Pharmacoeconomics Evaluation of the Systemic Antifungal Posaconazole for Prophylaxis against Invasive Fungal Infections among Immunocompromised Cancer Patients in Qatar
Abstract
The immunocompromised hematologic malignancy patients, at the National Center
for Cancer Care (NCCCR) in Qatar, receive the antifungal posaconazole for prophylaxis
as systemic prophylaxis against invasive fungal infections (IFIs). No economic evaluations
of the prophylactic posaconazole in Qatar exist in literature, whether about the resource
utilization associated with posaconazole as a stand-alone therapy, or the comparative
economic impact of posaconazole against potential alternatives. The objective of this study
was to evaluate the pharmacoeconomic impact of prophylactic posaconazole in
hematologic malignancy patients at risk for IFIs in NCCCR, Qatar.
Methods. Decision analytic economic models to perform a cost-analysis and a costeffectiveness
analysis of posaconazole were constructed. The decision analytic models
were from the hospital perspective, to follow the therapeutic pathways and consequences
of systemic antifungals for prophylaxis, for a study duration of 112 days. The primary
endpoint was a success with no major adverse drug reactions (ADR). Prophylaxis failure
was defined by IFIs occurrence, death, and IFIs prevention but with major ADR. The costanalysis
model was based the medical records available from 2013 to 2015, at NCCCR of
the Hamad Medical Corporation (HMC), but was also complemented by data extracted
from literature and local expert panels. The cost-effectiveness model was based on literature RCTs, which was adopted to the local setting by local expert panels and medical
records data.
Sensitivity analyses were conducted to enhance the robustness and generalizability
of the results.
Results. In the cost-analysis, 70 patients were eligible for the study inclusion.
Therapy failure due to IFIs reached 43%, while death occurred in 7% of the patients,
leading to successful prevention of IFIs in 50% of patients only. The primary outcome of
IFI presentation without major ADR was achieved in 42.5% of patients. The average
posaconazole utilization cost was QAR 109,802, with half of this consumed in failure due
to IFIs. In the cost-effectiveness evaluation, similar success rate (IFI prevention without
major ADR) was observed between posaconazole and fluconazole (0.76 versus 0.75,
respectively), but with a significant Decremental Cost-Effectiveness Ratio (DCER) of
QAR 3,922,618. The total therapy cost was higher with posaconazole (QAR 134,116
versus 80,463). The single patient pathway that influenced the outcomes of the models the
most is the prevention of IFIs with having major ADR. Sensitivity analyses demonstrated
the robustness of conclusions in both study models, with 96% chance for cost-savings to
be in favor of fluconazole over posaconazole.
Conclusion. The current study is the first economic evaluation of posaconazole in
Qatar and the region, and the first in the literature to comprehensively follow up therapies
throughout their IFIs failures and ADR. Prophylactic posaconazole was associated with a
considerable cost to the NCCCR setting. This was considerably higher than that associated
with fluconazole against IFIs in hematological patients, while being associated with a marginally minor improvement in outcome. This contradicts local Qatari practices in
relation to only having posaconazole available for the prophylactic use in NCCCR.
DOI/handle
http://hdl.handle.net/10576/11195Collections
- Master in Pharmacy [58 items ]