Schädlich Peter K, Schmidt-Lucke Caroline, Huppertz Eduard, Lehmacher Walter, Nixdorff Uwe, Stellbrink Christoph, Brecht Josef Georg
InForMed GmbH - Outcomes Research and Health Economics, Ingolstadt, Germany.
Am J Cardiovasc Drugs. 2007;7(3):199-217. doi: 10.2165/00129784-200707030-00006.
To estimate, from the perspective of Statutory Health Insurance (SHI, third-party payer) in Germany, the economic consequences of using the subcutaneous low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH) enoxaparin instead of intravenous unfractionated heparin followed by oral phenprocoumon (UFH/PPC) for anticoagulation in patients undergoing transesophageal echocardiography (TEE)-guided early electrical cardioversion (ECV) of persisting nonvalvular atrial fibrillation (AF) without intracardiac clot.
The incremental cost for the enoxaparin-based regimen versus the UFH/PPC-based regimen was chosen as the target variable. A decision-analytic model considering the in- and outpatient sectors was used to quantify the target variable. Resource use during in- and outpatient treatment was taken from the Anticoagulation in Cardioversion using Enoxaparin (ACE) trial and from expert interviews with cardiologists in Germany in order to reflect the day-to-day conditions of clinical practice. Costs were given by SHI expenses for inpatient treatment and for medical services, drugs, disposables, and laboratory tests during outpatient treatment. These costs were determined by multiplying utilized resource items by the price or tariff of each item based on German healthcare regulations for the reference period of 2003/2004. According to the ACE trial, the evaluation encompassed 28 (26-30) treatment days with two consecutive phases. Phase I with 5 (3-12) days comprised diagnostics, start of anticoagulation, and ECV. Phase II with the remaining days consisted of continued anticoagulation and patient monitoring. The dosage of enoxaparin was 1 mg/kg bodyweight twice daily in treatment phase I followed by 40 mg twice daily with a bodyweight <65 kg or 60 mg twice daily with a BW > or =65 kg in treatment phase II. The daily dosages of UFH by continuous infusion and overlapping PPC were adjusted to an International Normalized Ratio of 2.0-3.0 in treatment phase I followed by 2.25mg PPC once daily in treatment phase II. Patients with any comorbidity and complication level (CCL) and those with low comorbidity and complications expected to occur in rare cases only (low-risk patients) were analyzed separately. In each base-case analysis, exclusively point estimates of all respective model parameters were applied.
There were savings of 339 euro and 579 euro per patient receiving the enoxaparin-based regimen versus the UFH/PPC-based regimen in the case of patients with any CCL and of low-risk patients, respectively (1 euro approximate, equals $US1.25; first quarter 2004 values). In comprehensive sensitivity analyzes, the robustness of the model and its results was shown. First, the impact of the model parameters on the target variable for each patient group was quantified in a deterministic model. Secondly, the dependency of the target variable on random variables was described for each patient group using Monte Carlo simulation. Irrespective of the patient group, the cost weight and the base rate of hospitals for inpatient ECV in phase I turned out to have the greatest impact on the savings obtained by the enoxaparin-based regimen. In the case of patients with any CCL, this impact was about 1.4-fold of that of the probability of enoxaparin patients undergoing outpatient ECV in phase I. In the case of low-risk patients, the impact of the cost weight and the base rate of hospitals for inpatient ECV in phase I was about 4.1-fold of that of the price of enoxaparin 60 mg prefilled syringes in the outpatient sector. In 79% and 93% of 10,000 simulated comparisons each versus the UFH/PPC-based regimen, there were savings obtained by the enoxaparin-based regimen in patients with any CCL and in low-risk patients, respectively.
Results of this evaluation showed that an enoxaparin-based regimen for TEE-guided ECV of AF in patients without intracardiac clot offers SHI in Germany a considerable saving potential when used instead of an UFH/PPC-based regimen.
从德国法定医疗保险(SHI,第三方支付方)的角度,评估在经食管超声心动图(TEE)引导下对持续性非瓣膜性心房颤动(AF)且无心脏内血栓的患者进行早期心脏电复律(ECV)时,使用皮下注射低分子量肝素(LMWH)依诺肝素而非静脉注射普通肝素继以口服苯丙香豆素(UFH/PPC)进行抗凝的经济后果。
将基于依诺肝素的治疗方案相对于基于UFH/PPC的治疗方案的增量成本作为目标变量。使用一个考虑门诊和住院部门的决策分析模型来量化目标变量。住院和门诊治疗期间的资源使用取自使用依诺肝素进行心脏复律抗凝(ACE)试验以及对德国心脏病专家的专家访谈,以反映临床实践的日常情况。成本由住院治疗的SHI费用以及门诊治疗期间的医疗服务、药物、一次性用品和实验室检查费用给出。这些成本是通过将所使用的资源项目乘以基于2003/2004参考期德国医疗法规的每个项目的价格或费率来确定的。根据ACE试验,评估涵盖28(26 - 30)个治疗日,分为两个连续阶段。第一阶段为5(3 - 12)天,包括诊断、开始抗凝和ECV。第二阶段为剩余天数,包括持续抗凝和患者监测。在治疗阶段I,依诺肝素的剂量为每日两次,每次1 mg/kg体重,随后在治疗阶段II,体重<65 kg者每日两次,每次40 mg,体重≥65 kg者每日两次,每次60 mg。在治疗阶段I,通过持续输注UFH和重叠使用PPC,将每日剂量调整至国际标准化比值为2.0 - 3.0,随后在治疗阶段II,每日一次使用2.25 mg PPC。对任何合并症和并发症水平(CCL)的患者以及仅在罕见情况下预期有低合并症和并发症的患者(低风险患者)分别进行分析。在每个基础病例分析中,仅应用所有各自模型参数的点估计值。
在任何CCL的患者和低风险患者中,接受基于依诺肝素治疗方案的患者相对于基于UFH/PPC治疗方案的患者,分别节省339欧元和579欧元(1欧元约等于1.25美元;为第一季度2004年的值)。在全面的敏感性分析中,显示了模型及其结果的稳健性。首先,在确定性模型中量化每个患者组的模型参数对目标变量的影响。其次,使用蒙特卡罗模拟为每个患者组描述目标变量对随机变量的依赖性。无论患者组如何,第一阶段住院ECV的医院成本权重和基础费率对基于依诺肝素治疗方案所获得的节省影响最大。在任何CCL的患者中,这种影响约为依诺肝素患者在第一阶段接受门诊ECV概率影响的1.4倍。在低风险患者中,第一阶段住院ECV的医院成本权重和基础费率的影响约为门诊部门依诺肝素60 mg预填充注射器价格影响的4.1倍。在与基于UFH/PPC治疗方案的10,000次模拟比较中,分别有79%和93%的情况显示,基于依诺肝素治疗方案在任何CCL的患者和低风险患者中可节省费用。
该评估结果表明,对于无心脏内血栓的患者,在TEE引导下进行AF的ECV时,基于依诺肝素的治疗方案相对于基于UFH/PPC的治疗方案,可为德国的SHI带来可观的节省潜力。