Cost-Effectiveness of Clopidogrel plus Aspirin versus Aspirin Alone for Secondary Prevention of Cardiovascular Events- Results from the CHARISMA Trial

Abstract

Objective

To determine the incremental cost-effectiveness of clopidogrel plus aspirin (C + A) compared with aspirin (A) alone during the Clopidogrel for High Atherothrombotic Risk and Ischemic Stabilization, Management and Avoidance (CHARISMA) trial from a US payer perspective.

Background

Although the CHARISMA trial did not find a benefit of adding clopidogrel to aspirin in its overall study cohort, a benefit was suggested in a prespecified subgroup of patients with established cardiovascular (CV) disease. The cost-effectiveness of dual antiplatelet therapy in this population is unknown.

Methods

Medical resource utilization was assessed prospectively, and costs for hospitalizations, physician services, outpatient care, and medications were assigned using 2007 US dollars. Life expectancy was estimated contingent on fatal and nonfatal CV events using statistical models of long-term survival from the Saskatchewan Health database.

Results

C + A was associated with a 12.5% relative reduction in CV death, myocardial infarction, or stroke compared with A alone (6.9% vs. 7.9%, P = 0.048) over a median 28 months of follow-up. Severe or moderate bleeding events were higher in patients receiving C + A versus A alone (3.6% vs. 2.5%, P $100,000/life-year gained in 87.4%.

Conclusions

Among patients with established CV disease, adding clopidogrel to aspirin appears to increase life expectancy modestly at a cost generally considered acceptable within the US health-care system.

Authors

Jersey Chen Deepak L. Bhatt Elizabeth Schneider Dunn Chunxue Shi J. Jaime Caro Elizabeth M. Mahoney Sylvie Gabriel Joseph D. Jackson Eric J. Topol David J. Cohen

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