Pharoah P D, Hollingworth W
Cambridge and Huntingdon Health Commission, Fulbourn Hospital, UK.
BMJ. 1996 Jun 8;312(7044):1443-8. doi: 10.1136/bmj.312.7044.1443.
To estimate the cost effectiveness of statins in lowering serum cholesterol concentration in people at varying risk of fatal cardiovascular disease and to explore the implications of changing the criteria for intervention on cost and cost effectiveness for a purchasing authority.
A life table method was used to model the effect of treatment with a statin on survival over 10 years in men and women aged 45-64. The costs of intervention were estimated from the direct costs of treatment, offset by savings associated with a reduction in coronary angiographies, non-fatal myocardial infarctions, and revascularisation procedures. The robustness of the model to various assumptions was tested in a sensitivity analysis.
Population of a typical district health authority.
Cost per life year saved.
The average cost effectiveness of treating men aged 45-64 with no history of coronary heart disease and a cholesterol concentration > 6.5 mmol/l for 10 years with a statin was 136,000 pounds per life year saved. The average cost effectiveness for patients with pre-existing coronary heart disease and a cholesterol concentration > 5.4 mmol/l was 32,000 pounds. These averages hide enormous differences in cost effectiveness between groups at different risk, ranging from 6000 pounds per life year in men aged 55-64 who have had a myocardial infarction and whose cholesterol concentration is above 7.2 mmol/l to 361,000 pounds per life year saved in women aged 45-54 with angina and a cholesterol concentration of 5.5-6.0 mmol/l.
Lowering serum cholesterol concentration in patients with and without preexisting coronary heart disease is effective and safe, but treatment for all those in whom treatment is likely to be effective is not sustainable within current NHS resources. Data on cost effectiveness data should be taken into account when assessing who should be eligible for treatment.
评估他汀类药物降低不同致命性心血管疾病风险人群血清胆固醇浓度的成本效益,并探讨改变干预标准对采购机构成本及成本效益的影响。
采用生命表法对45 - 64岁男性和女性使用他汀类药物治疗10年的生存效果进行建模。干预成本根据治疗直接成本估算,并减去因冠状动脉造影、非致命性心肌梗死和血运重建手术减少而节省的费用。在敏感性分析中测试了模型对各种假设的稳健性。
典型地区卫生当局的人群。
每挽救一个生命年的成本。
对于无冠心病病史且胆固醇浓度>6.5 mmol/l的45 - 64岁男性,使用他汀类药物治疗10年,每挽救一个生命年的平均成本效益为136,000英镑。对于已有冠心病且胆固醇浓度>5.4 mmol/l的患者,平均成本效益为32,000英镑。这些平均值掩盖了不同风险组之间成本效益的巨大差异,从55 - 64岁曾发生心肌梗死且胆固醇浓度高于7.2 mmol/l的男性每挽救一个生命年6000英镑到45 - 54岁患有心绞痛且胆固醇浓度为5.5 - 6.0 mmol/l的女性每挽救一个生命年361,000英镑不等。
降低有或无冠心病患者的血清胆固醇浓度是有效且安全的,但在当前英国国家医疗服务体系(NHS)资源范围内,对所有可能有效的患者进行治疗是不可持续的。在评估谁应符合治疗条件时,应考虑成本效益数据。