
What is the Most Cost-Effective Plaque Psoriasis Treatment?
Approximately 1.7 million insured US patients are burdened with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis.
Tildrakizumab was recently found to be a more cost-effective option than most of its competitors in a comparative trial involving patients with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis.
In new data presented at the
The trial, which also showed the recently-approved therapy’s cost-effectiveness compared to apremilast and etanercept, has implications to the approximate 1.7 million insured US patients burdened with the chronic condition.
The IL-23 inhibitor prevents the protein’s interaction with its receptor, therefore block pro-inflammatory cytokine and chemokine release.
Investigators adopted a Markov model consisting of 4 PASI response-based health states for their cost-effectiveness trial. Their 10-year analysis assessed incremental cost per quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) gained for each first-line therapy compared with a mix of topical therapy, phototherapy, or other systemic therapy.
They also analyzed scenarios to understand the cost impact of adverse events, including hospitalizations due to severe infection and nonmelanoma skin cancer, among others. Indirect costs and different treatment pathways for first-line treatment non-responsiveness were also assessed.
Drug costs were calculated based on wholesale acquisition costs, and direct medical costs included drug and administration costs, laboratory costs, and clinic visits costs.
Though it was found to be among the costliest therapies in year 1 of patient use, tildrakizumab was the fourth-lowest costing drug in year 2 and beyond, investigators reported. Among monoclonal antibodies, it was the second-best therapy in costs. Infliximab, apremilast, and brodalumab were the lowest-cost therapies assessed, respectively.
Per incremental costs per QALY gained, tildrakizumab again fared better than secukinumab, guselkumab, ixekizumab, adalimumab, ustekinumab, and etanercept—but worse than brodalumab, infliximab, and apremilast, respectively. Across the multiple cost scenarios considered, the treatment costs were similar to the incremental costs.
Investigators concluded that tildrakizumab, as a first-line therapy for plaque psoriasis, is more cost-effective measure than guselkumab, secukinumab, izekizumab, ustekinumab, adalimumab, or etanercept.
The study, “
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