Comparative Incidence and Health Care Costs of Medically Attended Adverse Effects among U.S. Medicaid HIV Patients on Atazanavir- or Darunavir-Based Antiretroviral Therapy

Mar 1, 2013, 00:00 AM
10.1016/j.jval.2012.10.021
https://www.valueinhealthjournal.com/article/S1098-3015(12)04202-7/fulltext
Section Title : Comparative Effectiveness Research/Health Technology Assessment (HTA)
Section Order : 20
First Page : 418

Objectives

This is the first study to compare the incidence and health care costs of medically attended adverse effects in atazanavir- and darunavir-based antiretroviral therapy (ART) among U.S. Medicaid patients receiving routine HIV care.

Methods

This was a retrospective study using Medicaid administrative health care claims from 15 states. Subjects were HIV patients aged 18 to 64 years initiating atazanavir- or darunavir-based ART from January 1, 2003, to July 1, 2010, with continuous enrollment for 6 months before (baseline) and 6 months after (evaluation period) ART initiation and 1 or more evaluation period medical claim. Outcomes were incidence and health care costs of the following medically attended (International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification–coded or treated) adverse effects during the evaluation period: gastrointestinal, lipid abnormalities, diabetes/hyperglycemia, rash, and jaundice. All-cause health care costs were also determined. Patients treated with atazanavir and darunavir were propensity score matched (ratio = 3:1) by using demographic and clinical covariates. Multivariable models adjusted for covariates lacking postmatch statistical balance.

Results

Propensity-matched study sample included 1848 atazanavir- and 616 darunavir-treated patients (mean age 41 years, 50% women, 69% black). Multivariable-adjusted hazard ratios (HRs) (for darunavir, reference = atazanavir) and per-patient-per-month health care cost differences (darunavir minus atazanavir) were as follows: gastrointestinal, HR = 1.25 (P = 0.04), $43 (P = 0.13); lipid abnormalities, HR = 1.38 (P = 0.07), $3 (P = 0.88); diabetes/hyperglycemia, HR = 0.84 (P = 0.55), $13 (P = 0.69); and rash, HR = 1.11 (P = 0.23), $0 (P = 0.76); all-cause health care costs were $1086 (P0.001). Too few instances of jaundice (11 in atazanavir and 1 in darunavir) occurred to support multivariable modeling.

Conclusions

Medication tolerability can be critical to the success or failure of ART. Compared with darunavir-treated patients, atazanavir-treated patients had significantly fewer instances of medically attended gastrointestinal issues and more instances of jaundice and incurred significantly lower health care costs.

https://www.valueinhealthjournal.com/action/showCitFormats?pii=S1098-3015(12)04202-7&doi=10.1016/j.jval.2012.10.021
HEOR Topics :
  • Cost-comparison, Effectiveness, Utility, Benefit Analysis
  • Economic Evaluation
  • Epidemiology & Public Health
  • Infectious Disease
  • Safety & Pharmacoepidemiology
  • Specific Diseases & Conditions
Tags :
  • adverse effects
  • antiretroviral therapy
  • atazanavir
  • darunavir
  • health care costs
  • Medicaid
Regions :
  • North America