• Journal of critical care · Feb 2020

    Cost-effectiveness of second-line vasopressors for the treatment of septic shock.

    • Simon W Lam, Erin F Barreto, Rachael Scott, Kianoush B Kashani, Ashish K Khanna, and Seth R Bauer.
    • Department of Pharmacy, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH, USA. Electronic address: lams@ccf.org.
    • J Crit Care. 2020 Feb 1; 55: 48-55.

    PurposeTo determine the cost-effectiveness of escalating doses of norepinephrine or norepinephrine plus the adjunctive use of vasopressin or angiotensin II as a second-line vasopressor for septic shock.Materials And MethodsDecision tree analysis was performed to compare costs and outcomes associated with norepinephrine monotherapy or the two adjunctive second-line vasopressors. Short- and long-term outcomes modeled included ICU survival and lifetime quality-adjusted-life-years (QALY) gained. Costs were modeled from a payer's perspective, with a willingness-to-pay threshold set at $100,000/unit gained. One-way (tornado diagrams) and probabilistic sensitivity analyses were performed.ResultsAdjunctive vasopressin was the most cost-effective therapy, and dominated both norepinephrine monotherapy and adjunctive angiotensin II by producing higher ICU survival at less cost. For the lifetime horizon, while norepinephrine monotherapy was least expensive, adjunctive vasopressin was the most cost-effective with an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of $19,762 / QALY gained. Although adjunctive angiotensin II produced more QALYs compared to norepinephrine monotherapy, it was dominated in the long-term evaluation by second-line vasopressin. Sensitivity analyses demonstrated model robustness and medication costs were not significant drivers of model results.ConclusionsVasopressin is the most cost-effective second-line vasopressor in both the short- and long-term evaluations. Vasopressor price is a minor contributor to overall cost.Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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