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Cost-utility of enoxaparin compared with unfractionated heparin in unstable coronary artery disease

Cost-utility of enoxaparin compared with unfractionated heparin in unstable coronary artery disease
Cost-utility of enoxaparin compared with unfractionated heparin in unstable coronary artery disease
Low molecular weight heparins hold several advantages over unfractionated heparin including convenience of administration. Enoxaparin is one such heparin licensed in the UK for use in unstable coronary artery disease (unstable stable angina and non-Q wave myocardial infarction). In these patients, two large randomised controlled trials and their meta-analysis showed small benefits for enoxaparin over unfractionated heparin at 30–43 days and potentially at one year.

We found no relevant published full economic evaluations, only cost studies, one of which was conducted in the UK. The other studies, from the US, Canada and France, are difficult to interpret since their resource use and costs may not reflect UK practice.

Methods
We aimed to compare the benefits and costs of short-term treatment (two to eight days) with enoxaparin and unfractionated heparin in unstable coronary artery disease. We used published data sources to estimate the incremental cost per quality adjusted life year (QALY), adopting a NHS perspective and using 1998 prices.

Results
The base case was a 0.013 QALY gain and net cost saving of £317 per person treated with enoxaparin instead of unfractionated heparin. All but one sensitivity analysis showed net savings and QALY gains, the exception (the worst case) being a cost per QALY of £3,305. Best cases were a £495 saving and 0.013 QALY gain, or a £317 saving and 0.014 QALY gain per person.

Conclusions
Enoxaparin appears cost saving compared with unfractionated heparin in patients with unstable coronary artery disease. However, cost implications depend on local revascularisation practice.
1471-2261
Nicholson, Tricia
557b63c5-30eb-4c42-98d3-a3d71eb11c75
McGuire, Alistair
3fe10187-f99c-4d0f-9b86-e71217cd10a6
Milne, Ruairidh
630398a4-b65b-485b-9bf4-b0b8eb00c8d8
Nicholson, Tricia
557b63c5-30eb-4c42-98d3-a3d71eb11c75
McGuire, Alistair
3fe10187-f99c-4d0f-9b86-e71217cd10a6
Milne, Ruairidh
630398a4-b65b-485b-9bf4-b0b8eb00c8d8

Nicholson, Tricia, McGuire, Alistair and Milne, Ruairidh (2001) Cost-utility of enoxaparin compared with unfractionated heparin in unstable coronary artery disease. BMC Cardiovascular Disorders, 1 (1).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Low molecular weight heparins hold several advantages over unfractionated heparin including convenience of administration. Enoxaparin is one such heparin licensed in the UK for use in unstable coronary artery disease (unstable stable angina and non-Q wave myocardial infarction). In these patients, two large randomised controlled trials and their meta-analysis showed small benefits for enoxaparin over unfractionated heparin at 30–43 days and potentially at one year.

We found no relevant published full economic evaluations, only cost studies, one of which was conducted in the UK. The other studies, from the US, Canada and France, are difficult to interpret since their resource use and costs may not reflect UK practice.

Methods
We aimed to compare the benefits and costs of short-term treatment (two to eight days) with enoxaparin and unfractionated heparin in unstable coronary artery disease. We used published data sources to estimate the incremental cost per quality adjusted life year (QALY), adopting a NHS perspective and using 1998 prices.

Results
The base case was a 0.013 QALY gain and net cost saving of £317 per person treated with enoxaparin instead of unfractionated heparin. All but one sensitivity analysis showed net savings and QALY gains, the exception (the worst case) being a cost per QALY of £3,305. Best cases were a £495 saving and 0.013 QALY gain, or a £317 saving and 0.014 QALY gain per person.

Conclusions
Enoxaparin appears cost saving compared with unfractionated heparin in patients with unstable coronary artery disease. However, cost implications depend on local revascularisation practice.

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More information

Published date: 15 October 2001

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 181
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/181
ISSN: 1471-2261
PURE UUID: 9d3b834e-6d99-4ed1-bbad-512fef1628b6

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 21 Oct 2003
Last modified: 22 Jul 2022 20:19

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Contributors

Author: Tricia Nicholson
Author: Alistair McGuire
Author: Ruairidh Milne

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