The long term effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of initiating treatment for ocular hypertension.
van Gestel Aukje, Schouten Jan S A G, Beckers Henny J M, Severens Johan L, Hendrikse Fred, Webers Carroll A B
AI Summary
Studying ocular hypertension, early pressure-lowering treatment was found to be more effective and cheaper long-term than delayed treatment, making it a dominant, cost-effective strategy.
Abstract
Purpose
To investigate the long-term health and economic consequences of direct treatment initiation in ocular hypertension patients.
Methods
A cost-effectiveness analysis with a societal perspective and a lifelong horizon was performed. The primary outcomes were the incremental quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) and costs of direct pressure-lowering treatment for ocular hypertension, compared to a strategy where treatment is postponed until conversion to glaucoma has been observed. We used a decision analytic model based on individual patient simulation to forecast disease progression and treatment decisions in both strategies in a representative heterogeneous patient population and in 18 patient subgroups stratified by initial intraocular pressure and additional risk factors for conversion.
Results
The incremental discounted health gain of direct treatment was 0.27 QALYs, whereas the incremental discounted costs were -€ 649 during an average lifetime of 26 years. In the simulations of patient subgroups, the model outcomes moved towards higher health gains and lower incremental costs with increasing risk of conversion in the patient population. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of direct treatment ranged from € 15,425 per QALY gained in the lowest-risk subgroup to dominance in the highest-risk subgroup. Probabilistic sensitivity analysis indicated that uncertainty surrounding the model input parameters did not affect the conclusions.
Conclusion
Direct, early, pressure-lowering treatment is a dominant cost-effective treatment strategy over a strategy to start the same treatment approach later, after glaucoma has occurred for patients with ocular hypertension. Its implementation and consequences should be discussed with ophthalmologists and individual patients.
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