Division of Health Sciences, Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK.
Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK.
BMJ Open. 2023 Mar 14;13(3):e060423. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-060423.
To review the survival modelling used in cost-effectiveness studies evaluating an interventional procedure and to discuss implications for decision-makers.
A case study of three economic evaluations that each used immature data from the EVEREST II High Surgical Risk (HSR) Study of transcatheter edge-to-edge repair (TEER) for patients with severe mitral regurgitation (MR) who were at high risk of surgery.
Estimation of patient survival in cost-effectiveness studies.
The EVEREST II HSR Study included 78 patients who had TEER of the mitral valve using the MitraClip device and a retrospectively identified control group of 36 patients who received medical management and were followed up for 12 months. Observed survival (TEER arm only) was updated at 5 years.
Two studies used 12-month observed mortality from EVEREST II HSR to model survival over lifetime horizons. Observed and modelled survival were associated with considerable uncertainty due to short follow-up and small numbers of participants. Modelling control patients' survival required an approximate 10-fold extrapolation based on 12-month observation of only 38 patients. Observed 5-year survival in the TEER group differed from that less mature follow-up suggesting that survival modelling based on shorter follow-up was unsatisfactory. No public domain data for the control group are available beyond 12-month follow-up so meaningful estimates using mature data for both arms are currently not possible. A third study developed survival models using incompletely reported transitions between MR grades in EVEREST II HSR and mortality rates observed for different MR grades derived from a study in an unrelated population.
Modelling survival in such small samples followed up for only 12 months is associated with great uncertainty, and cost-effectiveness results based on these analyses should be viewed as premature and used cautiously in reimbursement decisions.
综述评价介入性操作的成本效益研究中使用的生存模型,并讨论其对决策者的影响。
对 3 项经济评估进行案例研究,每项评估均使用 EVEREST II 高手术风险(HSR)研究中经导管缘对缘修复(TEER)治疗重度二尖瓣反流(MR)高危手术患者的不成熟数据。
成本效益研究中患者生存的估计。
EVEREST II HSR 研究纳入 78 例接受 MitraClip 装置二尖瓣 TEER 的患者,以及 36 例接受药物治疗并随访 12 个月的回顾性对照患者。仅在 TEER 组中更新了 5 年的观察生存情况。
有 2 项研究使用 EVEREST II HSR 的 12 个月观察死亡率来模拟终生的生存情况。由于随访时间短、参与者数量少,观察到的和建模的生存均存在较大的不确定性。对对照患者的生存建模需要基于对仅 38 例患者的 12 个月观察进行近 10 倍的外推,这是不合理的。TEER 组的观察 5 年生存率与随访时间较短时的预测值不同,这表明基于较短随访时间的生存建模并不理想。对照组在 12 个月随访后没有公开的可用于生存分析的数据,因此目前无法使用成熟数据对两组进行有意义的估计。第 3 项研究使用 EVEREST II HSR 中不完全报告的 MR 分级之间的转移和从另一项无关人群研究中观察到的不同 MR 分级的死亡率来开发生存模型。
对仅随访 12 个月的小样本进行生存建模存在很大的不确定性,基于这些分析的成本效益结果应被视为不成熟的,并在报销决策中谨慎使用。