Modelling the economic and health consequences of cardiac resynchronization therapy in the UK.
Curr Med Res Opin
; 22(6): 1171-9, 2006 Jun.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-16846550
OBJECTIVE: Clinical evidence supports the use of cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) in advanced heart failure, but its cost-effectiveness is still unclear. This analysis assessed the economic and health consequences in the UK of implanting a CRT in patients with NYHA class III-IV heart failure. METHODS: A discrete event simulation of heart failure was used to compare the course over 5 years of 1000 identical pairs of patients -- one receiving both CRT and optimum pharmacologic treatment (OPT), the other OPT alone. All inputs were obtained from the data collected in the CArdiac REsynchronization in Heart Failure (CARE-HF) trial and a hospital in the UK. Direct medical costs (in 2004 pound) from the perspective of the National Health Service were considered. Both costs and benefits were discounted at 3.5%. Sensitivity analyses addressed all model inputs and multivariate analyses were performed by varying key parameters simultaneously. RESULTS: The model predicted 471 deaths and 2263 hospitalizations over 5 years with OPT alone and 348 deaths and 1764 hospitalizations with CRT, equivalent to a 26% reduction in mortality and 22% in hospitalizations, at a discounted cost of pound 11,423 per patient with CRT vs. pound 4,900 with OPT alone. CRT was predicted to increase quality-adjusted survival by 0.43 QALYs per patient, resulting in an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of pound 15,247 per QALY gained (range: pound 12,531- pound 23,184). Sensitivity analyses revealed that this outcome was most sensitive to time horizon and cost of implantation. CONCLUSION: Based on these 5-year analyses, CRT is expected to yield substantial health benefits at a reasonable cost.
Buscar no Google
Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Assunto principal:
Estimulação Cardíaca Artificial
/
Desfibriladores Implantáveis
/
Modelos Econômicos
/
Insuficiência Cardíaca
Tipo de estudo:
Health_economic_evaluation
/
Prognostic_studies
Limite:
Humans
País como assunto:
Europa
Idioma:
En
Ano de publicação:
2006
Tipo de documento:
Article