Pandya Ankur, Sy Stephen, Cho Sylvia, Weinstein Milton C, Gaziano Thomas A
Department of Health Policy and Management, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts.
Department of Health Policy and Management, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts2Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
JAMA. 2015 Jul 14;314(2):142-50. doi: 10.1001/jama.2015.6822.
The American College of Cardiology and the American Heart Association (ACC/AHA) cholesterol treatment guidelines have wide-scale implications for treating adults without history of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) with statins.
To estimate the cost-effectiveness of various 10-year ASCVD risk thresholds that could be used in the ACC/AHA cholesterol treatment guidelines.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Microsimulation model, including lifetime time horizon, US societal perspective, 3% discount rate for costs, and health outcomes. In the model, hypothetical individuals from a representative US population aged 40 to 75 years received statin treatment, experienced ASCVD events, and died from ASCVD-related or non-ASCVD-related causes based on ASCVD natural history and statin treatment parameters. Data sources for model parameters included National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys, large clinical trials and meta-analyses for statin benefits and treatment, and other published sources.
Estimated ASCVD events prevented and incremental costs per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) gained.
In the base-case scenario, the current ASCVD threshold of 7.5% or higher, which was estimated to be associated with 48% of adults treated with statins, had an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of $37,000/QALY compared with a 10% or higher threshold. More lenient ASCVD thresholds of 4.0% or higher (61% of adults treated) and 3.0% or higher (67% of adults treated) had ICERs of $81,000/QALY and $140,000/QALY, respectively. Shifting from a 7.5% or higher ASCVD risk threshold to a 3.0% or higher ASCVD risk threshold was estimated to be associated with an additional 161,560 cardiovascular disease events averted. Cost-effectiveness results were sensitive to changes in the disutility associated with taking a pill daily, statin price, and the risk of statin-induced diabetes. In probabilistic sensitivity analysis, there was a higher than 93% chance that the optimal ASCVD threshold was 5.0% or lower using a cost-effectiveness threshold of $100,000/QALY.
In this microsimulation model of US adults aged 45 to 75 years [corrected], the current 10-year ASCVD risk threshold (≥7.5% risk threshold) used in the ACC/AHA cholesterol treatment guidelines has an acceptable cost-effectiveness profile (ICER, $37,000/QALY), but more lenient ASCVD thresholds would be optimal using cost-effectiveness thresholds of $100,000/QALY (≥4.0% risk threshold) or $150,000/QALY (≥3.0% risk threshold). The optimal ASCVD threshold was sensitive to patient preferences for taking a pill daily, changes to statin price, and the risk of statin-induced diabetes.
美国心脏病学会和美国心脏协会(ACC/AHA)的胆固醇治疗指南对使用他汀类药物治疗无动脉粥样硬化性心血管疾病(ASCVD)病史的成年人具有广泛影响。
评估可用于ACC/AHA胆固醇治疗指南的各种10年ASCVD风险阈值的成本效益。
设计、设置和参与者:微观模拟模型,包括终生时间范围、美国社会视角、3%的成本贴现率以及健康结果。在该模型中,来自美国40至75岁代表性人群的假设个体接受他汀类药物治疗,根据ASCVD自然病史和他汀类药物治疗参数经历ASCVD事件,并死于ASCVD相关或非ASCVD相关原因。模型参数的数据来源包括国家健康和营养检查调查、关于他汀类药物益处和治疗的大型临床试验及荟萃分析,以及其他已发表资料。
估计预防的ASCVD事件以及每获得一个质量调整生命年(QALY)的增量成本。
在基准情景中,当前7.5%或更高的ASCVD阈值估计与48%接受他汀类药物治疗的成年人相关,与10%或更高的阈值相比,其增量成本效益比(ICER)为每QALY 37,000美元。更宽松的ASCVD阈值4.0%或更高(61%接受治疗的成年人)和3.0%或更高(67%接受治疗的成年人)的ICER分别为每QALY 81,000美元和140,000美元。从7.5%或更高的ASCVD风险阈值转变为3.0%或更高的ASCVD风险阈值估计可额外避免161,560例心血管疾病事件。成本效益结果对每日服药的负效用变化、他汀类药物价格以及他汀类药物诱发糖尿病的风险敏感。在概率敏感性分析中,使用每QALY 100,000美元的成本效益阈值时,最佳ASCVD阈值为5.0%或更低的可能性高于93%。
在这个针对45至75岁美国成年人的微观模拟模型中,ACC/AHA胆固醇治疗指南中使用的当前10年ASCVD风险阈值(≥7.5%风险阈值)具有可接受的成本效益概况(ICER,每QALY 37,000美元),但使用每QALY 100,000美元(≥4.0%风险阈值)或150,000美元(≥3.0%风险阈值)的成本效益阈值时,更宽松的ASCVD阈值将是最佳选择。最佳ASCVD阈值对患者每日服药的偏好、他汀类药物价格变化以及他汀类药物诱发糖尿病的风险敏感。