Generalized and partial lipodystrophy are rare and complex diseases with progressive clinical and humanistic burdens stemming from selective absence of subcutaneous adipose tissue which causes reduced energy storage capacity and a deficiency of adipokines such as leptin. Treatment options were limited before leptin replacement therapy (metreleptin) became available. This retrospective study evaluates both clinical and humanistic consequences of the disease and treatment. Chart data were abstracted from a cohort of metreleptin-treated patients with generalized and partial lipodystrophy (n=112) treated at the US National Institutes of Health. To quantify the quality of life consequences of the lipodystrophy disease attributes recorded in chart data, a discrete choice experiment was completed in 6 countries (US, n=250; EU, n=750). Resulting utility decrements were used to estimate the quality adjusted life-year consequences of changes in lipodystrophy attribute prevalence before and after metreleptin. In addition to metabolic impairment, patients with generalized and partial lipodystrophy experienced a range of lipodystrophy consequences, including liver abnormality (94%), hyperphagia (79%), impaired physical appearance (77%), kidney abnormality (63%), reproductive dysfunction (80% of females of reproductive age), and pancreatitis (39%). Improvement was observed in these attributes following initiation of metreleptin. Quality adjusted life-year gains associated with 12 months of treatment with metreleptin were estimated at 0.313 for generalized and 0.117 for partial lipodystrophy, reducing the gap in quality of life between untreated lipodystrophy and perfect health by approximately 59% and 31%, respectively. This study demonstrates that metreleptin is associated with meaningful clinical and quality of life improvements.
There is limited data on the cost-effectiveness of continuous-flow left ventricular assist devices (LVAD) in the United States particularly for the bridge-to-transplant indication. Our objective is to study the cost-effectiveness of a small intrapericardial centrifugal LVAD compared with medical management (MM) and subsequent heart transplantation using the respective clinical trial data. We developed a Markov economic framework. Clinical inputs for the LVAD arm were based on prospective trials employing the HeartWare centrifugal-flow ventricular assist device system. To better assess survival in the MM arm, and in the absence of contemporary trials randomizing patients to LVAD and MM, estimates from the Seattle Heart Failure Model were used. Costs inputs were calculated based on Medicare claim analyses and when appropriate prior published literature. Time horizon was lifetime. Costs and benefits were appropriately discounted at 3% per year. The deterministic cost-effectiveness analyses resulted in $69,768 per Quality Adjusted Life Year and $56,538 per Life Year for the bridge-to-transplant indication and $102,587 per Quality Adjusted Life Year and $87,327 per Life Year for destination therapy. These outcomes signify a substantial improvement compared with prior studies and re-open the discussion around the cost-effectiveness of LVADs.
IMPORTANCE With the approval of avapritinib for adults with unresectable or metastatic gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) harboring a platelet-derived growth factor receptor alpha (PDGFRA) exon 18 variant, including PDGFRA D842V variants, and National Comprehensive Cancer Network guideline recommendations as an option for patients with GIST after third-line treatment, it is important to estimate the potential financial implications of avapritinib on a payer's budget. OBJECTIVE To estimate the budget impact associated with the introduction of avapritinib to a formulary for metastatic or unresectable GISTs in patients with a PDGFRA exon 18 variant or after 3 or more previous treatments from the perspective of a US health plan. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTSFor this economic evaluation, a 3-year budget impact model was developed in March 2020, incorporating costs for drug acquisition, testing, monitoring, adverse events, and postprogression treatment. The model assumed that avapritinib introduction would be associated with increased PDGFRA testing rates from the current 49% to 69%. The health plan population was assumed to be mixed 69% commercial, 22% Medicare, and 9% Medicaid. Base case assumptions included a GIST incidence rate of 9.6 diagnoses per million people, a metastatic PDGFRA exon 18 mutation rate of 1.9%, and progression rate from first-line to fourth-line treatment of 17%. EXPOSURESThe model compared scenarios with and without avapritinib in a formulary.MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Annual, total, and per member per month (PMPM) budget impact. RESULTSIn a hypothetical 1-million member plan, fewer than 0.1 new patients with a PDGFRA exon 18 variant per year and 1.2 patients receiving fourth-line therapy per year were eligible for treatment.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.