9 research outputs found

    Cost-effectiveness of ponatinib in chronic myeloid leukemia in Italy:

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    An area-under-the-curve Markov model was designed to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of ponatinib as a third line treatment of Chronic Myeloid Leukemia-Chronic Phase (CML-CP) with reference to Italy. As for current guidelines, comparators were dasatinib, nilotinib, bosutinib, allogeneic stem cell transplantation (SCT), hydroxyurea. The economic perspective was the Italian National Health Service's (NHS), where costs for treatment drugs, monitoring and follow-up, adverse events, SCT procedure were considered on a lifetime span. Costs (mainly based on current tariffs in Italy) and benefits (QALYs) were discounted at a 3.5% annual rate. Ponatinib resulted dominant versus SCT. The lowest ICER was €13,090 (ponatinib vs hydroxyurea); the highest was €22,529 (ponatinib vs dasatinib). Sensitivity analysis – both deterministic (one way) and probabilistic – was focused on the comparison between ponatinib and dasatinib. The deterministic analysis showed that the most critical parameter in the model was ponatinib pri..

    Impact of mineral and bone disorder on healthcare resource use and associated costs in the European Fresenius medical care dialysis population: a retrospective cohort study

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    BACKGROUND: Secondary hyperparathyroidism (SHPT) is associated with mortality in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD), but the economic consequences of SHPT have not been adequately studied in the European population. We assessed the relationship between SHPT parameters (intact parathyroid hormone [iPTH], calcium, and phosphate) and hospitalisations, medication use, and associated costs among CKD patients in Europe. METHODS: The analysis of this retrospective cohort study used records of randomly selected patients who underwent haemodialysis between January 1, 2005 and December 31, 2006 at participating European Fresenius Medical Care facilities in 10 countries. Patients had ≥ 1 iPTH value recorded, and ≥ 1 month of follow-up after a 3-month baseline period during which SHPT parameters were assessed. Time at risk was post-baseline until death, successful renal transplantation, loss to follow-up, or the end of follow-up. Outcomes included cost per patient-month, rates of hospitalisations (cardiovascular disease [CVD], fractures, and parathyroidectomy [PTX]), and use of SHPT-, diabetes-, and CVD-related medications. National costs were applied to hospitalisations and medication use. Generalised linear models compared costs across strata of iPTH, total calcium, and phosphate, adjusting for baseline covariates. RESULTS: There were 6369 patients included in the analysis. Mean ± SD person-time at risk was 13.1 ± 6.4 months. Patients with iPTH > 600 pg/mL had a higher hospitalisation rate than those with lower iPTH. Hospitalisation rates varied little across calcium and phosphate levels. SHPT-related medication use varied with iPTH, calcium, and phosphate. After adjusting for demographic and clinical variables, patients with baseline iPTH > 600 pg/mL had 41% (95% CI: 25%, 59%) higher monthly total healthcare costs compared with those with iPTH in the K/DOQI target range (150–300 pg/mL). Patients with baseline phosphate and total calcium levels above target ranges (1.13–1.78 mmol/L and 2.10–2.37 mmol/L, respectively) had 38% (95% CI: 27%, 50%) and 8% (95% CI: 0%, 17%) higher adjusted monthly costs, respectively. Adjusted costs were 25% (95% CI: 18%, 32%) lower among patients with baseline phosphate levels below the target range. Results were consistent in sensitivity analyses. CONCLUSIONS: These data suggest that elevated SHPT parameters increase the economic burden of CKD in Europe

    A Cost-Utility Analysis of Cinacalcet in Secondary Hyperparathyroidism in Five European Countries

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    Background and Objective:Background and Objective: A probabilistic patient-level Markov model was previously developed to simulate lifetime clinical and economic outcomes of cinacalcet treatment in secondary hyperparathyroidism (SHPT) patients using local data from Italy. The present study extends the application of the model to four other European countries - Spain, Portugal, Switzerland and the Czech Republic - in order to assess the consistency of results. Abstract: Methods:Methods: Cinacalcet influences the levels of parathyroid hormone, serum calcium and phosphorous. Our simulation was based on data from the OPTIMA (Open-Label, Randomized Study Using Cinacalcet to Improve Achievement of KDOQI Targets in Patients with End-Stage Renal Disease) randomized controlled trial and from published correlations between bone-metabolism parameters, mortality and morbidity (cardiovascular [CV] events, fractures and parathyroidectomy). Local epidemiological and cost data for dialysis, drugs and event management were incorporated into the model. The simulation horizon was patient lifetime; standard treatment for SHPT (vitamin D sterols and phosphate binders) and cinacalcet plus standard treatment were compared. Effectiveness was measured in terms of life expectancy (LE) and quality-adjusted life expectancy (QALE). Health utility indexes derived from published literature took into account dialysis, CV events and fractures. Abstract: Results:Results: The simulated mean LE extension in patients receiving cinacalcet was 1.20 life-years (LY) in Italy, 1.10 LY in Spain, 1.18 LY in Portugal, 1.10 LY in the Czech Republic and 1.40 LY in Switzerland. QALE increase was 0.89, 0.82, 0.89, 0.80 and 1.01 QALY in the same countries, respectively. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) result was &U20AC;23 500/LY and &U20AC;31 600/QALY in Italy, &U20AC;21 800/LY and &U20AC;29 300/QALY in Spain, &U20AC;23 700/LY and &U20AC;31 200/QALY in Portugal, &U20AC;29 700/LY and &U20AC;40 800/QALY in the Czech Republic and &U20AC;24 700/LY and &U20AC;34 200/QALY in Switzerland. Including dialysis costs as a part of the total costing doubled the ICER, from a minimum of &U20AC;42 800/LY in Spain to a maximum of &U20AC;82 800/LY in Switzerland and in the range from &U20AC;57 500/QALY (Spain) to &U20AC;114 700/QALY (Switzerland). Abstract: Conclusion:Conclusion: Taking into consideration the limited clinical, epidemiological and health economics data available, cinacalcet treatment showed a relatively good cost-effectiveness profile in all the countries analysed, despite the differences in their healthcare systems and economic wealth.Cinacalcet, Cost-utility, Secondary-hyperparathyroidism.

    Building Sustainable Development through Technology Transfer Offices: An Approach Based on Levels of Maturity

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    This study focuses on how technology transfer offices’ (TTO) maturity level influences sustainable development in developing countries. A method for defining the maturity level of technology transfer offices was developed based on criteria, dimensions and variables from a comprehensive literature review. Technology transfer specialists were responsible for attaching weight to elements using the multicriteria method, fuzzy simple additive weighting. Results provided an important overview of 105 Brazilian TTOs, their maturity level and the impact on sustainable development

    Patient-reported burden of myasthenia gravis: baseline results of the international prospective, observational, longitudinal real-world digital study MyRealWorld-MG

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    Objectives Myasthenia gravis (MG) is a rare, chronic, autoimmune neuromuscular disease which can affect functional and mental aspects of health and health-related quality of life (HRQoL). This study aims to obtain detailed knowledge of the impact of MG on HRQoL in a broad population from the perspective of the patient. Design Prospective, observational, digital, longitudinal real-world study. Setting Adult patients with MG from seven countries (USA, Japan, Germany, UK, Italy, Spain and Canada) downloaded a mobile application onto their phones and entered data about themselves and their MG. Outcome measures Data was collected using the following general and disease-specific patient-reported outcome measurements: EuroQol 5 Domains Health-Related Quality of Life Questionnaire (EQ-5D-5L), Myasthenia Gravis Activities of Daily Living (MG-ADL), Myasthenia Gravis Quality of Life 15-item revised scale (MG-QoL-15r), Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) and Health Utilities Index III (HUI3). Patients were categorised by their self-assessed Myasthenia Gravis Foundation of America (MGFA) class (I-V). Results Baseline results of 841 participants (mean age 47 years, 70% women) are reported. The distribution across the MGFA classes was: 13.9%, 31.0%, 38.1%, 15.5% and 1.6% for classes I-V. The MGFA class was a strong predictor of all aspects of HRQoL, measured with disease-specific and with generic instruments. The domains in which patients with MG most frequently mentioned problems were usual activities, anxiety and depression, tiredness, breathing and vision. The mean total MG-ADL Score was positively associated with increasing MGFA classes: 2.7, 4.4, 6.3 and 8.4 for MGFA classes I-IV. Mean baseline EQ-5D-5L utility was also associated with MGFA classes and was 0.817, 0.766, 0.648 and 0.530 for MGFA class I-IV. Conclusions MG has a large impact on key aspects of health and HRQoL. The impact of this disease increases substantially with increasing disease severity
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