4.4 Article

Cost-minimization analysis of immunoglobulin treatment of primary immunodeficiency diseases in Spain

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HEALTH ECONOMICS
Volume 23, Issue 3, Pages 551-558

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10198-021-01378-x

Keywords

Primary immunodeficiency disease; Immune system; Immunoglobulin replacement therapy; Subcutaneous immunoglobulin; Intravenous immunoglobulin; Cost-minimization analysis

Funding

  1. CRUE-CSIC
  2. Springer Nature
  3. Shire, a Takeda company

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A cost-minimization model compared the costs of IVIG and SCIG for patients with PID in Spain, revealing that SCIG was associated with lower total costs. The main cost-saving factors for SCIG included differences in annual IG dosage costs and reduced hospital administration costs.
Primary immunodeficiency diseases (PID), which are comprised of over 400 genetic disorders, occur when a component of the immune system is diminished or dysfunctional. Patients with PID who require immunoglobulin (IG) replacement therapy receive intravenous IG (IVIG) or subcutaneous IG (SCIG), each of which provides equivalent efficacy. We developed a cost-minimization model to evaluate costs of IVIG versus SCIG from the Spanish National Healthcare System perspective. The base case modeled the annual cost per patient of IVIG and SCIG for the mean doses (per current expert clinical practice) over 1 year in terms of direct (drug and administration) and indirect (lost productivity for adults and parents/guardians of pediatric patients) costs. It was assumed that all IVIG infusions were administered in a day hospital, and 95% of SCIG infusions were administered at home. Drug costs were calculated from ex-factory prices obtained from local databases minus the mandatory deduction. Costs were valued on 2018 euros. The annual modeled costs were euro4,266 lower for patients with PID who received SCIG (total euro14,466) compared with those who received IVIG (total euro18,732). The two largest contributors were differences in annual IG costs as a function of dosage (- euro1,927) and hospital administration costs (- euro2,688). However, SCIG incurred training costs for home administration (euro695). Sensitivity analyses for two dose-rounding scenarios were consistent with the base case. Our model suggests that SCIG may be a cost-saving alternative to IVIG for patients with PID in Spain.

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