Cost-effectiveness of systemic treatments for moderate-to-severe psoriasis in the German health care setting

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Cost-effectiveness of systemic treatments for moderate-to-severe psoriasis in the German health care setting. / Küster, Denise; Nast, Alexander; Gerdes, Sascha; Weberschock, Tobias; Wozel, Gottfried; Gutknecht, Mandy; Schmitt, Jochen.

In: ARCH DERMATOL RES, Vol. 308, No. 4, 09.03.2016, p. 249-61.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Küster, D, Nast, A, Gerdes, S, Weberschock, T, Wozel, G, Gutknecht, M & Schmitt, J 2016, 'Cost-effectiveness of systemic treatments for moderate-to-severe psoriasis in the German health care setting', ARCH DERMATOL RES, vol. 308, no. 4, pp. 249-61. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00403-016-1634-y

APA

Küster, D., Nast, A., Gerdes, S., Weberschock, T., Wozel, G., Gutknecht, M., & Schmitt, J. (2016). Cost-effectiveness of systemic treatments for moderate-to-severe psoriasis in the German health care setting. ARCH DERMATOL RES, 308(4), 249-61. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00403-016-1634-y

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{859c105b64774a049c2cda4bdf3ebbef,
title = "Cost-effectiveness of systemic treatments for moderate-to-severe psoriasis in the German health care setting",
abstract = "Systemic treatments of moderate-to-severe psoriasis differ substantially in terms of effectiveness and costs. Comprehensive economic-evaluations of all systemic treatments for psoriasis from a societal perspective are missing. The objective of our study was to compare the cost-effectiveness all systemic treatments approved for moderate-to-severe psoriasis from a societal perspective, by including all cost categories. An incremental cost-effectiveness-analysis was performed for all systemic treatments for psoriasis, currently recommended by the German S3-Guideline i.e. methotrexate, cyclosporine, fumaric acid esters, and retinoids, adalimumab, etanercept, infliximab and ustekinumab. We used a Markov model with time-dependent transition probabilities and a time horizon of 2 years to investigate incremental cost-effectiveness ratios. Both direct and indirect costs were considered to reflect the societal perspective. Effectiveness outcome was PASI-75 response. One-way and probabilistic sensitivity analyses explored the effect of treatment duration, discount rate, effectiveness, and the perspective (societal vs. healthcare system) on the findings. According to the base-case analysis a cost-effective treatment pathway for moderate-to-severe psoriasis starts with methotrexate, followed by ustekinumab 90 mg and infliximab, if methotrexate does not achieve or maintain PASI-75 response. Sensitivity analyses confirmed the general robustness of these findings with methotrexate being most cost-effective. However, from a third-party-payer perspective (without indirect cost) conventional therapies were generally more cost-effective than biologics. From a value-based healthcare perspective, methotrexate should be the systemic treatment of first choice, ustekinumab 90 mg second choice and infliximab third choice for patients with moderate-to-severe psoriasis. From a societal perspective, the other treatments are less efficient according to our model. From a third-party-payer perspective conventional therapies are more cost-effective than biologics.",
author = "Denise K{\"u}ster and Alexander Nast and Sascha Gerdes and Tobias Weberschock and Gottfried Wozel and Mandy Gutknecht and Jochen Schmitt",
year = "2016",
month = mar,
day = "9",
doi = "10.1007/s00403-016-1634-y",
language = "English",
volume = "308",
pages = "249--61",
journal = "ARCH DERMATOL RES",
issn = "0340-3696",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Cost-effectiveness of systemic treatments for moderate-to-severe psoriasis in the German health care setting

AU - Küster, Denise

AU - Nast, Alexander

AU - Gerdes, Sascha

AU - Weberschock, Tobias

AU - Wozel, Gottfried

AU - Gutknecht, Mandy

AU - Schmitt, Jochen

PY - 2016/3/9

Y1 - 2016/3/9

N2 - Systemic treatments of moderate-to-severe psoriasis differ substantially in terms of effectiveness and costs. Comprehensive economic-evaluations of all systemic treatments for psoriasis from a societal perspective are missing. The objective of our study was to compare the cost-effectiveness all systemic treatments approved for moderate-to-severe psoriasis from a societal perspective, by including all cost categories. An incremental cost-effectiveness-analysis was performed for all systemic treatments for psoriasis, currently recommended by the German S3-Guideline i.e. methotrexate, cyclosporine, fumaric acid esters, and retinoids, adalimumab, etanercept, infliximab and ustekinumab. We used a Markov model with time-dependent transition probabilities and a time horizon of 2 years to investigate incremental cost-effectiveness ratios. Both direct and indirect costs were considered to reflect the societal perspective. Effectiveness outcome was PASI-75 response. One-way and probabilistic sensitivity analyses explored the effect of treatment duration, discount rate, effectiveness, and the perspective (societal vs. healthcare system) on the findings. According to the base-case analysis a cost-effective treatment pathway for moderate-to-severe psoriasis starts with methotrexate, followed by ustekinumab 90 mg and infliximab, if methotrexate does not achieve or maintain PASI-75 response. Sensitivity analyses confirmed the general robustness of these findings with methotrexate being most cost-effective. However, from a third-party-payer perspective (without indirect cost) conventional therapies were generally more cost-effective than biologics. From a value-based healthcare perspective, methotrexate should be the systemic treatment of first choice, ustekinumab 90 mg second choice and infliximab third choice for patients with moderate-to-severe psoriasis. From a societal perspective, the other treatments are less efficient according to our model. From a third-party-payer perspective conventional therapies are more cost-effective than biologics.

AB - Systemic treatments of moderate-to-severe psoriasis differ substantially in terms of effectiveness and costs. Comprehensive economic-evaluations of all systemic treatments for psoriasis from a societal perspective are missing. The objective of our study was to compare the cost-effectiveness all systemic treatments approved for moderate-to-severe psoriasis from a societal perspective, by including all cost categories. An incremental cost-effectiveness-analysis was performed for all systemic treatments for psoriasis, currently recommended by the German S3-Guideline i.e. methotrexate, cyclosporine, fumaric acid esters, and retinoids, adalimumab, etanercept, infliximab and ustekinumab. We used a Markov model with time-dependent transition probabilities and a time horizon of 2 years to investigate incremental cost-effectiveness ratios. Both direct and indirect costs were considered to reflect the societal perspective. Effectiveness outcome was PASI-75 response. One-way and probabilistic sensitivity analyses explored the effect of treatment duration, discount rate, effectiveness, and the perspective (societal vs. healthcare system) on the findings. According to the base-case analysis a cost-effective treatment pathway for moderate-to-severe psoriasis starts with methotrexate, followed by ustekinumab 90 mg and infliximab, if methotrexate does not achieve or maintain PASI-75 response. Sensitivity analyses confirmed the general robustness of these findings with methotrexate being most cost-effective. However, from a third-party-payer perspective (without indirect cost) conventional therapies were generally more cost-effective than biologics. From a value-based healthcare perspective, methotrexate should be the systemic treatment of first choice, ustekinumab 90 mg second choice and infliximab third choice for patients with moderate-to-severe psoriasis. From a societal perspective, the other treatments are less efficient according to our model. From a third-party-payer perspective conventional therapies are more cost-effective than biologics.

U2 - 10.1007/s00403-016-1634-y

DO - 10.1007/s00403-016-1634-y

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 26961372

VL - 308

SP - 249

EP - 261

JO - ARCH DERMATOL RES

JF - ARCH DERMATOL RES

SN - 0340-3696

IS - 4

ER -