Induction therapy with rabbit antithymocyte globulin versus basiliximab after kidney transplantation

  • Liana Cremaschi
  • Regina von Versen
  • Thomas Benzing
  • Michael Wiesener
  • Nikolai Zink
  • Gary Milkovich
  • Thomas Paivanas
  • Meghan Gallagher
  • Friedrich Thaiss

Beteiligte Einrichtungen

Abstract

A health economic analysis was undertaken based on the 1-year database from a randomized study of rabbit anti-human thymocyte immunoglobulin (rATG) versus basiliximab, in kidney transplantation using resource utilization data and cost estimates from three German hospitals. A three-state Markov model was applied to estimate cost-effectiveness to 10 years post-transplant. Total mean treatment cost per patient to year 1 post-transplant was €62 075 vs. €59 767 for rATG versus basiliximab (P < 0.01). rATG therapy was associated with similar treatment costs to basiliximab by year 2, and a predicted cumulative treatment cost saving of €4 259 under rATG versus basiliximab by year 10 post-transplant. The mean number of quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) per patient by year 1 was 0.809 vs. 0.802 in the rATG and basiliximab cohorts, respectively (P = 0.38), with cumulative QALYs of 6.161 and 6.065 per patient by year 10. By year 2, the cumulative cost per QALY was slightly lower under rATG (€35 378) than basiliximab (€35 885), progressing to a saving of €1 041 under rATG for the cumulative cost per QALY by year 10. In conclusion, this model indicates that rATG induction provides a modest increase in QALYs with lower long-term costs than basiliximab in deceased-donor high-risk kidney transplant patients.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0934-0874
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 10.2017
PubMed 28556488