Pregabalin versus SSRIs and SNRIs in benzodiazepine-refractory outpatients with generalized anxiety disorder: a post hoc cost-effectiveness analysis in usual medical practice in Spain.
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) is a prevalent health condition which seriously affects both patient quality of life and
the National Health System. The aim of this research was to carry out a post hoc cost-effectiveness analysis of the effect
of pregabalin versus selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs)/serotonin norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs)
in treated benzodiazepine-refractory outpatients with GAD.
METHODS
This post hoc cost-effectiveness analysis used secondary data extracted from the 6-month cohort, prospective, noninterventional
ADAN study, which was conducted to ascertain the cost of illness in GAD subjects diagnosed according to Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition criteria. Benzodiazepine-refractory subjects were those who claimed persistent
symptoms of anxiety and showed a suboptimal response (Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale ≥ 16) to benzodiazepines, alone or in
combination, over 6 months. Patients could switch to pregabalin (as monotherapy or addon) or to an SSRI or SNRI, alone or
in combination. Effectiveness was expressed as quality-adjusted life years gained, and the perspective was that of the National
Health System in the year 2008. A sensitivity analysis was performed using bootstrapping techniques (10,000 resamples were
obtained) in order to obtain a cost-effectiveness plane and a corresponding acceptability curve.
RESULTS
A total of 282 subjects (mean Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale score 25.8) were identified, comprising 157 in a pregabalin group
and 125 in an SSRI/SNRI group. Compared with SSRI/SNRI, pregabalin (average dose 163 mg/day) was associated with higher quality-adjusted
life years gained (0.1086 ± 0.0953 versus 0.0967 ± 0.1003, P = 0.334), but increased health care costs (€1014 ± 762 versus
€846 ± 620, P = 0.166) and drug costs (€376 ± 252 versus 220 ± 140, P < 0.001), resulting in an incremental cost-effectiveness
ratio of €25,304 (95% confidence interval dominant 149,430) per quality-adjusted life years gained for health care costs and
€25,454 (dominant 124,562) when drug costs were considered alone. Eighty-six percent of resamples fell below the threshold
of €30,000 per quality-adjusted life years.
CONCLUSION
This evaluation suggests that pregabalin may be cost-effective in comparison with SSRIs/SNRIs in benzodiazepine-refractory
outpatients with GAD treated in mental health care settings under usual medical practice in Spain.
Links
Authors
De Salas-Cansado M, Olivares JM, Alvarez E, Carrasco JL, Barrueta A, Rejas J
Institution
Trial Form Support Spain, Madrid.
Source
ClinicoEconomics and outcomes research : CEOR 4: 2012 pg 157-68Pub Type(s)
Journal ArticleLanguage
eng
PubMed ID
22745564
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