9 research outputs found
A call for transplant stewardship: The need for expanded evidenceâbased evaluation of induction and biologicâbased costâsaving strategies in kidney transplantation and beyond
Rising expenditures threaten healthcare sustainability. While transplant programs are typically considered profitable, transplant medications are expensive and frequently targeted for cost savings. This review aims to summarize available literature supporting costâcontainment strategies used in solid organ transplant. Despite widespread use of these tactics, we found the available evidence to be fairly low quality. Strategies mainly focus on induction, particularly rabbit antithymocyte globulin (rATG), given its significant cost and the lack of consensus surrounding dosing. While there is higherâquality evidence for high singleâdose rATG, and doseârounding protocols to reduce waste are likely low risk, more aggressive strategies, such as dosing rATG by CD3+ targetâattainment or on idealâbodyâweight, have less robust support and did not always attain similar efficacy outcomes. Extrapolation of induction dosing strategies to rejection treatment is not supported by any currently available literature. Costâsaving strategies for supportive therapies, such as IVIG and rituximab also have minimal literature support. Deferral of highâcost agents to the outpatient arena is associated with minimal risk and increases reimbursement, although may increase complexity and costâburden for patients and infusion centers. The available evidence highlights the need for evaluation of unique patientâspecific clinical scenarios and optimization of therapies, rather than simple blanket application of costâsaving initiatives in the transplant population.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/170795/1/ctr14372_am.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/170795/2/ctr14372.pd