Stevenson M, Jones M Lloyd, De Nigris E, Brewer N, Davis S, Oakley J
School of Health and Related Research (ScHARR), University of Sheffield, UK.
Health Technol Assess. 2005 Jun;9(22):1-160. doi: 10.3310/hta9220.
To establish the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of selective oestrogen receptor modulators, bisphosphonates and parathyroid hormone (subject to licensing) for the prevention and treatment of osteoporosis and the prevention of osteoporotic fractures in postmenopausal women.
Electronic databases.
Studies that met the review's entry criteria were eligible for inclusion in the meta-analyses provided that they reported fracture incidence in terms of the number of patients suffering fractures. Meta-analysis was carried out using the random-effects model. A model was constructed to estimate the cost-effectiveness of osteoporosis interventions. The model calculated the number of fractures that occurred and provided the costs associated with osteoporotic fractures, and the quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs). In addition, the conditions of breast cancer and coronary heart disease (CHD) were modelled, as some interventions have been shown to affect the risk of these conditions.
Ninety randomised controlled trials (RCTs) met the inclusion criteria. They related to the five interventions (alendronate, etidronate, risedronate, raloxifene and teriparatide) and to five comparators (calcium, calcium plus vitamin D, calcitriol, hormone replacement therapy and exercise), as well as placebo or no treatment. All five interventions have been shown to reduce the risk of vertebral fracture in women with severe osteoporosis with adequate calcium intakes. However, none of these drugs has been demonstrated, by direct comparison, to be significantly more effective than either each other or the other active interventions reviewed in this report. The intervention costs of treating all osteoporotic women, for a period of 5 years, were in the region of pound 900-1500 million for alendronate, etidronate, risedronate and raloxifene. The cost per QALY ratios fell dramatically with age. Assuming the risks of a woman with severe osteoporosis at the threshold of osteoporosis, no treatment had a cost per QALY below pound 35,000 at 50 years of age. At 60 years of age, the cost per QALY of raloxifene was pound 26,000 assuming no impact on hip fractures, and pound 31,000 assuming an adverse effect. However, these results are driven by the effect on breast cancer and the assumptions made regarding this disease state. No other intervention had a cost per QALY below pound 35,000. When analyses were conducted assuming that the fracture risk is doubled at each site, alendronate and risedronate had cost per QALY ratios below pound 30,000 at all ages. For women at the threshold of osteoporosis, without a prior fracture and aged 70 years, the cost per QALY of the three bisphosphonates ranged from pound 34,000 to pound 41,000. Raloxifene had a cost per QALY of pound 23,000, assuming no effect on hip fracture, given assumptions regarding breast cancer. At 80 years of age, the cost per QALY of alendronate and risedronate was below pound 20,000. This was true for etidronate when incorporating observational data, but the value rose to pound 69,000 when only RCT data were used. No other intervention had a cost per QALY below pound 35,000. It was assumed that doubling the risk of fracture for women without a prior fracture would give results similar to patients at the threshold of osteoporosis with a prior fracture.
Of the five interventions, only raloxifene appeared to reduce the risk of vertebral fracture in postmenopausal women unselected for low bone mineral density (BMD). However, as the full data have not been made public, there is some uncertainty regarding this result. None of the five interventions has been shown to reduce the risk of non-vertebral fracture in women unselected for low BMD. All of the proposed interventions provided gains in QALYs compared with no treatment in women with sufficient calcium and vitamin D intakes. The size of the QALY gain for each intervention was strongly related to the age of the patient. The estimated costs varied widely for the interventions. These net costs were markedly different by age, with some interventions becoming cost-saving at higher age ranges in patients with a prior fracture. Areas for future research include: the evidence base for the efficacy of fracture prevention in the very elderly, reanalysis of raloxifene using a dedicated breast cancer and CHD model, and more trials considering the cost-effectiveness of teriparatide.
确定选择性雌激素受体调节剂、双膦酸盐和甲状旁腺激素(视许可情况而定)在预防和治疗绝经后妇女骨质疏松症及预防骨质疏松性骨折方面的临床有效性和成本效益。
电子数据库。
符合综述纳入标准的研究有资格纳入荟萃分析,前提是它们报告了骨折发生率(以发生骨折的患者数量表示)。采用随机效应模型进行荟萃分析。构建了一个模型来估计骨质疏松症干预措施的成本效益。该模型计算发生的骨折数量,并提供与骨质疏松性骨折相关的成本以及质量调整生命年(QALY)。此外,对乳腺癌和冠心病(CHD)的情况进行了建模,因为一些干预措施已显示会影响这些疾病的风险。
90项随机对照试验(RCT)符合纳入标准。它们涉及五种干预措施(阿仑膦酸盐、依替膦酸盐、利塞膦酸盐、雷洛昔芬和特立帕肽)和五种对照措施(钙、钙加维生素D、骨化三醇、激素替代疗法和运动),以及安慰剂或不治疗。所有五种干预措施均已显示可降低钙摄入量充足的重度骨质疏松症女性的椎体骨折风险。然而,通过直接比较,这些药物中没有一种被证明比其他药物或本报告中审查的其他活性干预措施显著更有效。治疗所有骨质疏松症女性5年的干预成本,阿仑膦酸盐、依替膦酸盐、利塞膦酸盐和雷洛昔芬约为9亿至15亿英镑。每QALY成本比随年龄大幅下降。假设一名处于骨质疏松症阈值的重度骨质疏松症女性,50岁时不治疗的每QALY成本低于35000英镑。60岁时,假设对髋部骨折无影响,雷洛昔芬的每QALY成本为26000英镑,假设存在不利影响则为31000英镑。然而,这些结果是由对乳腺癌的影响以及关于这种疾病状态的假设驱动的。没有其他干预措施的每QALY成本低于35000英镑。当假设每个部位的骨折风险加倍进行分析时,阿仑膦酸盐和利塞膦酸盐在所有年龄段的每QALY成本比均低于30000英镑。对于处于骨质疏松症阈值、无既往骨折且年龄为70岁的女性,三种双膦酸盐的每QALY成本在34000英镑至41000英镑之间。假设对髋部骨折无影响,并考虑关于乳腺癌的假设,雷洛昔芬的每QALY成本为23000英镑。80岁时,阿仑膦酸盐和利塞膦酸盐的每QALY成本低于20000英镑。纳入观察性数据时依替膦酸盐也是如此,但仅使用RCT数据时该值升至69000英镑。没有其他干预措施的每QALY成本低于35000英镑。假设无既往骨折的女性骨折风险加倍会得出与有既往骨折的骨质疏松症阈值患者相似的结果。
在这五种干预措施中,只有雷洛昔芬似乎能降低未因低骨密度(BMD)而被挑选的绝经后女性的椎体骨折风险。然而,由于完整数据尚未公开,该结果存在一定不确定性。这五种干预措施均未显示能降低未因低BMD而被挑选的女性的非椎体骨折风险。与钙和维生素D摄入量充足的未治疗女性相比,所有提议的干预措施均能带来QALY的增加。每种干预措施的QALY增加幅度与患者年龄密切相关。干预措施的估计成本差异很大。这些净成本在不同年龄有显著差异,一些干预措施在有既往骨折的较高年龄范围内会节省成本。未来研究的领域包括:高龄人群骨折预防疗效的证据基础、使用专门的乳腺癌和冠心病模型对雷洛昔芬进行重新分析,以及更多考虑特立帕肽成本效益的试验。