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Assessment of cost of innovation versus the value of health gains associated with treatment of chronic hepatitis C in the United States: The quality-adjusted cost of care.

AbstractBACKGROUND:
New direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapy has dramatically increased cure rates for patients infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV), but has also substantially raised treatment costs.
AIM:
The aim of this analysis was to evaluate the therapeutic benefit and net costs (i.e. efficiency frontier) and the quality-adjusted cost of care associated with the evolution of treatment regimens for patients with HCV genotype 1 in the United States.
DESIGN:
A decision-analytic Markov model.
DATA SOURCE:
Published literature and clinical trial data.
TIME HORIZON:
Life Time.
PERSPECTIVE:
Third-party payer.
INTERVENTION:
This study compared four approved regimens in treatment-naïve genotype 1 chronic hepatitis C patients, including pegylated interferon and ribavirin (PR), first generation triple therapy (boceprevir + PR and telaprevir + PR), second generation triple therapy (sofosbuvir + PR and simeprevir + PR) and all-oral DAA regimens (ledipasvir/sofosbuvir and ombitasvir + paritaprevir/ritonavir + dasabuvir ± ribavirin).
OUTCOME MEASURE:
Quality-adjusted cost of care (QACC). QACC was defined as the increase in treatment cost minus the increase in the patient's quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) when valued at $50,000 per QALY.
RESULTS:
All-oral therapy improved the average sustained virologic response (SVR) rate to 96%, thereby offsetting the high drug acquisition cost of $85,714, which resulted in the highest benefit based on the efficiency frontier. Furthermore, while oral therapies increased HCV drug costs by $48,350, associated QALY gains decreased quality-adjusted cost of care by $14,120 compared to dual therapy. When the value of a QALY was varied from $100,000 to $300,000, the quality adjusted cost of care compared to dual therapy ranged from - $21,234 to - $107,861, - $89,007 to - $293,130, - $176,280 to - $500,599 for first generation triple, second generation triple, and all-oral therapies, respectively. Primary efficacy and safety measurements for drug regimens were sourced from clinical trials data rather than a real-world setting. Factors such as individual demographic characteristics, comorbidities and alcohol consumption of the individual patients treated may alter disease progression but were not captured in this analysis.
CONCLUSION:
New DAA treatments provide short-term and long-term clinical and economic value to society.
PRIMARY FUNDING SOURCE:
Gilead Sciences, Inc.
AuthorsZobair M Younossi, Haesuk Park, Douglas Dieterich, Sammy Saab, Aijaz Ahmed, Stuart C Gordon
JournalMedicine (Medicine (Baltimore)) Vol. 95 Issue 41 Pg. e5048 (Oct 2016) ISSN: 1536-5964 [Electronic] United States
PMID27741116 (Publication Type: Journal Article, Review)
Chemical References
  • Antiviral Agents
Topics
  • Antiviral Agents (therapeutic use)
  • Cost-Benefit Analysis
  • Health Care Costs
  • Hepatitis C, Chronic (drug therapy, economics)
  • Humans
  • Insurance, Health, Reimbursement (economics)
  • Quality of Health Care (economics)
  • Quality-Adjusted Life Years

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