Journal of medical economics
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Procalcitonin (PCT) is a specific marker for differentiating bacterial from non-infective causes of inflammation. It can be used to guide initiation and duration of antibiotic therapy in intensive care unit (ICU) patients with suspected sepsis, and might reduce the duration of hospital stay. Limiting antibiotic treatment duration is highly important because antibiotic over-use may cause patient harm, prolonged hospital stay, and resistance development. Several systematic reviews show that a PCT algorithm for antibiotic discontinuation is safe, but upfront investment required for PCT remains an important barrier against implementation. The current study investigates to what extent this PCT algorithm is a cost-effective use of scarce healthcare resources in ICU patients with sepsis compared to current practice. ⋯ Proven safe, a PCT algorithm for antibiotic discontinuation is a cost-effective means of reducing antibiotic exposure in adult ICU patients with sepsis, compared to current practice. Additional resources required for PCT are more than offset by downstream cost savings. This finding is highly important given the aim of preventing widespread antibiotic resistance.
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Lung cancer is a highly prevalent condition with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), representing ∼ 80%. Given its high prevalence and poor survival rates, it is important to understand costs associated with NSCLC treatment. ⋯ Considerable differences in average treatment costs were observed. In-patient costs dominate in the first year of treatment in all countries. The study highlights the costly nature of NSCLC.
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To quantify the cost of acute major adverse cardiac events (MACE; myocardial infarction [MI] and stroke) stratified by cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors in commercially, Medicare Supplemental-, and Medicaid-insured patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). ⋯ These results illustrate the potential clinical and economic importance of considering patients' CVD risk and medications' cardiovascular safety profile when treating T2DM patients.
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Editorial Comparative Study
A long war begins: biosimilars versus patented biologics.