Cost-Effectiveness of Multigene Pharmacogenetic Testing in Patients With Acute Coronary Syndrome After Percutaneous Coronary Intervention

Jan 1, 2020, 00:00
10.1016/j.jval.2019.08.002
https://www.valueinhealthjournal.com/article/S1098-3015(19)32344-7/fulltext
Title : Cost-Effectiveness of Multigene Pharmacogenetic Testing in Patients With Acute Coronary Syndrome After Percutaneous Coronary Intervention
Citation : https://www.valueinhealthjournal.com/action/showCitFormats?pii=S1098-3015(19)32344-7&doi=10.1016/j.jval.2019.08.002
First page : 61
Section Title : ECONOMIC EVALUATION
Open access? : Yes
Section Order : 61

Objective

To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of multigene testing (CYP2C19, SLCO1B1, CYP2C9, VKORC1) compared with single-gene testing (CYP2C19) and standard of care (no genotyping) in acute coronary syndrome (ACS) patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) from Medicare’s perspective.

Methods

A hybrid decision tree/Markov model was developed to simulate patients post-PCI for ACS requiring antiplatelet therapy (CYP2C19 to guide antiplatelet selection), statin therapy (SLCO1B1 to guide statin selection), and anticoagulant therapy in those that develop atrial fibrillation (CYP2C9/VKORC1 to guide warfarin dose) over 12 months, 24 months, and lifetime. The primary outcome was cost (2016 US dollar) per quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) gained. Costs and QALYs were discounted at 3% per year. Probabilistic sensitivity analysis (PSA) varied input parameters (event probabilities, prescription costs, event costs, health-state utilities) to estimate changes in the cost per QALY gained.

Results

Base-case–discounted results indicated that the cost per QALY gained was $59 876, $33 512, and $3780 at 12 months, 24 months, and lifetime, respectively, for multigene testing compared with standard of care. Single-gene testing was dominated by multigene testing at all time horizons. PSA-discounted results indicated that, at the $50 000/QALY gained willingness-to-pay threshold, multigene testing had the highest probability of cost-effectiveness in the majority of simulations at 24 months (61%) and over the lifetime (81%).

Conclusions

On the basis of projected simulations, multigene testing for Medicare patients post-PCI for ACS has a higher probability of being cost-effective over 24 months and the lifetime compared with single-gene testing and standard of care and could help optimize medication prescribing to improve patient outcomes.

Categories :
  • Adherence, Persistence, & Compliance
  • Cost/Cost of Illness/Resource Use Studies
  • Economic Evaluation
  • Geriatrics
  • Patient Behavior and Incentives
  • Patient-Centered Research
  • Patient-reported Outcomes & Quality of Life Outcomes
  • Personalized & Precision Medicine
  • Specialized Treatment Areas
  • Specific Diseases & Conditions
Tags :
  • acute coronary syndrome
  • multigene testing
  • pharmacogenetics
  • precision medicine
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