULTS: We found 30 carriers of the HLA-B*5801 allele in 253 cases of hyperuricemia or gout patients in the population (11.9%). Allopurinol was prescribed in both HLA-B*5801-positive and HLA-B*5801-negative groups. The evaluation of four models with or without genetic screening and management of allopurinol or febuxostat indicated that the HLA-B*5801 screening had significant cost benefit for clinical management. CONCLUSION: For appropriate management and cost-effectiveness, the HLA-B*5801 allele should be screened in all patients with hyperuricemia and gout in the Chinese population.


Subject(s)
Allopurinol/therapeutic use , Febuxostat/therapeutic use , Gout Suppressants/therapeutic use , Gout/genetics , HLA-B Antigens/genetics , Hyperuricemia/genetics , Adult , Allopurinol/economics , China/ethnology , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Febuxostat/economics , Female , Gene Frequency , Genetic Testing/economics , Gout/drug therapy , Gout/ethnology , Gout Suppressants/economics , Humans , Hyperuricemia/drug therapy , Hyperuricemia/ethnology , Male , Middle Aged , Precision Medicine , Retrospective Studies , Treatment Outcome
10.
Pharmacoeconomics ; 36(5): 625-636, 2018 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29557073

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Until very recently the only therapeutic alternative for the management of patients affected by gout/hyperuricemia that did not respond to a first-line treatment based on allopurinol alone or who cannot tolerate allopurinol was febuxostat, a xanthine oxidase non-purine-selective inhibitor. Lately, however, a new therapeutic alternative has become available for the management of this pathology: lesinurad, a urate transporter inhibitor. OBJECTIVE: To objective of this study was to evaluate the cost effectiveness of lesinurad/allopurinol in comparison with febuxostat as a second-line therapeutic strategy for the management of patients affected by gout and hyperuricemia that did not respond to a first-line therapy based on allopurinol alone. METHODS: A Markov model was built based on the natural history of the pathology; patients entered the model according to their level of serum uric acid concentration and flowed across it according to their response to the therapy. The analysis was carried out considering the perspective of the Italian National Health Service on a lifetime horizon and 6-month cycles. Costs and quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) were discounted at a 3.5% yearly rate. The results of the model were expressed in terms of incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER). Both a one-way and a multi-way Monte-Carlo analysis were carried out in order to check the robustness of the results achieved. RESULTS: The ICER derived from the comparison was equal to €77.53/QALY on the lifetime horizon, as there was a higher level of costs associated with the combination as compared with febuxostat (€10,658.27 vs. €10,645.87, for a differential of €12.40) and a higher level of QALYs achieved (7.77 vs. 7.61, for a differential of 0.16). CONCLUSIONS: The lesinurad/allopurinol combination is recommended for the treatment of patients affected by gout/hyperuricemia in the Italian Health System as it appears to be cost effective and thus sustainable for the Italian healthcare sector.


Subject(s)
Allopurinol/economics , Cost-Benefit Analysis/statistics & numerical data , Febuxostat/economics , Gout/economics , Hyperuricemia/economics , Thioglycolates/economics , Triazoles/economics , Allopurinol/therapeutic use , Drug Costs/statistics & numerical data , Drug Therapy, Combination/economics , Febuxostat/therapeutic use , Female , Gout/complications , Gout/drug therapy , Gout Suppressants/economics , Gout Suppressants/therapeutic use , Humans , Hyperuricemia/complications , Hyperuricemia/drug therapy , Italy , Male , Markov Chains , Middle Aged , Models, Economic , Monte Carlo Method , Quality-Adjusted Life Years , Thioglycolates/therapeutic use , Triazoles/therapeutic use
11.
Clin Lymphoma Myeloma Leuk ; 17(3): 173-178, 2017 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27965022

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The aim of the study was to compare reductions in uric acid (UA), length of stay (LOS), and hospitalization costs in patients with tumor lysis syndrome (TLS) treated with rasburicase or allopurinol. PATIENTS AND METHODS: This retrospective study of administrative data included hospitalized pediatric and adult patients who had clinical or laboratory TLS and received rasburicase or allopurinol. Each rasburicase-treated patient was propensity score-matched with 4 allopurinol-treated patients. Mean changes in UA within ≤ 2 days of treatment initiation were determined. Economic outcomes included mean number of days in the intensive care unit (ICU), total LOS, costs/hospitalization, and costs/percentage change in UA. RESULTS: Twenty-six rasburicase-treated patients were matched with 104 allopurinol-treated patients. Reduction in plasma UA was 5.3 mg/dL greater for patients treated with rasburicase than for patients treated with allopurinol (P < .0001). Length of ICU stay was 2.5 days less for patients treated with rasburicase than for patients treated with allopurinol (P < .0001), and total LOS was 5 days less for patients treated with rasburicase than for patients treated with allopurinol (P = .02). Total costs per patient were $20,038 lower for patients treated with rasburicase than for patients treated with allopurinol (P < .02). Cost per percentage UA reduction was also lower for patients treated with rasburicase versus patients treated with allopurinol ($3899 vs. $16,894; P < .001). CONCLUSION: In this analysis of TLS patients who received care in real-world settings, rasburicase versus allopurinol was significantly more effective in treating hyperuricemia and was associated with significantly shorter ICU and overall hospital stays and lower total inpatient costs.


Subject(s)
Allopurinol/economics , Gout Suppressants/economics , Hospitalization/economics , Length of Stay/economics , Tumor Lysis Syndrome/economics , Urate Oxidase/economics , Allopurinol/therapeutic use , Female , Gout Suppressants/therapeutic use , Humans , Hyperuricemia/drug therapy , Hyperuricemia/economics , Male , Middle Aged , Retrospective Studies , Tumor Lysis Syndrome/drug therapy , Urate Oxidase/therapeutic use , Uric Acid/metabolism
13.
J Manag Care Spec Pharm ; 22(4): 326-36, 2016 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27023686

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) are at increased risk for developing gout and having refractory disease. Gout flare prevention relies heavily on urate-lowering therapies such as allopurinol and febuxostat, but clinical decision making in patients with moderate-to-severe CKD is complicated by significant comorbidity and the scarcity of real-world cost-effectiveness studies. OBJECTIVE: To compare total and disease-specific health care expenditures by line of therapy in allopurinol and febuxostat initiators after diagnosis with gout and moderate-to-severe CKD. METHODS: A retrospective observational cohort study was conducted to compare mean monthly health care cost (in 2012 U.S. dollars) among gout patients with CKD (stage 3 or 4) who initiated allopurinol or febuxostat. The primary outcome was total mean monthly health care expenditures, and the secondary outcome was disease-specific (gout, diabetes, renal, and cardiovascular disease [CVD]) expenditures. Gout patients (ICD-9-CM 274.xx) aged ≥ 18 years with concurrent CKD (stage 3 or 4) were selected from the MarketScan databases (January 2009-June 2012) upon allopurinol or febuxostat initiation. Patients were followed until disenrollment, discontinuation of the qualifying study agent, or use of the alternate study agent. Patients initiating allopurinol were subsequently propensity score-matched (1:1) to patients initiating febuxostat. Five generalized linear models (GLMs) were developed, each controlling for propensity score, to identify the incremental costs (vs. allopurinol) associated with febuxostat initiation in first-line (without prior allopurinol exposure) and second-line (with prior allopurinol exposure) settings. RESULTS: Propensity score matching yielded 2 cohorts, each with 1,486 patients (64.6% male, mean [SD] age 67.4 [12.8] years). Post-match, 74.6% of patients had stage 3 CKD; 82.9% had CVD; and 42.1% had diabetes. The post-match sample was well balanced on numerous comorbidities and medication exposures with the following exception: 50.0% of febuxostat initiators were treated in the second-line setting; that is, they had baseline exposure to allopurinol, whereas only 4.2% of allopurinol initiators had baseline exposure to febuxostat. Unadjusted mean monthly cost was $1,490 allopurinol and $1,525 febuxostat (P = 0.809). GLM results suggest that first-line febuxostat users incurred significantly (P = 0.009) lower cost than allopurinol users ($1,299 vs. $1,487), whereas second-line febuxostat initiators incurred significantly (P = 0.001) higher cost ($1,751 vs. $1,487). Febuxostat initiators in both settings had significantly (P < 0.001) higher gout-specific cost, due to higher febuxostat acquisition cost. Increased gout-specific cost in the first-line febuxostat cohort was offset by significantly (P < 0.001) lower CVD ($288 vs. $459) and renal-related cost ($86 vs. $216). There were no significant differences in either renal or CVD costs (adjusted) between allopurinol initiators treated almost exclusively in the first-line setting and second-line febuxostat patients. CONCLUSIONS: Gout patients with concurrent CKD, initiating treatment with febuxostat in a first-line setting, incurred significantly less total cost than patients initiating allopurinol during the first exposure to each agent. Conversely, patients treated with second-line febuxostat following allopurinol incurred significantly higher total cost than patients initiating allopurinol. There was no significant difference in total cost between the agents across line of therapy. Although study findings suggest the potential for CVD and renal-related savings to offset febuxostat's higher acquisition cost in gout patients with moderate-to-severe CKD, this is the first such retrospective evaluation. Future research is warranted to both demonstrate the durability of study findings and to better elucidate the mechanism by which associated cost offsets occur. DISCLOSURES: No outside funding supported this study. Turpin is an employee of Takeda Pharmaceuticals U.S.A. Mitri and Wittbrodt were employees of Takeda Pharmaceuticals U.S.A. at the time of this study. Tidwell and Schulman are employees of Outcomes Research Solutions, consultants to Takeda Pharmaceuticals U.S.A. All authors contributed to the design of the study and to the writing and review of the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript. Tidwell and Schulman collected the data, and all authors participated in data interpretation.


Subject(s)
Allopurinol/therapeutic use , Febuxostat/therapeutic use , Gout Suppressants/therapeutic use , Gout/drug therapy , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Allopurinol/economics , Cohort Studies , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Febuxostat/economics , Female , Gout/economics , Gout Suppressants/economics , Health Care Costs , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Renal Insufficiency, Chronic/drug therapy , Renal Insufficiency, Chronic/economics , Renal Insufficiency, Chronic/physiopathology , Retrospective Studies , Severity of Illness Index , Uric Acid/metabolism
14.
J Med Econ ; 19(6): 604-10, 2016 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26855041

ABSTRACT

UNLABELLED: Objectives Cost-effectiveness of febuxostat compared with allopurinol in the treatment of hyperuricemia in patients with gout. Methods Costs, clinical outcomes, and QALYs were estimated using a Markov model. Febuxostat 80 mg and 120 mg sequentially, used as first line and second line therapy, was compared with allopurinol 300 mg. Patients switched to the next treatment in the sequence according to a dichotomous response vs no response (target serum urate level < 6 mg/dl outcome) after 3 months of active treatment. A 3% discount rate and 5-year time horizon were applied. PERSPECTIVE: National Health System. Results The addition of febuxostat to any therapeutic strategy was an efficient option, with incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICER) compared with allopurinol 300 mg ranging from €5268-€9737. Conclusions Febuxostat is a cost-effective treatment in Spain for the management of hyperuricemia in gout patients, with ICERs far below accepted Spanish efficiency thresholds (30 000€/QALY).


Subject(s)
Allopurinol/economics , Febuxostat/economics , Gout Suppressants/economics , Gout/drug therapy , Hyperuricemia/drug therapy , Allopurinol/therapeutic use , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Febuxostat/therapeutic use , Gout Suppressants/therapeutic use , Humans , Markov Chains , Models, Econometric , Quality-Adjusted Life Years , Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic , Renal Insufficiency/epidemiology , Spain
15.
J Med Econ ; 19(3): 265-76, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26535593

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To determine the cost-effectiveness of febuxostat vs allopurinol for the management of gout. METHODS: A stochastic microsimulation cost-effectiveness model with a US private-payer perspective and 5-year time horizon was developed. Model flow based on guideline and real-world treatment paradigms incorporated gout flare, serum uric acid (sUA) testing, treatment titration, discontinuation, and adverse events, chronic kidney disease (CKD) incidence and progression, and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) incidence. Outcomes were estimated for the general gout population and for gout patients with CKD stages 3/4. Modeled treatment interventions were daily oral febuxostat 40-80 mg and allopurinol 100-300 mg. Baseline patient characteristics were taken from epidemiologic studies, efficacy data from randomized controlled trials, adverse event rates from package inserts, and costs from the literature, government sources, and expert opinion. Eight clinically-relevant incremental cost-effectiveness ratios were estimated: per patient reaching target sUA, per flare avoided, per CKD incidence, progression, stages 3/4 progression, and stage 5 progression avoided, per incident T2DM avoided, and per death avoided. RESULTS: Five-year incremental cost-effectiveness ratios for the general gout population were $5377 per patient reaching target sUA, $1773 per flare avoided, $221,795 per incident CKD avoided, $29,063 per CKD progression avoided, $36,018 per progression to CKD 3/4 avoided, $71,426 per progression to CKD 5 avoided, $214,277 per incident T2DM avoided, and $217,971 per death avoided. In patients with CKD 3/4, febuxostat dominated allopurinol for all cost-effectiveness outcome measures. CONCLUSIONS: Febuxostat may be a cost-effective alternative to allopurinol, especially for patients with CKD stages 3 or 4.


Subject(s)
Febuxostat/economics , Febuxostat/therapeutic use , Gout Suppressants/economics , Gout Suppressants/therapeutic use , Gout/drug therapy , Adult , Aged , Allopurinol/economics , Allopurinol/therapeutic use , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Disease Management , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , United States , Uric Acid/blood
16.
Pharmacogenomics ; 16(16): 1781-93, 2015 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26554739

ABSTRACT

AIMS: Allopurinol is an efficacious urate-lowering therapy (ULT), but is associated with rare serious adverse drug reactions of Stevens-Johnson syndrome (SJS) and toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN), with higher risk among HLA-B*5801 carriers. We assessed the cost-effectiveness of HLA-B*5801 testing, an enhanced safety program or strategies with both components. METHODS: The analysis adopted a health systems perspective and considered Singaporean patients with chronic gout, over a lifetime horizon, using allopurinol or probenecid. The model incorporated SJS/TEN and gout treatment outcomes, allele frequencies, drug prices and other medical costs. RESULTS: Based on cost-effectiveness threshold of US$50,000 per quality-adjusted life year, HLA-B*5801-guided ULT selection or enhanced safety program was not cost effective. Avoidance of ULTs was the least preferred strategy as uncontrolled gout leads to lower quality-adjusted life years and higher costs. CONCLUSION: The analysis underscores the need for biomarkers with higher positive predictive value for SJS/TEN, less expensive genetic tests or safety programs, or more effective gout drugs. .


Subject(s)
Allopurinol/economics , Cost-Benefit Analysis/methods , Genotyping Techniques/economics , Gout/economics , HLA-B Antigens/economics , Patient Safety/economics , Allopurinol/therapeutic use , Genotype , Gout/drug therapy , Gout/epidemiology , Gout/genetics , Gout Suppressants/economics , Gout Suppressants/therapeutic use , HLA-B Antigens/genetics , Humans , Singapore/epidemiology
17.
Arthritis Care Res (Hoboken) ; 67(2): 280-7, 2015 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25047754

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Allopurinol-induced severe cutaneous adverse reactions (SCARs) are relatively rare but cause high rates of morbidity and mortality. Studies have shown that the HLA-B5801 allele and renal impairment are strongly associated with SCARs. Recent American College of Rheumatology guidelines recommend that, prior to treatment with allopurinol, the HLA-B5801 genotype of gout patients at high risk for SCARs, including Korean patients with chronic renal insufficiency, should be determined. However, whether such genotyping is cost-effective is unknown. This study evaluated the cost-effectiveness of HLA-B5801 genotyping for the treatment of gout in patients with chronic renal insufficiency in Korea. METHODS: A decision analytical model over a time period of 12 months was employed to compare the cost and outcomes of treatment informed by HLA-B5801 genotyping with that of a conventional treatment strategy using a hypothetical cohort of gout patients with chronic renal insufficiency. Direct medical costs were obtained from real patients with SCARs from 2 tertiary hospitals. Outcomes were measured as a total expected cost and an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio. RESULTS: In the base model, the total expected cost and probability of continuation of gout treatment without SCARs for the conventional and HLA-B5801 screening strategies were $1,193 and 97.8% and $1,055 and 100%, respectively. The results were robust according to sensitivity analyses. CONCLUSION: Our model suggests that gout treatment informed by HLA-B5801 genotyping is less costly and more effective than treatment without genotyping, and HLA-B5801 genotyping could considerably reduce the occurrence of allopurinol-induced SCARs and related deaths.


Subject(s)
Drug Eruptions/genetics , Gout/drug therapy , HLA-B Antigens/genetics , Renal Insufficiency, Chronic/complications , Allopurinol/adverse effects , Allopurinol/economics , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Decision Trees , Drug Eruptions/economics , Genotype , Genotyping Techniques/economics , Gout/complications , Gout/genetics , Gout Suppressants/adverse effects , Gout Suppressants/economics , Humans , Renal Insufficiency, Chronic/genetics , Republic of Korea
18.
Ann Intern Med ; 161(9): 617-26, 2014 Nov 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25364883

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Gout is the most common inflammatory arthritis in the United States. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of urate-lowering treatment strategies for the management of gout. DESIGN: Markov model. DATA SOURCES: Published literature and expert opinion. TARGET POPULATION: Patients for whom allopurinol or febuxostat is a suitable initial urate-lowering treatment. TIME HORIZON: Lifetime. PERSPECTIVE: Health care payer. INTERVENTION: 5 urate-lowering treatment strategies were evaluated: no treatment; allopurinol- or febuxostat-only therapy; allopurinol-febuxostat sequential therapy; and febuxostat-allopurinol sequential therapy. Two dosing scenarios were investigated: fixed dose (80 mg of febuxostat daily, 0.80 success rate; 300 mg of allopurinol daily, 0.39 success rate) and dose escalation (≤120 mg of febuxostat daily, 0.82 success rate; ≤800 mg of allopurinol daily, 0.78 success rate). OUTCOME MEASURES: Discounted costs, discounted quality-adjusted life-years, and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios. RESULTS OF BASE-CASE ANALYSIS: In both dosing scenarios, allopurinol-only therapy was cost-saving. Dose-escalation allopurinol-febuxostat sequential therapy was more costly but more effective than dose-escalation allopurinol therapy, with an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of $39 400 per quality-adjusted life-year. RESULTS OF SENSITIVITY ANALYSIS: The relative rankings of treatments did not change. Our results were relatively sensitive to several potential variations of model assumptions; however, the cost-effectiveness ratios of dose escalation with allopurinol-febuxostat sequential therapy remained lower than the willingness-to-pay threshold of $109 000 per quality-adjusted life-year. LIMITATION: Long-term outcome data for patients with gout, including medication adherence, are limited. CONCLUSION: Allopurinol single therapy is cost-saving compared with no treatment. Dose-escalation allopurinol-febuxostat sequential therapy is cost-effective compared with accepted willingness-to-pay thresholds. PRIMARY FUNDING SOURCE: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.


Subject(s)
Allopurinol/economics , Gout Suppressants/economics , Gout/drug therapy , Quality-Adjusted Life Years , Thiazoles/economics , Allopurinol/administration & dosage , Cost Savings , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Drug Therapy, Combination/economics , Febuxostat , Gout/economics , Gout Suppressants/administration & dosage , Humans , Markov Chains , Models, Theoretical , Thiazoles/administration & dosage
19.
J Clin Pharm Ther ; 38(4): 301-8, 2013 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23550846

ABSTRACT

WHAT IS KNOWN AND OBJECTIVE: Single-dose rasburicase for the treatment and prevention of hyperuricaemia in adult and paediatric patients with cancer at high risk of tumour lysis syndrome (TLS) has been widely adopted in pharmacy practice as unlabelled use with limited clinical evidence. This meta-analysis study evaluated the efficacy and cost savings of a single-dose rasburicase (SDR) regimen compared with the Food and Drug Administration-approved daily dosing of rasburicase (DDR) for 5 days or the traditional treatment with allopurinol in adult cancer patients with hyperuricaemia or at high risk for TLS. METHODS: Prospective and retrospective studies were retrieved from a systemic search of major electronic data sources. Studies included in the meta-analysis were those with SDR for the prophylaxis of high-risk TLS or treatment of hyperuricaemia in adult patients with cancer. The results of response rate and controlling of time-dependent plasma uric acid (UA) reduction were pooled and compared with the results from patients treated with DDR for 5 days or patients treated with allopurinol. A cost analysis was performed to analyse the treatment costs for adults with hyperuricaemia or at high risk for TLS. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: Ten studies (eight retrospective and two prospective) evaluated the SDR response rate and plasma UA level reduction over time. The pooled total number of patients treated with SDR (from 0·05 mg/kg to 0·20 mg/kg) was 269. The pooled response rate of the SDR arm was not significantly different than that of DDR (0·2 mg/kg) arm (88·15% vs. 90·18%, P = 0·542), but significantly stronger than that of allopurinol (300 mg/day orally days 1 to 5) arm (response rate: 88·15% vs. 66%, P < 0·0005). Pooled SDR group efficiently controlled the plasma uric acid (UA) level below 4·5 mg/dL over 24 h, 48 h and 72 h, whereas DDR reduced plasma UA levels to hypouricaemia level (<2 mg/dl). In addition, cost analysis demonstrated that standard-dose SDR (≥6 mg) has non-inferior clinical benefit and significant cost savings compared with the DDR regimen. WHAT IS NEW AND CONCLUSION: Single-dose rasburicase (SDR) for adult cancer patients with hyperuricaemia or at high risk for TLS demonstrated better response rate and stronger control of uric acid level compared with allopurinol. SDR response rate was not inferior to that of DDR, and the standard-dose SDR generates more cost savings compared with the DDR. It suggests that the single-dose rasburicase is clinically effective and cost efficient for the prophylaxis of high-risk TLS and the treatment of hyperuricaemia in adult patients with cancer. Additional randomized control studies are needed to confirm the findings of this meta-analysis study.


Subject(s)
Tumor Lysis Syndrome/drug therapy , Tumor Lysis Syndrome/prevention & control , Urate Oxidase/administration & dosage , Urate Oxidase/economics , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Allopurinol/economics , Allopurinol/therapeutic use , Female , Humans , Hyperuricemia/blood , Hyperuricemia/drug therapy , Hyperuricemia/economics , Hyperuricemia/prevention & control , Middle Aged , Prospective Studies , Retrospective Studies , Tumor Lysis Syndrome/blood , Tumor Lysis Syndrome/economics , United States , United States Food and Drug Administration , Uric Acid/blood , Young Adult
20.
Appl Health Econ Health Policy ; 10(6): 431-40, 2012 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23013428

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Rasburicase is a recombinant urate-oxidase enzyme used to reduce high levels of plasma uric acid (PUA) resulting from tumour lysis syndrome (TLS). Rasburicase reduces PUA levels within 4 hours of administration, thereby minimizing the risk of serious complications from TLS. Treatment pattern analyses indicate rasburicase is often used in combination with allopurinol; however, no studies have evaluated the clinical and economic consequences of this pattern of care. The purpose of this study was to compare hospitalization costs, overall length of stay (LOS), and critical-care LOS in patients receiving rasburicase with or without allopurinol. METHODS: Hospital claims data from the Premier Perspective Database™ were used to conduct this retrospective analysis. Patients in the Premier hospital database who were administered rasburicase or combination therapy (rasburicase + allopurinol) within 2 days of hospital admission were eligible for study inclusion. Patients were excluded if they were <18 years of age or received haemodialysis (or any other renal replacement therapy support) on admission. Rasburicase patients were propensity-score-matched to combination therapy patients based on gender, race, hospital type (urban/rural, teaching), provider type, payer type, admission source, use of electrolyte modification therapy, critical-care admission and presence of a cancer diagnosis. Differences in healthcare costs, overall LOS and critical-care LOS were assessed using γ-distributed generalized linear models with a log-link function. RESULTS: The study population comprised 66 patients receiving rasburicase monotherapy matched to 66 patients receiving combination therapy. Mean age was 62.9 years, and 29% were female. Patients initiated on combination therapy had a shorter mean duration of rasburicase administration than patients initiated on monotherapy (2.1 vs 2.7 days) [p = 0.0059]. Additionally, rasburicase monotherapy incurred an average total cost of $US35 843 per hospitalization, compared with $US46 672 for those receiving combination therapy (p = 0.0820). Rasburicase monotherapy patients also had a shorter mean overall LOS (10.0 days vs 15.4 days; p = 0.0067). The mean critical-care LOS was similar in both cohorts (2.4 days rasburicase vs 2.9 days combination therapy; p = 0.3389). CONCLUSION: Examination of claims data showed that combination therapy (rasburicase + allopurinol) trended toward higher total hospitalization costs than rasburicase monotherapy. In addition, combination therapy was associated with significantly longer overall LOS compared with upfront rasburicase monotherapy in patients at risk for developing TLS.


Subject(s)
Gout Suppressants/therapeutic use , Hospitalization/economics , Tumor Lysis Syndrome/drug therapy , Urate Oxidase/therapeutic use , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Allopurinol/economics , Allopurinol/therapeutic use , Cohort Studies , Drug Therapy, Combination , Female , Gout Suppressants/economics , Hospitalization/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Length of Stay/economics , Length of Stay/statistics & numerical data , Linear Models , Male , Middle Aged , Propensity Score , Retrospective Studies , Time Factors , Tumor Lysis Syndrome/economics , Urate Oxidase/economics
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