A Worldwide Price Comparison of Glaucoma Medications, Laser Trabeculoplasty, and Trabeculectomy Surgery.
Zhao Peter Y, Rahmathullah Raheem, Stagg Brian C, Almobarak Faisal, Edward Deepak P, Robin Alan L, Stein Joshua D
AI Summary
This study found glaucoma treatments are often unaffordable globally, especially in developing nations, with timolol being the most accessible. Improving affordability is crucial to reduce global glaucoma blindness.
Abstract
Importance
Medical and surgical interventions for glaucoma are effective only if they are affordable to patients. Little is known about how affordable glaucoma interventions are in developing and developed countries.
Objective
To compare the prices of topical glaucoma medications, laser trabeculoplasty, and trabeculectomy relative with median annual household income (MA-HHI) for countries worldwide.
Design, setting and participants: Cross-sectional observational study. For each country, we obtained prices for glaucoma medications, laser trabeculoplasty, and trabeculectomy using government pricing data, drug databases, physician fee schedules, academic publications, and communications with local ophthalmologists. Prices were adjusted for purchasing power parity and inflation to 2016 US dollars, and annual therapy prices were examined relative to the MA-HHI. Interventions costing less than 2.5% of the MA-HHI were considered affordable.
Main outcomes and measures: Daily cost for topical glaucoma medications, cost of annual therapy with glaucoma medications, laser trabeculoplasty, and trabeculectomy relative to MA-HHI in each country.
Results
Data were obtained from 38 countries, including 17 developed countries and 21 developing countries, as classified by the World Economic Outlook. We observed considerable variability in intervention prices compared with MA-HHI across the countries and across interventions, ranging from 0.1% to 5% of MA-HHI for timolol, 0.1% to 27% for latanoprost, 0.2% to 17% for laser trabeculoplasty, and 0.3% to 42% for trabeculectomy. Timolol was the most affordable medication in all countries studied and was 2.5% or more of MA-HHI in only 2 countries (5%). The annual cost of latanoprost was 2.5% or more of MA-HHI in 15 countries (41%) (15 developing countries [75%] and no developed countries). The cost of laser trabeculoplasty was 2.5% or more of the MA-HHI in 15 countries (44%) (11 developing countries [65%] and 4 developed countries [24%]). The cost of trabeculectomy was 2.5% or more of the MA-HHI in 28 countries (78%) (18 developing countries [95%] and 10 developed countries [59%]). In 18 countries (53%), laser trabeculoplasty cost less than a 3-year latanoprost supply.
Conclusions and relevance: For many patients worldwide, the costs of medical, laser, and incisional surgical interventions were 2.5% or more of the MA-HHI. Successfully reducing global blindness from glaucoma requires addressing multiple contributing factors, including making glaucoma interventions more affordable.
MeSH Terms
Shields Classification
Key Concepts6
Timolol was the most affordable glaucoma medication in all 38 countries studied, with its annual cost being 2.5% or more of the median annual household income (MA-HHI) in only 2 countries (5%).
The annual cost of latanoprost for glaucoma treatment was 2.5% or more of the median annual household income (MA-HHI) in 15 out of 38 countries (41%), specifically in 15 developing countries (75%) and no developed countries.
The cost of laser trabeculoplasty for glaucoma treatment was 2.5% or more of the median annual household income (MA-HHI) in 15 out of 34 countries (44%), including 11 developing countries (65%) and 4 developed countries (24%).
The cost of trabeculectomy surgery for glaucoma treatment was 2.5% or more of the median annual household income (MA-HHI) in 28 out of 36 countries (78%), specifically in 18 developing countries (95%) and 10 developed countries (59%).
In 18 out of 34 countries (53%), the cost of laser trabeculoplasty was less than the cost of a 3-year supply of latanoprost for glaucoma treatment.
Medical, laser, and incisional surgical interventions for glaucoma had costs that were 2.5% or more of the median annual household income (MA-HHI) for many patients worldwide, highlighting the need for increased affordability to reduce global blindness from glaucoma.
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