Cost-effectiveness of percutaneous closure of a patent foramen ovale compared with medical management in patients with a cryptogenic stroke: from the US payer perspective

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Cost-effectiveness of percutaneous closure of a patent foramen ovale compared with medical management in patients with a cryptogenic stroke : from the US payer perspective. / Volpi, John J.; Ridge, John R.; Nakum, Mitesh; Rhodes, John F.; Søndergaard, Lars; Kasner, Scott E.

I: Journal of Medical Economics, Bind 22, Nr. 9, 2019, s. 883-890.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Volpi, JJ, Ridge, JR, Nakum, M, Rhodes, JF, Søndergaard, L & Kasner, SE 2019, 'Cost-effectiveness of percutaneous closure of a patent foramen ovale compared with medical management in patients with a cryptogenic stroke: from the US payer perspective', Journal of Medical Economics, bind 22, nr. 9, s. 883-890. https://doi.org/10.1080/13696998.2019.1611587

APA

Volpi, J. J., Ridge, J. R., Nakum, M., Rhodes, J. F., Søndergaard, L., & Kasner, S. E. (2019). Cost-effectiveness of percutaneous closure of a patent foramen ovale compared with medical management in patients with a cryptogenic stroke: from the US payer perspective. Journal of Medical Economics, 22(9), 883-890. https://doi.org/10.1080/13696998.2019.1611587

Vancouver

Volpi JJ, Ridge JR, Nakum M, Rhodes JF, Søndergaard L, Kasner SE. Cost-effectiveness of percutaneous closure of a patent foramen ovale compared with medical management in patients with a cryptogenic stroke: from the US payer perspective. Journal of Medical Economics. 2019;22(9):883-890. https://doi.org/10.1080/13696998.2019.1611587

Author

Volpi, John J. ; Ridge, John R. ; Nakum, Mitesh ; Rhodes, John F. ; Søndergaard, Lars ; Kasner, Scott E. / Cost-effectiveness of percutaneous closure of a patent foramen ovale compared with medical management in patients with a cryptogenic stroke : from the US payer perspective. I: Journal of Medical Economics. 2019 ; Bind 22, Nr. 9. s. 883-890.

Bibtex

@article{3b2f5a661fc14e99a10d433864ed2903,
title = "Cost-effectiveness of percutaneous closure of a patent foramen ovale compared with medical management in patients with a cryptogenic stroke: from the US payer perspective",
abstract = "Aims: To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of percutaneous patent foramen ovale (PFO) closure, from a US payer perspective. Lower rates of recurrent ischemic stroke have been documented following percutaneous PFO closure in properly selected patients. Stroke in patients aged <60 years is particularly interesting because this population is typically at peak economic productivity and vulnerable to prolonged disability. Materials and methods: A Markov model comprising six health states (Stable after index stroke, Transient ischemic attack, Post-Transient Ischemic Attack, Clinical ischemic stroke, Post-clinical ischemic stroke, and Death) was constructed to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of PFO closure in combination with medical management versus medical management alone. The base-case model employed a 5-year time-horizon, with transition probabilities, clinical inputs, costs, and utility values ascertained from published and national costing sources. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) was evaluated per US guidelines, utilizing a discount rate of 3.0%. Results: At 5 years, overall costs and quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) obtained from PFO closure compared with medical management were $16,323 vs $7,670 and 4.18 vs 3.77, respectively. At 5 years, PFO closure achieved an ICER of $21,049, beneficially lower than the conventional threshold of $50,000. PFO closure reached cost-effectiveness at 2.3 years (ICER = $47,145). Applying discount rates of 0% and 6% had a negligible impact on base-case model findings. Furthermore, PFO closure was 95.4% likely to be cost-effective, with a willingness-to-pay (WTP) threshold of $50,000 and a 5-year time horizon. Limitations: From a cost perspective, our economic model employed a US patient sub-population, so cost data may not extrapolate to other non-US stroke populations. Conclusion: Percutaneous PFO closure plus medical management represents a cost-effective approach for lowering the risk of recurrent stroke compared with medical management alone.",
keywords = "cost-effectiveness, cryptogenic stroke, Ischemic stroke, patent foramen ovale",
author = "Volpi, {John J.} and Ridge, {John R.} and Mitesh Nakum and Rhodes, {John F.} and Lars S{\o}ndergaard and Kasner, {Scott E.}",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1080/13696998.2019.1611587",
language = "English",
volume = "22",
pages = "883--890",
journal = "Journal of Medical Economics",
issn = "1369-6998",
publisher = "Taylor & Francis",
number = "9",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Cost-effectiveness of percutaneous closure of a patent foramen ovale compared with medical management in patients with a cryptogenic stroke

T2 - from the US payer perspective

AU - Volpi, John J.

AU - Ridge, John R.

AU - Nakum, Mitesh

AU - Rhodes, John F.

AU - Søndergaard, Lars

AU - Kasner, Scott E.

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Aims: To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of percutaneous patent foramen ovale (PFO) closure, from a US payer perspective. Lower rates of recurrent ischemic stroke have been documented following percutaneous PFO closure in properly selected patients. Stroke in patients aged <60 years is particularly interesting because this population is typically at peak economic productivity and vulnerable to prolonged disability. Materials and methods: A Markov model comprising six health states (Stable after index stroke, Transient ischemic attack, Post-Transient Ischemic Attack, Clinical ischemic stroke, Post-clinical ischemic stroke, and Death) was constructed to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of PFO closure in combination with medical management versus medical management alone. The base-case model employed a 5-year time-horizon, with transition probabilities, clinical inputs, costs, and utility values ascertained from published and national costing sources. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) was evaluated per US guidelines, utilizing a discount rate of 3.0%. Results: At 5 years, overall costs and quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) obtained from PFO closure compared with medical management were $16,323 vs $7,670 and 4.18 vs 3.77, respectively. At 5 years, PFO closure achieved an ICER of $21,049, beneficially lower than the conventional threshold of $50,000. PFO closure reached cost-effectiveness at 2.3 years (ICER = $47,145). Applying discount rates of 0% and 6% had a negligible impact on base-case model findings. Furthermore, PFO closure was 95.4% likely to be cost-effective, with a willingness-to-pay (WTP) threshold of $50,000 and a 5-year time horizon. Limitations: From a cost perspective, our economic model employed a US patient sub-population, so cost data may not extrapolate to other non-US stroke populations. Conclusion: Percutaneous PFO closure plus medical management represents a cost-effective approach for lowering the risk of recurrent stroke compared with medical management alone.

AB - Aims: To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of percutaneous patent foramen ovale (PFO) closure, from a US payer perspective. Lower rates of recurrent ischemic stroke have been documented following percutaneous PFO closure in properly selected patients. Stroke in patients aged <60 years is particularly interesting because this population is typically at peak economic productivity and vulnerable to prolonged disability. Materials and methods: A Markov model comprising six health states (Stable after index stroke, Transient ischemic attack, Post-Transient Ischemic Attack, Clinical ischemic stroke, Post-clinical ischemic stroke, and Death) was constructed to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of PFO closure in combination with medical management versus medical management alone. The base-case model employed a 5-year time-horizon, with transition probabilities, clinical inputs, costs, and utility values ascertained from published and national costing sources. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) was evaluated per US guidelines, utilizing a discount rate of 3.0%. Results: At 5 years, overall costs and quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) obtained from PFO closure compared with medical management were $16,323 vs $7,670 and 4.18 vs 3.77, respectively. At 5 years, PFO closure achieved an ICER of $21,049, beneficially lower than the conventional threshold of $50,000. PFO closure reached cost-effectiveness at 2.3 years (ICER = $47,145). Applying discount rates of 0% and 6% had a negligible impact on base-case model findings. Furthermore, PFO closure was 95.4% likely to be cost-effective, with a willingness-to-pay (WTP) threshold of $50,000 and a 5-year time horizon. Limitations: From a cost perspective, our economic model employed a US patient sub-population, so cost data may not extrapolate to other non-US stroke populations. Conclusion: Percutaneous PFO closure plus medical management represents a cost-effective approach for lowering the risk of recurrent stroke compared with medical management alone.

KW - cost-effectiveness

KW - cryptogenic stroke

KW - Ischemic stroke

KW - patent foramen ovale

U2 - 10.1080/13696998.2019.1611587

DO - 10.1080/13696998.2019.1611587

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 31025589

AN - SCOPUS:85066088258

VL - 22

SP - 883

EP - 890

JO - Journal of Medical Economics

JF - Journal of Medical Economics

SN - 1369-6998

IS - 9

ER -

ID: 240985961