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Economic evaluation of Restrictive Vs. Liberal Transfusion Strategy Following Acute Myocardial Infarction (REALITY): trial-based cost effectiveness and cost utility analyses

Authors :
Isabelle, Durand-Zaleski
Gregory, Ducrocq
Maroua, Mimouni
Jerome, Frenkiel
Cristina, Avendano-Solá
Jose R, Gonzalez-Juanatey
Emile, Ferrari
Gilles, Lemesle
Etienne, Puymirat
Laurence, Berard
Marine, Cachanado
Joan Albert, Arnaiz
Manuel, Martínez-Sellés
Johanne, Silvain
Albert, Ariza-Solé
Gonzalo, Calvo
Nicolas, Danchin
Sandra, Paco
Elodie, Drouet
Helene, Abergel
Alexandra, Rousseau
Tabassome, Simon
Philippe Gabriel, Steg
Leticia Pereira, Gomez
Source :
European heart journal. Quality of careclinical outcomes.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Aims To estimate the cost–effectiveness and cost–utility ratios of a restrictive vs. liberal transfusion strategy in acute myocardial infarction (AMI) patients with anaemia. Methods and results Patients (n = 666) with AMI and haemoglobin between 7–8 and 10 g/dL recruited in 35 hospitals in France and Spain were randomly assigned to a restrictive (n = 342) or a liberal (n = 324) transfusion strategy with 1-year prospective collection of resource utilization and quality of life using the EQ5D3L questionnaire. The economic evaluation was based on 648 patients from the per-protocol population. The outcomes were 30-day and 1-year cost-effectiveness, with major adverse cardiovascular events (MACEs) averted as the effectiveness outcome. and a 1-year cost–utility ratio. The 30-day incremental cost–effectiveness ratio was €33 065 saved per additional MACE averted with the restrictive vs. liberal strategy, with an 84% probability for the restrictive strategy to be cost-saving and MACE-reducing (i.e. dominant). At 1 year, the point estimate of the cost–utility ratio was €191 500 saved per quality-adjusted life year gained; however, the cumulated MACE was outside the pre-specified non-inferiority margin, resulting in a decremental cost–effectiveness ratio with a point estimate of €72 000 saved per additional MACE with the restrictive strategy. Conclusion In patients with AMI and anaemia, the restrictive transfusion strategy was dominant (cost-saving and outcome-improving) at 30 days. At 1 year, the restrictive strategy remained cost-saving, but clinical non-inferiority on MACE was no longer maintained. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02648113. One sentence summary The use of a restrictive transfusion strategy in patients with acute myocardial infarction is associated with lower healthcare costs, but more evidence is needed to ascertain its long-term clinical impact.

Details

ISSN :
20581742 and 02648113
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European heart journal. Quality of careclinical outcomes
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....eeabc7da0a15006f4a90375b9fa333d3