scholarly journals P449 Cost Effectiveness of a Proactive Therapeutic Drug Monitoring Strategy in Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease Receiving Infliximab

2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S445-S446
Author(s):  
J Doherty ◽  
R Varley ◽  
M Healy ◽  
C Dunne ◽  
F Mac Carthy ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Proactive therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) has not demonstrated improved therapy outcomes compared with clinically-based dosing strategies. While the use of proactive TDM incurs additional assay-related costs this strategy may be cost-effective due to TDM-driven therapy dose de-escalation and discontinuation. Methods We aimed to assess if proactive-TDM is cost-effective in clinical practice. A proactive TDM strategy was utilized in our unit with infliximab (IFX) and antibody-to-infliximab (ATI) levels assessed at trough in all inflammatory bowel disease(IBD) patients receiving IFX. Baseline demographics and IFX dosing schedules were documented. Patients were grouped based on disease activity status. Patients with IFX levels outside therapeutic range had dosing adjusted as appropriate. IFX dose adjustments were not protocolized and were at physicians discretion. IFX dosing regimens following proactive TDM were documented and net effect on IFX infusions number over the subsequent year extrapolated. Increase or decrease in drug-related costs on an annualized basis were estimated. Results 108 patients were included. Median age 36 years. 46% were female. 36% had ulcerative colitis, 60% Crohn’s disease. 35% were receiving concomitant immunomodulators. 56% were in remission at the time of TDM. 44%, 30% and 26% had IFX levels < 3 µg/mL, 3 – 7 µg/mL and > 7 µg/mL. IFX levels were significantly lower in patients with active disease compared with those in remission(p=0.008). Following proactive TDM assessment 37%, 11%, 36%, 13%, 2% and 1% of patients had no treatment change, therapy discontinuation, interval shortening, interval lengthening, dose increase and dose decrease respectively. Cost-effectiveness analysis focused on patients in remission (n=59). The use of proactive TDM-based IFX dosing resulted in a projected annualized reduction of 19.5 and 28.5 infusions due to IFX discontinuation and interval lengthening; the projected annualized increase in infusions was 39.1 and 4.3 due to IFX interval shortening and dose increase. This resulted in a net projected reduction of 4.7 IFX infusions per annum. Utilizing publicly available list prices for originator and biosimilar IFX and accounting for assay cost, projected cost savings resulting from proactive-TDM was 9105.0 and 6840.7 Euro per annum. Conclusion Proactive TDM in IBD patients in remission resulted in a modest reduction in the projected annualized number of infusions in our unit with consequent minor drug-related cost savings. Proactive-TDM encouraged cost-effective prescribing of IFX, however, the effect was minor. The frequency at which proactive TDM should be performed and whether subsequent rounds of proactive-TDM would continue to deliver similar cost savings is uncertain.

Author(s):  
Jiaqi Yao ◽  
Xinchan Jiang ◽  
Joyce H S You

Abstract Background There is a growing body of primary evidence on the cost-effectiveness of applying therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) for inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) management with various drug therapies and strategies. Objectives The aim of this study was to conduct a systematic review on model-based cost-effectiveness analyses of applying TDM for IBD management. Methods Literature search was conducted (up to October 2019) in Medline (Ovid), Embase (Ovid), Web of Science, Scopus, CINAHL Complete, and the Centre for Reviews and Dissemination. Studies published in the English language that met inclusion criteria were included: (1) patients with IBD, (2) TDM-based treatment was compared with a comparator, (3) types of analysis were cost-benefit, cost-consequence, cost-effectiveness, cost-utility, or cost analysis, and (4) analyses conducted by model-based evaluation. The study quality was assessed using Consolidated Health Economic Evaluation Reporting Standards. Results Six studies on drug monitoring for IBD patients (1 azathioprine and 5 infliximab) published in 2005 to 2019 were included. All studies targeted on patients with Crohn’s disease and reported TDM strategies to save cost when comparing with standard care. Four analyses evaluated both economic and clinical outcomes. Three analyses found the TDM strategies (for treatment initiation, advancement of therapy, or proactive monitoring) to improve clinical outcomes. One study found TDM strategies (reflex testing and concurrent testing) to gain lower quality-adjusted life years than standard care. Four of six (66.7%) studies achieved good to excellent rankings in quality assessment. Conclusions Compared with standard treatment without TDM, the TDM-guided strategies were consistently found to be cost-saving or cost-effective.


2020 ◽  
Vol 65 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniela Pugliese ◽  
Giuseppe Privitera ◽  
Fabrizio Pizzolante ◽  
Antonio Gasbarrini ◽  
Luisa Guidi ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 13 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S387-S387
Author(s):  
N Torres ◽  
D Martín Arranz ◽  
M Sánchez Azofra ◽  
E Martín Arranz ◽  
L Garcia ◽  
...  

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