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Cost‐Effectiveness Comparison of Ustekinumab, Infliximab, or Adalimumab for the Treatment of Moderate‐Severe Crohn's Disease in Biologic‐Naïve Patients
Author(s) -
Aliyev Elmar R.,
Hay Joel W.,
Hwang Caroline
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
pharmacotherapy: the journal of human pharmacology and drug therapy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.227
H-Index - 109
eISSN - 1875-9114
pISSN - 0277-0008
DOI - 10.1002/phar.2208
Subject(s) - ustekinumab , medicine , infliximab , adalimumab , crohn's disease , quality adjusted life year , cost effectiveness , disease , risk analysis (engineering)
Study Objective Ustekinumab was recently approved by the United States U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of Crohn's disease. In this analysis, we aimed to compare the cost‐effectiveness of ustekinumab, infliximab, or adalimumab for the treatment of moderate‐severe Crohn's disease in patients who failed conventional therapy (i.e., corticosteroids and immunomodulators) but were naïve to tumor necrosis factor antagonists (i.e., biologic drugs). Design Cost‐effectiveness analysis using a hybrid model structure (decision tree and Markov model). Measurements and Main Results A decision tree simulated biologic induction, and a Markov model simulated biologic and conventional therapy maintenance. Cycle length was 2 weeks with a discounted 5‐year time horizon and a limited U.S. societal perspective in the base case; results from a payer perspective are also reported. Transition probabilities, direct costs, indirect costs, and utilities were obtained from the literature. To measure relative treatment value (i.e., order of treatment cost‐effectiveness), net monetary benefits were reported for a $150,000 willingness‐to‐pay threshold per quality‐adjusted life‐year in the base case. Infliximab dominated both adalimumab and ustekinumab, with a net monetary benefit (NMB) of $9943 and $29,798, respectively, in the base case. Adalimumab dominated ustekinumab, with an NMB of $19,855. All biologics yielded similar quality‐adjusted life‐years (~3.5), whereas costs varied substantially ($50,510, $54,985, and $72,921 for infliximab, adalimumab, and ustekinumab, respectively). The payer perspective, alternate time horizons, and scenario analyses consistently showed infliximab dominance. One‐way, threshold, and probabilistic sensitivity analyses confirmed the robustness of these results with respect to all parameters. Although biosimilars were not explicitly modeled as comparators, one‐way sensitivity analysis showed that drug acquisition costs could alter relative treatment value but would have to be varied by at least 50%. Conclusion For moderate‐severe Crohn's disease, infliximab yields significantly more NMBs compared with both adalimumab and ustekinumab. Additional clinical (e.g., empiric dosing, biologic cycling) and quality‐of‐life (e.g., lost productivity, disutility of home injections) research is needed to allow for model frameworks and parameters that more accurately reflect the nuances of Crohn's disease treatment.

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