4.6 Article

Gene therapy in hemophilia A: a cost-effectiveness analysis

Journal

BLOOD ADVANCES
Volume 2, Issue 14, Pages 1792-1798

Publisher

AMER SOC HEMATOLOGY
DOI: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2018021345

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute [1-T32110849-01-A1]
  2. Health Resources and Services Administration Federal Hemophilia Treatment Centers [H30MC24050-04-00]
  3. Pennsylvania Department of Health state support of the Hemophilia Center of Western PA [SAP 41000058531]

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Gene therapy provides a potential phenotypic cure for hemophilia, yet the cost of this novel treatment is high, tempering enthusiasm and raising questions regarding cost vs benefit. To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of gene therapy treatment of severe hemophilia A compared with prophylaxis with factor VIII (FVIII), we developed a Markov state-transition model to estimate the costs and effectiveness of severe hemophilia A treatment strategies from a United States health care system perspective. Quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) were the effectiveness measure. In the base case, hypothetical cohorts of 30-year-old patients received gene therapy or FVIII prophylaxis. We obtained model probabilities and utilities from the literature and costs from Medicare reimbursement data. One-way and probabilistic sensitivity analyses were performed to test the robustness of results. Over a 10-year time horizon, total per-person gene therapy strategy costs were $1.0M and resulted in 8.33 QALYs, whereas prophylaxis cost $1.7M and resulted in 6.62 QALYs. Thus, gene therapy dominated prophylaxis (costs less and was more effective). Gene therapy remained dominant unless initial costs exceeded $1.6M and were,$100 000 per 1 QALY gained compared with prophylaxis if initial costs were,$1.7M. Results were not sensitive to variation of all other parameters over clinically plausible ranges. In a probabilistic sensitivity analysis simultaneously varying all parameters 3000 times over parameter distributions, gene therapy was dominant in 92% of model iterations. Treatment of severe hemophilia A with gene therapy is likely to be cost-saving or cost-effective compared with FVIII prophylaxis.

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