Within-Trial Cost-Effectiveness of an Adherence-Enhancing Educational Intervention for Glaucoma.

Am J Ophthalmol

Durham Center of Innovation to Accelerate Discovery and Practice Transformation (K.W.M., S.W., M.O., H.B.B., A.H.), Durham Veterans Affairs Health Care System, Durham, North Carolina, USA; Department of Population Health Sciences (A.H.), Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC, United States; Duke-Margolis Center for Health Policy (A.H.), Duke University, Durham, NC, United States.

Published: December 2022

Purpose: To assess the within-trial cost-effectiveness of a behavioral intervention to improve glaucoma medication adherence.

Design: Prospective cost-effectiveness analysis of randomized, controlled trial data.

Methods: The study setting was a Veterans Affairs (VA) eye clinic. The patient population comprised veterans with medically treated glaucoma and self-reported poor adherence. Participants were randomized to a personalized educational session with a reminder bottle to promote medication adherence or to a control session on general eye health. Costs were assessed from the perspective of the VA payor at 6 months using the VA Managerial Cost Accounting System. Probabilistic sensitivity analyses were conducted using bootstrapped samples. The main outcome measures were the proportion of participants attaining ≥80% adherence as measured by electronic monitor, total intervention and medical resource costs, and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios comparing intervention to control at 6 months.

Results: Of 200 randomized participants, 95 of 100 assigned to the intervention and 97 of 100 assigned to the control had adherence outcomes at 6 months, and the proportion of adherent patients was higher in the intervention group compared to control (0.78 vs 0.40, P < .0001). All participants had costs at 6 months. The total cost at 6 months was $1,149,600 in the intervention group (n = 100) compared to $1,298,700 in the control group (n = 100). Thus, in a hypothetical cohort of 100 patients, the intervention was associated with cost savings (-$149,100) and resulted in 38 additional patients achieving medication adherence.

Conclusions: An adherence-enhancing behavioral intervention was effective and cost saving at 6 months.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10084845PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ajo.2022.08.011DOI Listing

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