AI Article Synopsis

  • Heavily treatment-experienced individuals with HIV often face limited options due to multidrug resistance, and lenacapavir (LEN) is a new treatment approved for this group in combination with other antiretrovirals.
  • A study aimed to assess the cost-effectiveness of LEN combined with an optimized background regimen compared to other recent treatments, fostemsavir (FTR) and ibalizumab (IBA), specifically for multidrug-resistant HIV cases.
  • The findings indicated that LEN+OBR provided the highest quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) and life years (LYs) over a lifetime, suggesting it may be the most effective and cost-effective option among the treatments analyzed.

Article Abstract

Background: Heavily treatment-experienced (HTE) people with HIV (PWH) have limited treatment options owing to multidrug resistance (MDR). Lenacapavir (LEN) is indicated, in combination with other antiretrovirals, for the treatment of adults with MDR HIV-1 experiencing failure of their current antiretroviral regimen because of resistance, intolerance, or safety considerations.

Objective: To evaluate the cost-utility of LEN in combination with an optimized background regimen (OBR) vs alternative recently approved treatments for HTE PWH, fostemsavir (FTR)+OBR and ibalizumab (IBA)+OBR, for the treatment of PWH with MDR, from a mixed US health care payer perspective.

Methods: A Markov state-transition model with a lifetime time horizon was developed. Transition probabilities between viral load categories were based on individual participant data from the CAPELLA trial for LEN+OBR and on relative efficacy parameters obtained from indirect treatment comparisons for comparators. Health state utilities were sourced from the literature. Costs included drug acquisition costs, drug administration costs, disease management costs, adverse event costs, AIDS-related event costs, and treatment switching costs and were sourced from red book costs, Medicare and Medicaid fees, and the literature. Costs and outcomes were discounted at 3% annually. The model was used to estimate total and incremental costs, life-years (LYs), quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs), and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios. A deterministic and a probabilistic sensitivity analysis, as well as scenario analyses, were performed to address elements of uncertainty in the model and to explore the robustness of the results.

Results: Over a lifetime time horizon, LEN+OBR was associated with the highest absolute QALYs (9.41) and the greatest number of LYs (12.09) compared with FTR+OBR (QALYs: 8.75; LYs: 11.26) and IBA+OBR (QALYs: 8.36; LYs: 10.78). LEN+OBR was also associated with the lowest total lifetime costs of the 3 interventions (LEN+OBR: $1,441,122 [US dollars]; FTR+OBR: $1,504,986; IBA+OBR: $1,524,396) and therefore was dominant over both comparators in the base case. LEN+OBR remained dominant vs FTR+OBR and IBA+OBR across the range of scenarios tested and LEN+OBR had a 99% probability of being cost-effective compared with FTR+OBR and IBA+OBR in the probabilistic sensitivity analysis at a willingness-to-pay threshold of $50,000/QALY.

Conclusions: This economic evaluation demonstrated that LEN+OBR provides meaningful increases in QALYs and LYs, and is dominant over a lifetime time horizon, compared with FTR+OBR and IBA+OBR for the treatment of PWH with MDR in the United States.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11365559PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.18553/jmcp.2024.30.9.1001DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

lifetime time
12
time horizon
12
compared ftr+obr
12
ftr+obr iba+obr
12
costs
11
optimized background
8
background regimen
8
regimen obr
8
people hiv
8
multidrug resistance
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!