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Cost-Effectiveness of an Antibacterial Envelope for Cardiac Implantable Electronic Device Infection Prevention in the US Healthcare System From the WRAP-IT Trial
- Source :
- Circulation. Arrhythmia and Electrophysiology
- Publication Year :
- 2020
- Publisher :
- Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2020.
-
Abstract
- Supplemental Digital Content is available in the text.<br />Background: In the WRAP-IT trial (Worldwide Randomized Antibiotic Envelope Infection Prevention), adjunctive use of an absorbable antibacterial envelope resulted in a 40% reduction of major cardiac implantable electronic device infection without increased risk of complication in 6983 patients undergoing cardiac implantable electronic device revision, replacement, upgrade, or initial cardiac resynchronization therapy defibrillator implant. There is limited information on the cost-effectiveness of this strategy. As a prespecified objective, we evaluated antibacterial envelope cost-effectiveness compared with standard-of-care infection prevention strategies in the US healthcare system. Methods: A decision tree model was used to compare costs and outcomes of antibacterial envelope (TYRX) use adjunctive to standard-of-care infection prevention versus standard-of-care alone over a lifelong time horizon. The analysis was performed from an integrated payer-provider network perspective. Infection rates, antibacterial envelope effectiveness, infection treatment costs and patterns, infection-related mortality, and utility estimates were obtained from the WRAP-IT trial. Life expectancy and long-term costs associated with device replacement, follow-up, and healthcare utilization were sourced from the literature. Costs and quality-adjusted life years were discounted at 3%. An upper willingness-to-pay threshold of $150 000 per quality-adjusted life year was used to determine cost-effectiveness, in alignment with the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association practice guidelines and as supported by the World Health Organization and contemporary literature. Results: The base case incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of the antibacterial envelope compared with standard-of-care was $112 603/quality-adjusted life year. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio remained lower than the willingness-to-pay threshold in 74% of iterations in the probabilistic sensitivity analysis and was most sensitive to the following model inputs: infection-related mortality, life expectancy, and infection cost. Conclusions: The absorbable antibacterial envelope was associated with a cost-effectiveness ratio below contemporary benchmarks in the WRAP-IT patient population, suggesting that the envelope provides value for the US healthcare system by reducing the incidence of cardiac implantable electronic device infection. Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT02277990.
- Subjects :
- Time Factors
Cost effectiveness
Cost-Benefit Analysis
population
Risk Factors
Absorbable Implants
defibrillators
Multicenter Studies as Topic
Infection control
infections
Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
education.field_of_study
Anti-Bacterial Agents
Defibrillators, Implantable
incidence
mortality
Models, Economic
Treatment Outcome
ComputingMethodologies_DOCUMENTANDTEXTPROCESSING
Quality-Adjusted Life Years
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Healthcare system
medicine.medical_specialty
Prosthesis-Related Infections
Clinical Decision-Making
Population
Drug Costs
Prosthesis Implantation
Cost Savings
Physiology (medical)
medicine
Humans
Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy Devices
education
Intensive care medicine
business.industry
Decision Trees
Original Articles
Antibiotic Prophylaxis
United States
Quality of Life
business
Envelope (motion)
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 19413084 and 19413149
- Volume :
- 13
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Circulation: Arrhythmia and Electrophysiology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....5ad55e23c5be5fcd3f754e1cd0c05eab
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1161/circep.120.008503