4.6 Article

Cost-Effectiveness of Endovascular Thrombectomy in Childhood Stroke: An Analysis of the Save ChildS Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF STROKE
Volume 24, Issue 1, Pages 138-147

Publisher

KOREAN STROKE SOC
DOI: 10.5853/jos.2021.01606

Keywords

Pediatrics; Stroke; Thrombectomy; Cost-benefit analysis

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This study evaluated the long-term cost, health consequences, and cost-effectiveness of EVT in pediatric stroke patients. The results showed that EVT is a cost-effective and cost-saving strategy, resulting in increased QALYs and reduced lifetime costs for children with LVOs.
Background and Purpose The Save ChildS Study demonstrated that endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) is a safe treatment option for pediatric stroke patients with large vessel occlusions (LVOs) with high recanalization rates. Our aim was to determine the long-term cost, health consequences and cost-effectiveness of EVT in this patient population. Methods In this retrospective study, a decision-analytic Markov model estimated lifetime costs and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs). Early outcome parameters were based on the entire Save ChildS Study to model the EVT group. As no randomized data exist, the Save ChildS patient sub-group with unsuccessful recanalization was used to model the standard of care group. For model -ing of lifetime estimates, pediatric and adult input parameters were obtained from the current lit- erature. The analysis was conducted in a United States setting applying healthcare and societal perspectives. Probabilistic sensitivity analyses were performed. The willingness-to-pay threshold was set to $100,000 per QALY. Results The model results yielded EVT as the dominant (cost-effective as well as cost-saving) strategy for pediatric stroke patients. The incremental effectiveness for the average age of 11.3 years at first stroke in the Save ChildS Study was determined as an additional 4.02 lifetime QALYs, with lifetime cost-savings that amounted to $169,982 from a healthcare perspective and $254,110 when applying a societal perspective. Acceptability rates for EVT were 96.60% and 96.66% for the healthcare and societal perspectives. Conclusions EVT for pediatric stroke patients with LVOs resulted in added QALY and reduced lifetime costs. Based on the available data in the Save ChildS Study, EVT is very likely to be a cost-effective treatment strategy for childhood stroke.

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