The cost implications of a polypill for primary prevention in the TIPS-3 trial.

Eur Heart J Qual Care Clin Outcomes

Population Health Research Institute, Hamilton Health Sciences, McMaster University, DBCVSRI, 20 Copeland Avenue, Hamilton, ON L8L 2X2, Canada.

Published: November 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • The TIPS-3 trial showed that a polypill combining several medications significantly reduces cardiovascular events by 20% compared to a placebo in individuals without existing cardiovascular disease.
  • The trial revealed that costs for the polypill varied significantly across economic regions, with lower-middle-income countries experiencing a cost increase of $291 per participant and upper-middle-income countries facing an increase of $1068 over 4.6 years.
  • Despite these increases, the polypill is deemed affordable across all economic groups and is particularly cost-effective in high-income countries.

Article Abstract

Aims: The International Polycap Study 3 (TIPS-3) trial demonstrated that a polypill containing cholesterol- and multiple blood-pressure-lowering drugs reduces cardiovascular events by 20% compared with placebo in people without cardiovascular disease. The polypill plus aspirin led to a 31% relative risk reduction in cardiovascular disease events compared with double placebo. We report regional variations in costs and affordability of a polypill based on the TIPS-3 trial.

Methods And Results: Countries were categorized using World Bank economic groups: lower-middle-income, upper-middle-income, and high-income countries. Country-specific costs were obtained for hospitalization events, procedures, and non-study medications (2019 US dollars). Polypill price was based on the cheapest equivalent substitute (CES) for each component. For the polypill vs. placebo, the difference in cost over the 4.6 years of the trial was $291 [95% confidence interval (CI): $243-339] per participant in lower-middle-income countries, $1068 (95% CI: $992-1144) in upper-middle-income countries, and $48 (95% CI: -$271 to $367) in high-income countries. Results were similar for the polypill plus aspirin vs. a double placebo. In both cases, the polypill was affordable in all groups using monthly household capacity to pay or a threshold of 4% of the gross national income per capita.

Conclusion: The use of a polypill (CES) in TIPS-3 increases costs in lower-middle-income countries and upper-middle-income countries but is affordable in countries at various economic levels and is cost neutral (dominant) in high-income countries.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ehjqcco/qcab101DOI Listing

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