scholarly journals Evaluating the cost effectiveness of donepezil in the treatment of Alzheimer's disease in Germany using discrete event simulation

BMC Neurology ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Susanne Hartz ◽  
Denis Getsios ◽  
Sunning Tao ◽  
Steve Blume ◽  
Grant Maclaine
2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-17 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shien Guo ◽  
Denis Getsios ◽  
Luis Hernandez ◽  
Kelly Cho ◽  
Elizabeth Lawler ◽  
...  

The growing understanding of the use of biomarkers in Alzheimer's disease (AD) may enable physicians to make more accurate and timely diagnoses. Florbetaben, a beta-amyloid tracer used with positron emission tomography (PET), is one of these diagnostic biomarkers. This analysis was undertaken to explore the potential value of florbetaben PET in the diagnosis of AD among patients with suspected dementia and to identify key data that are needed to further substantiate its value. A discrete event simulation was developed to conduct exploratory analyses from both US payer and societal perspectives. The model simulates the lifetime course of disease progression for individuals, evaluating the impact of their patient management from initial diagnostic work-up to final diagnosis. Model inputs were obtained from specific analyses of a large longitudinal dataset from the New England Veterans Healthcare System and supplemented with data from public data sources and assumptions. The analyses indicate that florbetaben PET has the potential to improve patient outcomes and reduce costs under certain scenarios. Key data on the use of florbetaben PET, such as its influence on time to confirmation of final diagnosis, treatment uptake, and treatment persistency, are unavailable and would be required to confirm its value.


2021 ◽  
Vol 50 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuqi Zhang ◽  
Hannah Carter ◽  
Peter Lazzarini ◽  
Susanna Cramb ◽  
Rosana Pacella ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Implementation of guideline-based care for diabetes-related foot ulcers (DFU) in clinical practice is typically sub-optimal. We aimed to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of implementing different incremental increases in guideline-based care scenarios, compared with current practice, using discrete event simulation models. Methods The costs and effectiveness of current practice (identified as 30% receiving guideline-based care, remainder (70%) non-guideline-based care) were compared with seven hypothetical scenarios of implementing incremental increases in guideline-based care (40%, 50%, 60%, 70%, 80%, 90%, 100%) and evaluated using discrete event simulation models, including important events of disease history and parameterised by a large DFU cohort. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio for each scenario was calculated and compared to willingness-to-pay of AUD28,000 per quality-adjusted life-years (QALY). Probability sensitivity analysis was conducted to incorporate parameter uncertainty by 2,000 random simulations. Results Under a three-year time-horizon, the seven scenarios (40%-100% guideline-based care) were estimated to incrementally save $901-$1843 (AUD 2020) and provide 0.017-0.056 more QALY per person, with all scenarios being cost-saving & more effective than current practice (30% guideline-based care). From probability sensitivity analyses we were increasingly confident (69.7%-89.8% confident) that implementing increased incremental scenarios (40%-100% guideline-based care) would be cost-effective compared with current practice (59.8%-73.4% confident). Conclusions All scenarios incrementally increasing guideline-based care were evaluated to be cost-saving and more effective than current practice according to this discrete event simulation modelling based on a large real-world cohort. Key messages Our findings support the cost-effectiveness of implementing any incremental increase in guideline-based care compared to current practice.


2014 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 165-172 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lachlan Standfield ◽  
Tracy Comans ◽  
Paul Scuffham

Objectives: The aim of this study was to assess if the use of Markov modeling (MM) or discrete event simulation (DES) for cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) may alter healthcare resource allocation decisions.Methods: A systematic literature search and review of empirical and non-empirical studies comparing MM and DES techniques used in the CEA of healthcare technologies was conducted.Results: Twenty-two pertinent publications were identified. Two publications compared MM and DES models empirically, one presented a conceptual DES and MM, two described a DES consensus guideline, and seventeen drew comparisons between MM and DES through the authors’ experience. The primary advantages described for DES over MM were the ability to model queuing for limited resources, capture individual patient histories, accommodate complexity and uncertainty, represent time flexibly, model competing risks, and accommodate multiple events simultaneously. The disadvantages of DES over MM were the potential for model overspecification, increased data requirements, specialized expensive software, and increased model development, validation, and computational time.Conclusions: Where individual patient history is an important driver of future events an individual patient simulation technique like DES may be preferred over MM. Where supply shortages, subsequent queuing, and diversion of patients through other pathways in the healthcare system are likely to be drivers of cost-effectiveness, DES modeling methods may provide decision makers with more accurate information on which to base resource allocation decisions. Where these are not major features of the cost-effectiveness question, MM remains an efficient, easily validated, parsimonious, and accurate method of determining the cost-effectiveness of new healthcare interventions.


2009 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 16-28 ◽  
Author(s):  
Beate Jahn ◽  
Karl Peter Pfeiffer ◽  
Engelbert Theurl ◽  
Jean-Eric Tarride ◽  
Ron Goeree

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