Public Health Unit, Department of Primary Health Care, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Universiti Sains Islam Malaysia, Nilai, Negeri Sembilan, Malaysia.
Department of Research, Development and Innovation, University Malaya Medical Centre, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
Front Public Health. 2023 Feb 22;11:1114560. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2023.1114560. eCollection 2023.
A scaled-up treatment cascade with direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapy is necessary to achieve global WHO targets for hepatitis C virus (HCV) elimination in Malaysia. Recently, limited access to sofosbuvir/daclatasvir (SOF/DAC) is available through compulsory licensing, with access to sofosbuvir/velpatasvir (SOF/VEL) expected through voluntary licensing due to recent agreements. SOF/VEL has superior clinical outcomes but has higher drug acquisition costs compared to SOF/DAC. A stratified treatment cascade might be the most cost-efficient approach for Malaysia whereby all HCV patients are treated with SOF/DAC except for patients with cirrhosis who are treated with SOF/VEL.
This study aimed to conduct a 5-year budget impact analysis of the proposed stratified treatment cascade for HCV treatment in Malaysia. A disease progression model that was developed based on model-predicted HCV epidemiology data was used for the analysis, where all HCV patients in scenario A were treated with SOF/DAC for all disease stages while in scenario B, SOF/DAC was used only for non-cirrhotic patients and SOF/VEL was used for the cirrhotic patients. Healthcare costs associated with DAA therapy and disease stage monitoring were included to estimate the downstream cost implications.
The stratified treatment cascade with 109 in Scenario B was found to be cost-saving compared to Scenario A. The cumulative savings for the stratified treatment cascade was USD 1.4 million over 5 years.
A stratified treatment cascade with SOF/VEL was expected to be cost-saving and can result in a budget impact reduction in overall healthcare expenditure in Malaysia.
为了在马来西亚实现世界卫生组织(WHO)消除丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)的目标,需要扩大直接作用抗病毒(DAA)治疗的治疗级联。最近,通过强制许可获得了有限的索非布韦/达卡他韦(SOF/DAC),由于最近达成的协议,预计通过自愿许可获得索非布韦/维帕他韦(SOF/VEL)。SOF/VEL 具有更好的临床疗效,但与 SOF/DAC 相比,药物获得成本更高。分层治疗级联可能是马来西亚最具成本效益的方法,即所有 HCV 患者均用 SOF/DAC 治疗,除肝硬化患者外,他们用 SOF/VEL 治疗。
本研究旨在对马来西亚 HCV 分层治疗方案进行 5 年预算影响分析。该分析使用了一种基于模型预测 HCV 流行病学数据的疾病进展模型,其中方案 A 中的所有 HCV 患者在所有疾病阶段均用 SOF/DAC 治疗,而在方案 B 中,SOF/DAC 仅用于非肝硬化患者,SOF/VEL 用于肝硬化患者。该分析纳入了 DAA 治疗和疾病阶段监测相关的医疗费用,以估计下游成本影响。
与方案 A 相比,方案 B 中的分层治疗级联可节省成本。5 年内分层治疗级联的累计节省为 140 万美元。
SOF/VEL 分层治疗级联预计可节省成本,并可降低马来西亚总体医疗支出的预算影响。