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Competing treatments for migraine: a headache for decision-makers.

Authors :
Mistry, Hema
Naghdi, Seyran
Underwood, Martin
Duncan, Callum
Madan, Jason
Matharu, Manjit
Source :
Journal of Headache & Pain. 12/5/2023, Vol. 24 Issue 1, p1-12. 12p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: Migraine is the world's second most common disabling disorder, affecting 15% of UK adults and costing the UK over £1.5 billion per year. Several costly new drugs have been approved by National Institute for Health and Care Excellence. Aim: To assess the cost-effectiveness of drugs used to treat adults with chronic migraine. Methods: We did a systematic review of placebo-controlled trials of preventive drugs for chronic migraine. We then assessed the cost-effectiveness of the currently prescribable drugs included in the review: Onabotulinum toxin A (BTA), Eptinezumab (100mg or 300mg), Fremanezumab (monthly or quarterly dose), Galcanezumab or Topiramate, each compared to placebo, and we evaluated them jointly. We developed a Markov (state-transition) model with a three-month cycle length to estimate the costs and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) for the different medications from a UK NHS and Personal Social Services perspective. We used a two-year time horizon with a starting age of 30 years for the patient cohort. We estimated transition probabilities based on monthly headache days using a network meta-analysis (NMA) developed by us, and from published literature. We obtained costs from published sources and applied discount rates of 3.5% to both costs and outcomes. Results: Deterministic results suggest Topiramate was the least costly option and generated slightly more QALYs than the placebo, whereas Eptinezumab 300mg was the more costly option and generated the most QALYs. After excluding dominated options, the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) between BTA and Topiramate was £68,000 per QALY gained and the ICER between Eptinezumab 300mg and BTA was not within plausible cost-effectiveness thresholds. The cost-effectiveness acceptability frontier showed that Topiramate is the most cost-effective medication for any amount the decision maker is willing-to-pay per QALY. Conclusions: Among the various prophylactic medications for managing chronic migraine, only Topiramate was within typical cost-effectiveness threshold ranges. Further research is needed, ideally an economic evaluation alongside a randomised trial, to compare these newer, expensive CGRP MAbs with the cheaper oral medications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
11292369
Volume :
24
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Headache & Pain
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
174014561
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s10194-023-01686-y