Ossian Health Economics and Communications GmbH, Basel, Switzerland.
Pharmacosmos A/S, Holbaek, Denmark.
Adv Ther. 2018 Dec;35(12):2128-2137. doi: 10.1007/s12325-018-0827-5. Epub 2018 Nov 19.
The incidence of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) in Denmark is among the highest in the world, with Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis occurring at rates of 9.1 and 18.6 per 100,000 person-years respectively in 2010-2013. Anemia is the most prevalent extraintestinal complication of IBD, most commonly caused by iron deficiency. In treating IBD-associated iron deficiency anemia (IDA), intravenous iron is more effective and better tolerated and shows a faster response than oral iron. The present study evaluated resource use and costs associated with using iron isomaltoside (Monofer; IIM) versus ferric carboxymaltose (Ferinject; FCM) in patients with IDA and IBD in Denmark.
A budget impact model was developed to evaluate the cost of IIM compared with FCM from a Danish healthcare payer perspective. Iron deficits were modeled using dosing tables and a joint distribution of bodyweight [mean 75.4 kg, standard deviation (SD) 17.4 kg] and hemoglobin (mean 10.8 g/dL, SD 1.4 g/dl) based on observational data from patients with IBD. Retreatment frequency was modeled using a pooled retrospective analysis of randomized trial data, and costs were modeled using diagnosis-related groups with an outpatient infusion cost of DKK 2855.
Using IIM required 1.2 infusions (per treatment) to correct the mean iron deficit compared with 1.6 with FCM. Treating 2.54 patients with IIM would therefore avoid one infusion compared with FCM. Patients using IIM required multiple infusions in 25.0% of cases compared with 64.3% with FCM. Over 5 years, total estimated costs were DKK 21,406 per patient with IIM compared with DKK 28,137 with FCM, corresponding to savings of DKK 6731 with IIM.
Using IIM in place of FCM markedly reduced the number of iron infusions required in patients with IBD and IDA in Denmark. The reduction in infusions was accompanied by reductions in cost compared with FCM.
Pharmacosmos A/S.
丹麦的炎症性肠病(IBD)发病率居世界前列,2010-2013 年克罗恩病和溃疡性结肠炎的发病率分别为每 10 万人 9.1 和 18.6 例。贫血是 IBD 最常见的肠外并发症,最常见的原因是缺铁。在治疗 IBD 相关缺铁性贫血(IDA)时,静脉铁比口服铁更有效、耐受性更好,且起效更快。本研究评估了在丹麦,用铁异麦芽糖(Monofer;IIM)与羧麦芽糖铁(Ferinject;FCM)治疗 IDA 和 IBD 患者相关的资源利用和成本。
从丹麦医疗保健支付者的角度,建立预算影响模型来评估 IIM 与 FCM 的成本。根据 IBD 患者的观察性数据,利用体重表(平均 75.4kg,标准差 17.4kg)和血红蛋白表(平均 10.8g/dL,标准差 1.4g/dL),对铁缺乏量进行建模。根据汇总的随机试验数据进行回顾性分析,对再治疗频率进行建模,使用按诊断相关分组模型,门诊输注费用为 2855 丹麦克朗。
与 FCM 相比,使用 IIM 治疗缺铁平均需要 1.2 次输注(每次治疗)来纠正铁缺乏。因此,与 FCM 相比,用 IIM 治疗 2.54 例患者可减少一次输注。与 FCM 相比,用 IIM 治疗的患者在 25.0%的情况下需要多次输注,而 FCM 则为 64.3%。在 5 年内,与 FCM 相比,用 IIM 治疗的每位患者的估计总成本为 21406 丹麦克朗,节省 6731 丹麦克朗。
在丹麦,用 IIM 代替 FCM 可显著减少 IBD 和 IDA 患者所需的铁输注次数。与 FCM 相比,输注次数的减少伴随着成本的降低。
Pharmacosmos A/S。