Southampton Health Technology Assessments Centre (SHTAC), University of Southampton, Southampton, UK.
Health Technol Assess. 2011 Apr;15(17):i-xii, 1-210. doi: 10.3310/hta15170.
to assess the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of peginterferon alfa and ribavirin for the treatment of chronic hepatitis c virus (HCV) in three specific patient subgroups affected by recent licence changes: those eligible for shortened treatment courses [i.e. those with low viral load (LVL) and who attained a rapid virological response (RVR) at 4 weeks of treatment], those eligible for re-treatment following previous non-response or relapse, and those co-infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).
Fourteen electronic bibliographic databases, including the Cochrane Library, MEDLINE and EMBASE, were searched up to October 2009. Key hepatitis C resources and symposia, bibliographies of related papers and manufacturer submissions to the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence were also searched and clinical experts were contacted.
A systematic review and economic evaluation were carried out. Titles and abstracts were screened for eligibility by one reviewer. Inclusion criteria were defined a priori and applied independently by two reviewers to the full text of retrieved references. For the clinical effectiveness review, studies were included if they were randomised controlled trials (RCTs) of adults with chronic HCV, restricted to the patient groups described above. The intervention was standard peginterferon and ribavirin combination therapy compared with shortened duration courses (24 weeks for genotype 1, 16 weeks for genotype 2/3) or best supportive care (BSC). Outcomes included sustained virological response (SVR), relapse rate and adverse events. In addition, full economic evaluations and studies of health-related quality of life were sought for this subgroup of patients. Data extraction and quality assessment were undertaken by two reviewers independently. Studies were synthesised through a narrative review with tabulation of results. Our previously published Markov state-transition model was adapted to estimate the cost-effectiveness of treatment strategies in subgroups of adults with chronic HCV who were eligible for shortened treatment and re-treatment and those with HCV/HIV co-infection. The model extrapolated the impact of SVR on life expectancy, quality-adjusted life expectancy and lifetime costs for each subgroup of patients with HCV. Categories of costs included in the model were drug acquisition, patient management, on-treatment monitoring, management of adverse events, and health-state costs for disease progression.
In total, 2400 references were identified. Six RCTs were included in the review of clinical effectiveness, all reporting peginterferon alfa and ribavirin therapy in patients eligible for shortened treatment. In general, these RCTs were of good quality. No RCTs comparing peginterferon and ribavirin with BSC were identified for the re-treatment or co-infection populations. The results suggest that chronic HCV patients who have LVL at baseline and who achieve an RVR can be treated with shortened courses of therapy (24 weeks for genotype 1, 16 weeks for genotype 2/3) and achieve SVR rates that are comparable to those who receive the standard duration of treatment (ranges 84%-96% vs 83%-100%, respectively). However, patient numbers in the LVL/RVR subgroups were small and none of the trials was powered for this subgroup analysis, so results should be interpreted with caution. In the one trial reporting virological relapse rates in the subgroup of patients with LVL/RVR, rates were low and not statistically significantly different between those treated for 24 versus 48 weeks [3.6% vs 0%, respectively, difference 3.6%, 95% confidence interval (CI) -7.2% to 6.6%, p = 1.000]. In the cost-effectiveness analysis of shortened treatment with peginterferon alfa-2a, incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) ranged from £35,000 to £65,000 for patients with genotype 1, whereas in patients with genotypes 2 and 3 shortened treatment dominated standard treatment. For patients with genotype 1 with LVL/RVR, shortened treatment with peginterferon alfa-2b dominated standard treatment. In patients with genotype 1 and those with genotype non-1 who were re-treated with peginterferon alfa-2a, the ICERs were £9169 and £2294, respectively. In patients with genotypes 1 and 4, who were re-treated with peginterferon alfa-2b, the ICER was £7681, whereas re-treatment dominated BSC for patients with genotypes 2 and 3. In patients co-infected with HCV/HIV, who were receiving peginterferon alfa-2a, the ICER was £7941 per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) gained in patients with genotypes 1 and 4, whereas in patients with genotypes 2 and 3 peginterferon alfa-2a dominated BSC. In co-infected patients receiving peginterferon alfa-2b the ICER was £11,806 in genotypes 1 and 4, and £2161 in genotypes 2 and 3.
The clinical trial evidence indicates that patients may be successfully treated with a shorter course of peginterferon combination therapy without compromising the likelihood of achieving an SVR. The economic evaluation shows that treatment with peginterferon alfa in the specified subgroups of patients with LVL/RVR will yield QALY gains, without excessive increases in costs, and may be cost saving in some situations. However, a judgement is required on the value of the QALY loss that may result from adopting a shorter treatment regimen, if shorter treatment is associated with a lower SVR than standard treatment duration. There is a need for further RCT evidence, particularly in people who have not responded to, or relapsed following, treatment. Phase II and Phase III trials are currently in progress, evaluating the safety and efficacy of protease inhibitors and nucleoside analogues for treatment-naive and treatment-experienced people with chronic HCV.
The National Institute for Health Research Health Technology Assessment programme.
评估聚乙二醇干扰素 alfa 和利巴韦林治疗慢性丙型肝炎病毒 (HCV) 的临床效果和成本效益,这三种特定患者亚组受到最近许可变更的影响:那些符合缩短疗程条件的患者[即病毒载量低 (LVL) 且在治疗 4 周时达到快速病毒学应答 (RVR)]、那些先前无应答或复发后重新治疗的患者,以及那些同时感染人类免疫缺陷病毒 (HIV) 的患者。
14 个电子文献数据库,包括 Cochrane 图书馆、MEDLINE 和 EMBASE,截至 2009 年 10 月进行了搜索。还搜索了与相关论文的关键肝炎资源和专题讨论会、参考文献和制造商向国家卫生与临床卓越研究所提交的资料,并联系了临床专家。
进行了系统评价和经济评估。通过一名评审员筛选标题和摘要以确定是否符合入选条件。纳入标准事先确定,由两名评审员独立应用于检索到的参考文献的全文。对于临床有效性评价,纳入的研究为慢性 HCV 成人的随机对照试验 (RCT),仅限于上述患者组。干预措施为标准聚乙二醇干扰素和利巴韦林联合治疗与缩短疗程 (基因型 1 为 24 周,基因型 2/3 为 16 周) 或最佳支持治疗 (BSC)。结果包括持续病毒学应答 (SVR)、复发率和不良事件。此外,还为这些患者亚组寻求了全经济评价和健康相关生活质量研究。数据提取和质量评估由两名评审员独立进行。通过表格总结结果,对研究进行了叙述性综述。我们之前发表的马尔可夫状态转移模型被改编用于估计符合缩短治疗和重新治疗条件的慢性 HCV 成人患者亚组以及合并 HCV/HIV 感染的患者亚组的治疗策略的成本效益。该模型推断 SVR 对预期寿命、调整后的预期寿命和终生成本的影响,包括药物获取、患者管理、治疗期间监测、不良事件管理和疾病进展的健康状态成本。
共确定了 2400 条参考文献。有 6 项 RCT 纳入了临床有效性评价,所有研究均报告了聚乙二醇干扰素 alfa 和利巴韦林治疗符合缩短疗程条件的患者。这些 RCT 总体质量较高。未发现比较聚乙二醇干扰素和利巴韦林与 BSC 治疗再治疗或合并感染患者的 RCT。结果表明,基线时 LVL 且达到 RVR 的慢性 HCV 患者可以接受缩短疗程的治疗(基因型 1 为 24 周,基因型 2/3 为 16 周),并达到与接受标准疗程相当的 SVR 率(范围分别为 84%-96%和 83%-100%)。然而,LVL/RVR 亚组的患者数量较少,并且没有一项试验针对该亚组分析进行了适当的设计,因此结果应谨慎解释。在报告 LVL/RVR 患者亚组病毒学复发率的一项试验中,复发率较低,且治疗 24 周与 48 周之间的差异无统计学意义[分别为 3.6%和 0%,差异 3.6%,95%置信区间 (CI) -7.2%至 6.6%,p = 1.000]。在聚乙二醇干扰素 alfa-2a 缩短治疗的成本效益分析中,基因型 1 患者的增量成本效益比 (ICER) 范围为 35000 英镑至 65000 英镑,而基因型 2 和 3 的患者缩短治疗优于标准治疗。对于 LVL/RVR 的基因型 1 患者,聚乙二醇干扰素 alfa-2b 缩短治疗优于标准治疗。对于基因型 1 患者和基因型非 1 患者重新接受聚乙二醇干扰素 alfa-2a 治疗的患者,ICER 分别为 9169 英镑和 2294 英镑。对于基因型 1 和 4 的患者,重新接受聚乙二醇干扰素 alfa-2b 治疗的 ICER 为 7681 英镑,而对于基因型 2 和 3 的患者,重新治疗优于 BSC。对于合并 HCV/HIV 的患者,接受聚乙二醇干扰素 alfa-2a 治疗的患者,基因型 1 和 4 的 ICER 为每获得一个质量调整生命年 (QALY) 增加 7941 英镑,而基因型 2 和 3 的患者聚乙二醇干扰素 alfa-2a 优于 BSC。在接受聚乙二醇干扰素 alfa-2b 治疗的合并感染患者中,基因型 1 和 4 的 ICER 为 11806 英镑,基因型 2 和 3 的 ICER 为 2161 英镑。
临床试验证据表明,患者可能通过缩短聚乙二醇干扰素联合治疗的疗程而不影响获得 SVR 的可能性,成功得到治疗。经济评估表明,对于 LVL/RVR 特定患者亚组,使用 peginterferon alfa 治疗将带来 QALY 获益,而不会导致成本过度增加,并且在某些情况下可能具有成本效益。然而,需要对采用较短治疗方案可能导致的 QALY 损失进行判断,如果较短的治疗与标准治疗持续时间相比导致 SVR 降低。目前正在进行 II 期和 III 期试验,评估蛋白酶抑制剂和核苷类似物对初治和经治慢性丙型肝炎患者的安全性和疗效。
英国国家卫生研究院卫生技术评估计划。