Clinical therapeutics
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Clinical therapeutics · Jan 1997
A pharmacoeconomic evaluation of the use of dexrazoxane in preventing anthracycline-induced cardiotoxicity in patients with stage IIIB or IV metastatic breast cancer.
A Markov model was developed to determine the cost of treating patients with stage IIIB or IV metastatic breast cancer with 5-fluorouracil, doxorubicin, and cyclophosphamide (FAC) and dexrazoxane (administered after six courses of FAC) versus FAC alone. The primary end point in our economic study was cost per cardiac event avoided. Cost per life-year saved was also calculated, even though the survival advantage needs to be confirmed in follow-up studies. ⋯ Analyses showed that therapy with dexrazoxane costs $5661.77 per cardiac event prevented. Sensitivity analyses on model variables were performed and showed that the basic results of the model did not change when parameters were varied. The clinical efficacy and cost-effectiveness of dexrazoxane as shown by the results of the current study encourage further investigation of the uses of dexrazoxane in other populations and against other comparators.
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Clinical therapeutics · Jan 1997
Cost-effectiveness of long-term intrathecal morphine therapy for pain associated with failed back surgery syndrome.
A decision analytic study was conducted using computer simulation to project the outcomes in a simulated cohort of patients whose treatment for back surgery had failed. The objective of this study was to estimate the direct cost of intrathecal morphine therapy (IMT) delivered via an implantable pump relative to alternative therapy (medical management) over a 60-month course of treatment. IMT administered by way of an implantable pump can provide effective pain relief for selected patients whose less invasive treatment modalities have failed. ⋯ In a sensitivity analysis, the best case (low adverse event rate, low cost) estimate was $53,468 ($891/mo), whereas the worst case (high adverse event rate, high cost) estimate was $125,102 ($2085/mo). Cost-effectiveness estimates ranged from $7212 (best case) to $12,276 (worst case) per year of pain relief. Results from a computer simulation designed to collect the costs not included in previous empiric research indicate that IMT appears to be cost-effective when compared with alternative (medical) management for selected patients when the duration of therapy exceeds 12 to 22 months.