AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluates the cost-effectiveness of Tonic Motor Activation (TOMAC) therapy as a treatment for patients with medication-refractory Restless Legs Syndrome (RLS), using a decision-analytic Markov model to compare it with standard care.* -
  • Results show that TOMAC significantly improved RLS symptoms, resulting in additional quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) and presenting incremental costs that yield cost-effectiveness ratios of around $37,823 to $47,609 per QALY gained over three years and a lifetime.* -
  • The findings support TOMAC therapy as a high-value treatment for RLS, reaffirming previous analyses and highlighting its potential benefits for patients with limited treatment options.*

Article Abstract

Aims: Patients with medication-refractory restless legs syndrome (RLS) have limited therapeutic options available for symptom relief. Tonic motor activation (TOMAC) presents a novel, non-invasive therapy for this patient population. The aim of this study was to conduct an updated cost-effectiveness analysis of TOMAC therapy based on recently available longer-term follow-up data.

Materials And Methods: A previously published decision-analytic Markov model was utilized to project strategy-specific costs and outcomes over three-years and lifetime for TOMAC compared to status quo treatment (control). Cohort characteristics were based on 24-week clinical data from the extension cohort of the RESTFUL study, which included longer-term follow-up of RESTFUL completers who were assigned to continue or discontinue TOMAC use (TOMAC and control, respectively). The primary analysis outcome was the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) in $ per quality-adjusted life year (QALY) gained, calculated using change in International RLS Study Group Rating Scale (IRLS) score as the effect measure. Extensive sensitivity analyses were performed.

Results: TOMAC treatment improved IRLS by 5.9 versus control, resulting in estimated utility improvement of +0.05. Over three-years and lifetime, TOMAC added 0.14 and 0.73 QALYs, at incremental costs of $6,751 and $27,440, resulting in projected ICERs of $47,609 and $37,823 per QALY gained, respectively. TOMAC was found to be cost-effective across all tested sensitivity analyses.

Limitations And Conclusion: The inclusion of longer follow-up data in the current analysis confirms earlier exploratory cost-effectiveness findings and suggest TOMAC therapy may provide a high-value treatment option for patients with medication-refractory RLS.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13696998.2024.2410595DOI Listing

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  • The study evaluates the cost-effectiveness of Tonic Motor Activation (TOMAC) therapy as a treatment for patients with medication-refractory Restless Legs Syndrome (RLS), using a decision-analytic Markov model to compare it with standard care.* -
  • Results show that TOMAC significantly improved RLS symptoms, resulting in additional quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) and presenting incremental costs that yield cost-effectiveness ratios of around $37,823 to $47,609 per QALY gained over three years and a lifetime.* -
  • The findings support TOMAC therapy as a high-value treatment for RLS, reaffirming previous analyses and highlighting its potential benefits for patients with limited treatment options.*
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Objective/background: There is a significant unmet need for safe and effective nonpharmacological therapies for restless legs syndrome (RLS). The objective was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of tonic motor activation (TOMAC) in patients with RLS.

Patients/methods: A multicenter, randomized, participant-blinded, sham-controlled trial enrolled 45 adults with primary moderate-to-severe RLS who were either medication-naïve (n = 20) or medication-refractory (n = 25).

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