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Cost-effectiveness intervention thresholds for romosozumab and teriparatide in the treatment of osteoporosis in the UK

Cost-effectiveness intervention thresholds for romosozumab and teriparatide in the treatment of osteoporosis in the UK
Cost-effectiveness intervention thresholds for romosozumab and teriparatide in the treatment of osteoporosis in the UK
Summary: sequential romosozumab-to-alendronate or sequential teriparatide-to-alendronate can be a cost-effective treatment option for postmenopausal women at very high risk of fracture.

Purpose: to estimate the 10-year probability of a major osteoporotic fracture (MOF) at which sequential treatment with romosozumab or teriparatide followed by alendronate, compared with alendronate alone, becomes cost-effective in a UK setting.

Methods: a microsimulation model with a Markov structure was used to simulate fractures, costs, and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs), in women receiving sequential treatment with either romosozumab or teriparatide followed by alendronate, compared with alendronate alone. Patients aged 50 to 90 years with a recent MOF, hip or spine fracture were followed from the start of a 5-year treatment until the age of 100 years or death. The analysis had a healthcare perspective. Efficacy of romosozumab, teriparatide and alendronate was derived from phase III randomised controlled trials. Resource use and unit costs were derived from the literature. Cost-effectiveness intervention threshold (CEIT), defined as the 10-year probability of a major osteoporotic fracture at which treatment becomes cost-effective, was compared with clinically appropriate intervention thresholds for bone-forming treatment in women with very high fracture risk as recommended by the UK National Osteoporosis Guideline Group (NOGG).

Results: the base case analysis showed that sequential romosozumab-to-alendronate treatment was cost-effective from a 10-year MOF probability of 18–35% and above depending on age and site of sentinel fracture at a willingness to pay (WTP) of £30,000. For teriparatide-to-alendronate, treatment was cost-effective at a 10-year MOF probability of 27–57%. The results were sensitive to pricing of the drugs but relatively insensitive to treatment duration, romosozumab persistence assumptions, and site of sentinel fracture. The CEITs for romosozumab-to-alendronate treatment were lower than the clinical thresholds from the age of 70 years meaning that treatment could be considered both cost-effective and aligned with the NOGG treatment guidelines. By contrast, for teriparatide-to-alendronate the CEITs were higher than the clinical thresholds irrespective of age. However, cost-effective scenarios were found in the presence of strong clinical risk factors in addition to a recent sentinel fracture.

Conclusion: the results of this study indicate that sequential romosozumab-to-alendronate or teriparatide-to-alendronate treatment can be a cost-effective treatment option for postmenopausal women at very high risk of fracture.
Cost-effectiveness, Economic evaluation, FRAX, Intervention thresholds, Markov microsimulation model, Osteoporosis, Recent fracture
0937-941X
Borgström, Fredrik
ec4be3ce-ac15-4f33-995f-042d05084465
Lorentzon, Mattias
9d78ed25-2b0c-46c5-a2db-a8b246af0956
Johansson, Helena
04f12338-4dd1-437b-b9bc-e0884130c215
Harvey, Nicholas C.
ce487fb4-d360-4aac-9d17-9466d6cba145
McCloskey, Eugene
6d3df4aa-b438-4a83-bd06-06b6cbe3980f
Willems, Damon
e88ddc5a-c535-4e9b-9c2b-2a8eed02685f
Knutson, Douglas
d7ede6c6-fc12-41fc-a00d-d509ff870c92
Kanis, John A.
f1621d8d-8afb-4d97-9679-2165d88a344d
Borgström, Fredrik
ec4be3ce-ac15-4f33-995f-042d05084465
Lorentzon, Mattias
9d78ed25-2b0c-46c5-a2db-a8b246af0956
Johansson, Helena
04f12338-4dd1-437b-b9bc-e0884130c215
Harvey, Nicholas C.
ce487fb4-d360-4aac-9d17-9466d6cba145
McCloskey, Eugene
6d3df4aa-b438-4a83-bd06-06b6cbe3980f
Willems, Damon
e88ddc5a-c535-4e9b-9c2b-2a8eed02685f
Knutson, Douglas
d7ede6c6-fc12-41fc-a00d-d509ff870c92
Kanis, John A.
f1621d8d-8afb-4d97-9679-2165d88a344d

Borgström, Fredrik, Lorentzon, Mattias, Johansson, Helena, Harvey, Nicholas C., McCloskey, Eugene, Willems, Damon, Knutson, Douglas and Kanis, John A. (2024) Cost-effectiveness intervention thresholds for romosozumab and teriparatide in the treatment of osteoporosis in the UK. Osteoporosis International. (doi:10.1007/s00198-024-07251-w).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Summary: sequential romosozumab-to-alendronate or sequential teriparatide-to-alendronate can be a cost-effective treatment option for postmenopausal women at very high risk of fracture.

Purpose: to estimate the 10-year probability of a major osteoporotic fracture (MOF) at which sequential treatment with romosozumab or teriparatide followed by alendronate, compared with alendronate alone, becomes cost-effective in a UK setting.

Methods: a microsimulation model with a Markov structure was used to simulate fractures, costs, and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs), in women receiving sequential treatment with either romosozumab or teriparatide followed by alendronate, compared with alendronate alone. Patients aged 50 to 90 years with a recent MOF, hip or spine fracture were followed from the start of a 5-year treatment until the age of 100 years or death. The analysis had a healthcare perspective. Efficacy of romosozumab, teriparatide and alendronate was derived from phase III randomised controlled trials. Resource use and unit costs were derived from the literature. Cost-effectiveness intervention threshold (CEIT), defined as the 10-year probability of a major osteoporotic fracture at which treatment becomes cost-effective, was compared with clinically appropriate intervention thresholds for bone-forming treatment in women with very high fracture risk as recommended by the UK National Osteoporosis Guideline Group (NOGG).

Results: the base case analysis showed that sequential romosozumab-to-alendronate treatment was cost-effective from a 10-year MOF probability of 18–35% and above depending on age and site of sentinel fracture at a willingness to pay (WTP) of £30,000. For teriparatide-to-alendronate, treatment was cost-effective at a 10-year MOF probability of 27–57%. The results were sensitive to pricing of the drugs but relatively insensitive to treatment duration, romosozumab persistence assumptions, and site of sentinel fracture. The CEITs for romosozumab-to-alendronate treatment were lower than the clinical thresholds from the age of 70 years meaning that treatment could be considered both cost-effective and aligned with the NOGG treatment guidelines. By contrast, for teriparatide-to-alendronate the CEITs were higher than the clinical thresholds irrespective of age. However, cost-effective scenarios were found in the presence of strong clinical risk factors in addition to a recent sentinel fracture.

Conclusion: the results of this study indicate that sequential romosozumab-to-alendronate or teriparatide-to-alendronate treatment can be a cost-effective treatment option for postmenopausal women at very high risk of fracture.

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OI_CE Thresholds Anabolic_revision_final - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 8 September 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 4 October 2024
Published date: 4 October 2024
Keywords: Cost-effectiveness, Economic evaluation, FRAX, Intervention thresholds, Markov microsimulation model, Osteoporosis, Recent fracture

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 494694
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494694
ISSN: 0937-941X
PURE UUID: df28630a-df19-4202-ba19-cace04cceca1
ORCID for Nicholas C. Harvey: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8194-2512

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Date deposited: 14 Oct 2024 16:40
Last modified: 26 Oct 2024 01:39

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Contributors

Author: Fredrik Borgström
Author: Mattias Lorentzon
Author: Helena Johansson
Author: Eugene McCloskey
Author: Damon Willems
Author: Douglas Knutson
Author: John A. Kanis

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