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Economic Evaluation of the Hepatitis C Virus Treatment Extension to Early-Stage Fibrosis Patients: Evidence from the PITER Real-World Cohort

Authors :
Ruggeri, Matteo
Coretti, Silvia
Romano, Federica
Kondili, L. A.
Vella, Stefano
Cicchetti, Americo
Ruggeri M. (ORCID:0000-0002-5703-7424)
Coretti S.
Romano F.
Vella S.
Cicchetti A. (ORCID:0000-0002-4633-9195)
Ruggeri, Matteo
Coretti, Silvia
Romano, Federica
Kondili, L. A.
Vella, Stefano
Cicchetti, Americo
Ruggeri M. (ORCID:0000-0002-5703-7424)
Coretti S.
Romano F.
Vella S.
Cicchetti A. (ORCID:0000-0002-4633-9195)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Objectives: To conduct a cost-effectiveness analysis of two planning strategies of the second-generation direct-acting antiviral interferon-free regimens for the treatment of chronic hepatitis C virus infection. Methods: A lifetime multicohort model comprised 8125 real-life patients enrolled in the PITER (Italian platform for the study of viral hepatitis) registry, implemented by the ISS (Istituto Superiore di Sanità). Two treatment planning strategies were compared: 1) policy 1—treat all patients regardless of the stage of fibrosis (F0–F4) with second-generation direct-acting antivirals and 2) policy 2—treat patients at F3/F4 stage and those who are prioritized by the scientific guidelines first, and the remaining patients when they reach the F3 stage. Clinical outcomes and costs were evaluated by using a lifetime horizon Markov model and adopting the third-party payer perspective. Health outcomes were expressed in terms of quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs). A sensitivity analysis was run to explore first- and second-order uncertainty and heterogeneity. An expected value of perfect information analysis was also conducted. Results: Policy 1 exhibits an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of €8,775/QALY gained and remains less than €30,000/QALY in 94% of realizations produced by the Monte-Carlo simulation. Such a proportion increases to 97% when adopting a threshold of €40,000/QALY gained. Conclusions: Moving from the urgency criterion to evidence-based escalating strategies when prioritizing the access to new anti–hepatitis C virus treatments is a good investment in health, whose affordability should be explored through context-specific budget impact analyses.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1242040417
Document Type :
Electronic Resource