作者
Shanlian Hu,Limin Liu,Richard F Pollock,Johannes Pöhlmann,Depei Wu,Yabing Zhang
摘要
Two intravenous (IV) iron formulations, ferric derisomaltose (FDI) and iron sucrose (IS), are currently available for the treatment of iron deficiency anemia (IDA) in China. Clinical studies have demonstrated that FDI has an improved efficacy and safety profile versus IS, while requiring fewer infusions to correct iron deficits. Based on these findings, the present study evaluated the costs and benefits of FDI and IS for the treatment of IDA, from a healthcare system and societal perspective in China.A patient-level model was developed to project time to hematological response and incidence of cardiovascular adverse events and hypersensitivity reactions (HSRs) associated with FDI and IS over 5 years. Costs included iron acquisition, administration, and adverse event/HSR treatment costs, based on published studies, fee schedules, and a physician survey. Health state utilities associated with adverse events, HSRs, and the number of infusions were obtained from the literature and a time trade-off survey.From a healthcare system perspective, FDI was associated with incremental costs of RMB 1,934 (purchasing power parity USD 462) and incremental quality-adjusted life expectancy of 0.078 quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) versus IS, yielding an incremental cost-utility ratio of RMB 24,901 (USD 5,949) in the base case scenario. From a societal perspective, FDI was associated with reduced total costs and therefore dominant versus IS.Limitations included the absence of clinical data specific to China and insufficient data to model persistence with treatment.This was the first cost-utility analysis comparing FDI and IS for the treatment of IDA in China. Based on a patient-level model, FDI was found to improve quality of life and reduce administration and adverse events costs relative to IS. Using the 2020 Chinese gross domestic product per capita of RMB 72,447 (USD 17,307) as a cost-effectiveness threshold, FDI would be considered cost-effective in China.Ferric derisomaltose (FDI) was approved in February 2021 for the treatment of iron deficiency anemia (IDA) in China and allows for fast iron correction in one visit with a good safety profile. The current standard of care in China is iron sucrose (IS). Clinical and economic decision-making can benefit from having longer-term projections on the benefits and costs of new medications relative to the current standard of care, which is why we conducted the first cost-utility analysis of FDI and IS for China. We developed a patient-level model that captured the effects of the iron formulations on IDA, in addition to incidences of adverse events and hypersensitivity reactions (HSRs) associated with either formulation. Costs of the iron formulations, their administration, and of treatments for adverse events and HSR were modeled alongside the quality of life effects of IDA, adverse events, HSRs, and iron infusions. We used published clinical data and Chinese cost data to inform our model. Our results show that FDI was associated with higher quality-adjusted life expectancy than IS, regardless of the perspective of the analysis, and higher total costs from the healthcare system perspective. From a societal perspective, FDI was associated with lower costs due to reduced travel and waiting time and smaller productivity losses given there were fewer appointments. These results imply that FDI is likely good value for money for the healthcare system and indeed cost-saving for society relative to IS, which has so far been the most widely used IV iron treatment in China.