4.2 Article

Cost-effectiveness analysis of initial treatment with single-pill combination antihypertensive medications

Journal

JOURNAL OF HUMAN HYPERTENSION
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41371-023-00811-3

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Hypertension guidelines recommend initiating treatment with single pill combination (SPC) antihypertensive medications, but only one-third of treated hypertensive US adults use SPCs. This analysis evaluated the cost-effectiveness of initial treatment with SPC dual antihypertensive medications compared to usual care monotherapy in hypertensive US adults. The results showed that initiating antihypertensive treatment with SPC dual therapy can provide more QALYs without additional cost compared to usual care monotherapy.
Hypertension guidelines recommend initiating treatment with single pill combination (SPC) antihypertensive medications, but SPCs are used by only one-third of treated hypertensive US adults. This analysis estimated the cost-effectiveness of initial treatment with SPC dual antihypertensive medications compared with usual care monotherapy in hypertensive US adults.The validated BP Control Model-Cardiovascular Disease (CVD) Policy Model simulated initial SPC dual therapy (two half-standard doses in a single pill) compared with initial usual care monotherapy (half-standard dose when baseline systolic BP < 20 mmHg above goal and one standard dose when >= 20 mmHg above goal). Secondary analyses examined equivalent dose monotherapy (one standard dose) and equivalent dose dual therapy as separate pills (two half-standard doses). The primary outcomes were direct healthcare costs, quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs), and incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) over 10 years from a US healthcare sector perspective.At 10 years, initial dual drug SPC was projected to yield 0.028 (95%UI 0.008 to 0.051) more QALYs at no greater cost ($73, 95%UI -$1 983 to $1 629) than usual care monotherapy. In secondary analysis, SPC dual therapy was cost-effective vs. equivalent dose monotherapy (ICER $8 000/QALY gained) and equivalent dose dual therapy as separate pills (ICER $57 000/QALY gained). At average drug prices, initiating antihypertensive treatment with SPC dual therapy is more effective at no greater cost than usual care initial monotherapy and has the potential to improve BP control rates and reduce the burden of CVD in the US.

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