Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of Sodium Zirconium Cyclosilicate for Treating Hyperkalemia Among Chinese Patients

Speaker(s)

Tian L1, Fu S2, Zhao X1, Li M3, Li HC1
1China Pharmaceutical University, Nanjing, China, 2China Pharmaceutical University, nanjing, China, 3China Pharmaceutical University, nanjing, 32, China

Presentation Documents

OBJECTIVES: Hyperkalemia most commonly develops in patients with heart failure (HF) or chronic kidney disease (CKD). Sodium zirconium cyclosilicate (SZC) is a new selective potassium (K+) binder for the treatment of hyperkalemia. The aim of this study was to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of SZC versus usual care (consisting of calcium polystyrene sulfonate (CPS), lifestyle interventions, RAASi modifications, etc.) for the treatment of hyperkalemia among HF and CKD patients in China.

METHODS: Individual patient microsimulation models were constructed to simulate a HF cohort across the lifetime horizon and a CKD cohort until the initiation of renal replacement therapy (RRT). K+ levels were based on two phase 3 clinical trials. Health state utility and event incidence rates were retrieved from literature. Drug costs and healthcare utilization costs were obtained from negotiated price, literature, and expert interviews. Costs and quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) were both discounted at 5%. The main outcomes were overall costs, QALYs, and incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER). The willingness to pay (WTP) threshold in China is CNY 80,976-242,928/QALY, which is one to three times the gross domestic product per capita. Sensitivity analyses were performed to characterize models’ uncertainty.

RESULTS: The base case results revealed that SZC was associated with 2.86 QALYs and CNY 92,671.58; usual care was associated with 1.81 QALYs and CNY 54,101.26 in the HF cohort. In CKD cohort, SZC was associated with 3.23 QALYs and CNY 121,416.82; usual care was associated with 2.91 QALYs and CNY 111,464.57. SZC resulted in an ICER of CNY 36,735.87/QALY for the HF cohort and CNY 31,181.55/QALY for the CKD cohort, respectively. The one-way sensitivity analyses and probability sensitivity analyses found the results were robust.

CONCLUSIONS: SZC is a cost-effective treatment compared to usual care in HF and CKD patients. SZC is an important new option for the management of hyperkalemia in China.

Code

EE484

Topic

Economic Evaluation

Topic Subcategory

Cost-comparison, Effectiveness, Utility, Benefit Analysis

Disease

SDC: Cardiovascular Disorders (including MI, Stroke, Circulatory), SDC: Diabetes/Endocrine/Metabolic Disorders (including obesity)