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Thématique :
- Foie
Originalité :
Très original
Solidité :
A confirmer
Doit faire évoluer notre pratique :
Dans certains cas
 
 
Nom du veilleur :
Docteur Jean-Louis PAYEN
Coup de coeur :
 
 
Journal of Hepatology
  2016/07  
 
  2016 Jul;65(1):17-25  
  doi: 10.1016/j.jhep.2016.02.007  
 
  Prioritization of HCV treatment in the direct-acting antiviral era: An economic evaluation  
 
  Martin NK, Vickerman P, Dore GJ, Grebely J, Miners A, Cairns J, Foster GR, Hutchinson SJ, Goldberg DJ, Martin TC, Ramsay M; STOP-HCV Consortium, Hickman M  
  https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Prioritization+of+HCV+treatment+in+the+direct-acting+antiviral+era%3A+An+economic+evaluation  
 
 

BACKGROUND & AIMS:

We determined the optimal HCV treatment prioritization strategy for interferon-free (IFN-free) HCV direct-acting antivirals (DAAs) by disease stage and risk status incorporating treatment of people who inject drugs (PWID).

METHODS:

A dynamic HCV transmission and progression model compared the cost-effectiveness of treating patients early vs. delaying until cirrhosis for patients with mild or moderate fibrosis, where PWID chronic HCV prevalence was 20, 40 or 60%. Treatment duration was 12weeks at £3300/wk, to achieve a 95% sustained viral response and was varied by genotype/stage in alternative scenarios. We estimated long-term health costs (in £UK=€1.3=$1.5) and outcomes as quality adjusted life-years (QALYs) gained using a £20,000 willingness to pay per QALY threshold. We ranked strategies with net monetary benefit (NMB); negative NMB implies delay treatment.

RESULTS:

The most cost-effective group to treat were PWID with moderate fibrosis (mean NMB per early treatment £60,640/£23,968 at 20/40% chronic prevalence, respectively), followed by PWID with mild fibrosis (NMB £59,258 and £19,421, respectively) then ex-PWID/non-PWID with moderate fibrosis (NMB £9,404). Treatment of ex-PWID/non-PWID with mild fibrosis could be delayed (NMB -£3,650). In populations with 60% chronic HCV among PWID it was only cost-effective to prioritize DAAs to ex-PWID/non-PWID with moderate fibrosis. For every one PWID in the 20% chronic HCV setting, 2 new HCV infections were averted. One extra HCV-related death was averted per 13 people with moderate disease treated. Rankings were unchanged with reduced drug costs or varied sustained virological response/duration by genotype/fibrosis stage.

CONCLUSIONS:

Treating PWID with moderate or mild HCV with IFN-free DAAs is cost-effective compared to delay until cirrhosis, except when chronic HCV prevalence and reinfection risk is very high.

 
Question posée
 
Evaluation médico-économique, au Royaume Unis, des nouveaux traitements de l’hépatite C.
 
Question posée
 
Selon cette étude, il est coût efficace de traiter les hépatites minimes.
 
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