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Health impact of tafamidis in transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy patients: an analysis from the Tafamidis in Transthyretin Cardiomyopathy Clinical Trial (ATTR-ACT) and the open-label long-term extension studies

Authors :
Bart Heeg
D. Tran
Maarten J. Postma
Benjamin Li
Ahmad Masri
Rahul Bhambri
Daniel Grima
Andrea Garcia
Mark H. Rozenbaum
Michelle Stewart
Value, Affordability and Sustainability (VALUE)
Real World Studies in PharmacoEpidemiology, -Genetics, -Economics and -Therapy (PEGET)
Microbes in Health and Disease (MHD)
Source :
European heart journal. Quality of care & clinical outcomes, 8(5), 529-538
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2021.

Abstract

Aim The Tafamidis in Transthyretin Cardiomyopathy Clinical Trial (ATTR-ACT) showed that tafamidis reduced all-cause mortality and cardiovascular-related hospitalizations in patients with transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy (ATTR-CM). This study aimed to estimate the impact of tafamidis on survival and quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs). Methods and results A multi-state, cohort, Markov model was developed to simulate the disease course of ATTR-CM throughout a lifetime. For survival extrapolation, survival curves were fitted by treatment arm and New York Heart Association (NYHA) Class I/II (68% of patients) and NYHA Class III (32% of patients) cohorts using the individual patient-level data from both the ATTR-ACT and the corresponding long-term extension study. Univariate and multivariate sensitivity analyses were conducted. The predicted mean survival for the total population (NYHA Class I/II + III) was 6.73 years for tafamidis and 2.85 years for the standard of care (SoC), resulting in an incremental mean survival of 3.88 years [95% confidence interval (CI) 1.32–5.66]. Of the 6.73 life-years, patients on tafamidis spend, on average, 4.82 years in NYHA Class I/II, while patients on SoC spend an average of 1.60 life-years in these classes. The combination of longer survival in lower NYHA classes produced a QALY gain of 5.39 for tafamidis and 2.11 for SoC, resulting in 3.29 incremental QALYs (95% CI 1.21–4.74) in favour of tafamidis. Conclusion Based on the disease simulation model results, tafamidis is expected to more than double the life expectancy and QALYs of ATTR-CM patients compared to SoC. Longer-term follow-up data from the ATTR-ACT extension study will further inform these findings. Clinical trials.gov identifier NCT01994889 (date of registration: 26 November 2013).

Details

ISSN :
20581742 and 20585225
Volume :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Heart Journal - Quality of Care and Clinical Outcomes
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....78a0980e971309d259f1ecb6c2170671
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/ehjqcco/qcab031