4.4 Article

Impact of compliance to oral cysteamine treatment on the costs of Kidney failure in patients with nephropathic cystinosis in the United Kingdom

Journal

BMC NEPHROLOGY
Volume 24, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12882-023-03392-y

Keywords

Nephropathic cystinosis; Kidney Failure; Treatment compliance; Delayed-release Cysteamine Bitartrate; Adherence; United Kingdom

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This study evaluates the impact of compliance on lifetime costs of treating kidney failure (KF) in patients with nephropathic cystinosis (NC). The results show that improving treatment compliance with oral cysteamine can reduce the lifelong costs of KF.
BackgroundNephropathic Cystinosis (NC), a rare disease characterised by intra-lysosomal accumulation of cystine, results in progressive kidney failure (KF). Compliance to lifelong oral cysteamine, the only therapy, is often compromised. The relationship between compliance and costs of NC has not been previously formally assessed. The present study evaluates the impact of compliance on lifetime (direct) costs of treating KF in NC patients in the United Kingdom.MethodsA three-state (KF-free, post-KF, death) partitioned survival model was developed for hypothetical 'Good Compliance' (GC) and 'Poor Compliance' (PC) cohorts. Survival in the KF-free state was determined by a published regression function of composite compliance score (CCS). The CCS is a summation of annual compliance scores (ACS) over treatment duration prior to KF. ACSs are indexed on annual (average) leukocyte cystine levels (LCL). The Poor Compliance cohort was defined to reflect NC patients in a previous study with a mean LCL of 2.35 nmols nmol half-cystine/mg protein over the study period - and an estimated mean ACS of 1.64 over a 13.4 year treatment duration. The Good Compliance cohort was assumed to have an ACS of 2.25 for 21 years. Major KF costs were evaluated - i.e., dialysis, kidney transplants, and subsequent monitoring.ResultsThe mean CCS was 47 for the GC and 22 for the PC cohort respectively, corresponding to estimated lifetime KF costs of 92,370 pound and 117,830 pound respectively - i.e., a cost saving of 25,460 pound/patient, or 1,005 pound/patient for every 1-unit improvement in CCS.ConclusionThis analysis indicates that lifetime costs of KF in NC can be reduced through improved treatment compliance with oral cysteamine.

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