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Article
Early cost-utility analysis of tissue-engineered heart valves compared to bioprostheses in the aortic position in elderly patients.
The European journal of health economics : HEPAC : health economics in prevention and care
  • Simone A Huygens
  • Isaac Corro Ramos
  • Carlijn V C Bouten
  • Jolanda Kluin
  • Shih Ting Chiu
  • Gary Grunkemeier, Medical Data Research Centre, Providence Health and Service, Portland, OR, USA.
  • Johanna J M Takkenberg
  • Maureen P M H Rutten-van Mölken
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
6-1-2020
Keywords
  • cards,
  • cards publication,
  • oregon,
  • portland,
  • Aged,
  • Aged, 80 and over,
  • Bioprosthesis,
  • Cost-Benefit Analysis,
  • Female,
  • Health Expenditures,
  • Heart Valve Prosthesis,
  • Heart Valve Prosthesis Implantation,
  • Humans,
  • Male,
  • Models, Econometric,
  • Quality-Adjusted Life Years,
  • Technology Assessment, Biomedical,
  • Tissue Engineering
Disciplines
Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Aortic valve disease is the most frequent indication for heart valve replacement with the highest prevalence in elderly. Tissue-engineered heart valves (TEHV) are foreseen to have important advantages over currently used bioprosthetic heart valve substitutes, most importantly reducing valve degeneration with subsequent reduction of re-intervention. We performed early Health Technology Assessment of hypothetical TEHV in elderly patients (≥ 70 years) requiring surgical (SAVR) or transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) to assess the potential of TEHV and to inform future development decisions.

METHODS: Using a patient-level simulation model, the potential cost-effectiveness of TEHV compared with bioprostheses was predicted from a societal perspective. Anticipated, but currently hypothetical improvements in performance of TEHV, divided in durability, thrombogenicity, and infection resistance, were explored in scenario analyses to estimate quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) gain, cost reduction, headroom, and budget impact.

RESULTS: Durability of TEHV had the highest impact on QALY gain and costs, followed by infection resistance. Improved TEHV performance (- 50% prosthetic valve-related events) resulted in lifetime QALY gains of 0.131 and 0.043, lifetime cost reductions of €639 and €368, translating to headrooms of €3255 and €2498 per hypothetical TEHV compared to SAVR and TAVI, respectively. National savings in the first decade after implementation varied between €2.8 and €11.2 million (SAVR) and €3.2-€12.8 million (TAVI) for TEHV substitution rates of 25-100%.

CONCLUSIONS: Despite the relatively short life expectancy of elderly patients undergoing SAVR/TAVI, hypothetical TEHV are predicted to be cost-effective compared to bioprostheses, commercially viable and result in national cost savings when biomedical engineers succeed in realising improved durability and/or infection resistance of TEHV.

Clinical Institute
Cardiovascular (Heart)
Department
Cardiology
Department
Geriatrics
Citation Information
Simone A Huygens, Isaac Corro Ramos, Carlijn V C Bouten, Jolanda Kluin, et al.. "Early cost-utility analysis of tissue-engineered heart valves compared to bioprostheses in the aortic position in elderly patients." The European journal of health economics : HEPAC : health economics in prevention and care (2020)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/shih-ting-chiu/8/