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Cost-Effectiveness of 5-Aminosalicylate Therapy in Combination With Biologics or Tofacitinib in the Treatment of Ulcerative Colitis
- Source :
- Am J Gastroenterol
- Publication Year :
- 2020
- Publisher :
- Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2020.
-
Abstract
- Introduction Medications are major cost drivers in the treatment of patients with inflammatory bowel disease. Recent analyses suggest that there is no added efficacy in continuing nor harm in stopping 5-aminosalicylate (ASA) therapy in patients with inflammatory bowel disease escalated to biological therapies or tofacitinib. We assessed the cost-effectiveness of discontinuing 5-ASA therapy in patients with ulcerative colitis on biological therapies or tofacitinib, compared with continuing 5-ASA therapy. Methods We performed a cost-effectiveness analysis of 5-ASA with biologic therapy and tofacitinib compared with the same treatment without 5-ASA. Our primary outcome was to determine whether biologic/tofacitinib monotherapy was cost-effective compared with biologic/tofacitinib and 5-ASA combination therapy using the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio at a willingness to pay of $50,000/quality-adjusted life year. Owing to the uncertainty surrounding outcome probabilities, probabilistic sensitivity analyses with 10,000 simulations were also performed. We conducted a sensitivity analysis comparing biologic/tofacitinib and 5-ASA therapy compared with biologic/tofacitinib monotherapy, whereby vedolizumab was the first biologic used, followed by infliximab and finally tofacitinib. Results Our model shows that biologic/tofacitinib monotherapy dominates (cheaper and more effective) combination therapy of biologics/tofacitinib with 5-ASA. Probabilistic sensitivity analyses simulations resulted in biologic/tofacitinib monotherapy dominating 100% of the scenarios, with mean cost savings of $24,483.01 over 2 years. When vedolizumab was the first-line therapy in the sensitivity analysis, biologic/tofacitinib monotherapy continued to dominate the combination of 5-ASA and biologic/tofacitinib therapy. Discussion This analysis in patients with ulcerative colitis who require treatment with biologics or tofacitinib demonstrates that continuing 5-ASA therapy is not a cost-effective strategy. Discontinuation of 5-ASA therapy in these patients is safe and less expensive and should be recommended.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
Combination therapy
Cost effectiveness
Cost-Benefit Analysis
Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized
Inflammatory bowel disease
Article
Vedolizumab
Deprescriptions
Pharmacotherapy
Gastrointestinal Agents
Piperidines
Internal medicine
medicine
Humans
Mesalamine
Protein Kinase Inhibitors
Biological Products
Tofacitinib
Hepatology
business.industry
Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal
Gastroenterology
medicine.disease
Ulcerative colitis
Infliximab
Markov Chains
digestive system diseases
Pyrimidines
Colitis, Ulcerative
Drug Therapy, Combination
Quality-Adjusted Life Years
business
medicine.drug
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15720241 and 00029270
- Volume :
- 116
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- American Journal of Gastroenterology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....c99252186c33f89898f4ffbe4f50cfd0
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.14309/ajg.0000000000000847