Saint-Laurent_2015_J.Med.Econ_18_930

Reference

Title : Cost-utility analysis of memantine extended release added to cholinesterase inhibitors compared to cholinesterase inhibitor monotherapy for the treatment of moderate-to-severe dementia of the Alzheimer's type in the US - Saint-Laurent_2015_J.Med.Econ_18_930
Author(s) : Saint-Laurent Thibault C , Ozer Stillman I , Chen S , Getsios D , Proskorovsky I , Hernandez L , Dixit S
Ref : J Med Econ , 18 :930 , 2015
Abstract :

OBJECTIVE: This study evaluates the cost-effectiveness of memantine extended release (ER) as an add-on therapy to acetylcholinesterase inhibitor (AChEI) [combination therapy] for treatment of patients with moderate-to-severe Alzheimer's disease (AD) from both a healthcare payer and a societal perspective over 3 years when compared to AChEI monotherapy in the US.
METHODS: A phase III trial evaluated the efficacy and safety of memantine ER for treatment of AD patients taking an AChEI. The analysis assessed the long-term costs and health outcomes using an individual patient simulation in which AD progression is modeled in terms of cognition, behavior, and functioning changes. Input parameters are based on patient-level trial data, published literature, and publicly available data sources. Changes in anti-psychotic medication use are incorporated based on a published retrospective cohort study. Costs include drug acquisition and monitoring, total AD-related medical care, and informal care associated with caregiver time. Incremental cost-utility ratio (ICUR), life years, care time for caregiver, time in community and institution, time on anti-psychotics, time by disease severity, and time without severe symptoms are reported. Costs and health outcomes are discounted at 3% per annum.
RESULTS: Considering a societal perspective over 3 years, this analysis shows that memantine ER combined with an AChEI provides better clinical outcomes and lower costs than AChEI monotherapy. Discounted average savings were estimated at $18,355 and $20,947 per patient and quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) increased by an average of 0.12 and 0.13 from a societal and healthcare payer perspective, respectively. Patients on combination therapy spent an average of 4 months longer living at home and spend less time in moderate-severe and severe stages of the disease. CONCLUSION: Combination therapy for patients with moderate-to-severe AD is a cost-effective treatment compared to AChEI monotherapy in the US.

PubMedSearch : Saint-Laurent_2015_J.Med.Econ_18_930
PubMedID: 26086535

Related information

Citations formats

Saint-Laurent Thibault C, Ozer Stillman I, Chen S, Getsios D, Proskorovsky I, Hernandez L, Dixit S (2015)
Cost-utility analysis of memantine extended release added to cholinesterase inhibitors compared to cholinesterase inhibitor monotherapy for the treatment of moderate-to-severe dementia of the Alzheimer's type in the US
J Med Econ 18 :930

Saint-Laurent Thibault C, Ozer Stillman I, Chen S, Getsios D, Proskorovsky I, Hernandez L, Dixit S (2015)
J Med Econ 18 :930