Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6241490 | Respiratory Medicine | 2015 | 10 Pages |
SummaryObjectiveTo assess the cost-effectiveness of adding delamanid (Deltybaâ¢) to a background regimen (BR) for treating multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) in Germany.MethodsThe incremental cost-effectiveness of treating a cohort of MDR-TB patients, 38-years old on average, with Deltyba⢠plus BR versus a five drug- BR regimen alone was compared in a Markov model over a period of 10 years. Cost per quality-adjusted life year (QALY) and disability-adjusted life years (DALY) were determined from a societal perspective. Recent data from a German cost calculation on MDR-TB were applied to the 24-month outcome results of patients participating in the placebo-controlled, phase II Otsuka's Trial 204. Costs and effectiveness were discounted at a rate of 3% and subjected to deterministic as well as probabilistic sensitivity analysis in a Monte Carlo simulation.ResultsBased on the current market prices the total discounted cost per patient on BR plus Deltyba⢠was â¬142,732 compared to â¬150,909 for BR alone. The total discounted QALYs per patient were 8.47 for Deltyba⢠versus 6.13 for BR alone. Accordingly, the addition of Deltyba⢠proved to be dominant over the BR alone-strategy by simultaneously saving â¬8177 and gaining 2.34 QALYs. Deltyba⢠was cost saving in 73% of probabilistic sensitivity analyses compared to BR alone and 100% cost effective at a willingness-to-pay (WTP) threshold of â¬10,000.ConclusionsUnder conditions prevalent in Germany, Deltyba⢠added to a five drug BR regimen is likely to be cost-saving compared to BR alone under a wide range of assumptions. Adding delamanid remained cost-effective when costs due to loss of productivity were excluded as the QALYs gained by lower lethality and a higher proportion of successfully treated patients outweighed the delamanid drug costs. These results strongly support the application of Deltyba⢠in treating MDR-TB patients.