“…However, the authors considered different time horizons, discount rates, healthcare costs and cost-effectiveness thresholds, which may also limit the comparability of results. Moreover, the stage of the disease might be a relevant factor behind the economic burden of the condition, but there is no consistency in relation to this question, since 10 studies did not specify the degree of severity [33,36,39,42,44,48,[51][52][53][54]57], while 11 studies referred to relapsing-remitting MS individually [31,34,35,37,38,40,41,43,50,55,56] and the other 8 studies considered slow or secondary-progressive MS, solely or jointly with relapsing-remitting MS. Lastly, the search strategy in relation to the databases used might be subject to debate. However, we complemented our search launched in Medline by additionally using the CEA Registry of Tufts University, which applies an algorithm also launched in Medline and a systematic review process [27,78].…”