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Economic impact of extended treatment with peginterferon α‐2a and ribavirin for slow hepatitis C virologic responders
23
Citations
31
References
2008
Year
PharmacotherapyAntiviral DrugExtended TreatmentViral HepatitisAntiviral Drug DevelopmentEconomic ImpactPublic HealthHealth PolicyExtended CourseTreatment OptionOutcomes ResearchEpidemiologyGenotype 1Peginterferon α‐2AHepatologyHealth EconomicsHepatitis CTreatment And PreventionAntiviral TherapyHepatitisMedicine
It is difficult to achieve a sustained virologic response from antiviral therapy for genotype 1 hepatitis C virus-infected patients without a sufficient virologic response in the early weeks after treatment. However, a recent study has reported on the effectiveness of an extended course of treatment with peginterferon alpha-2a plus ribavirin for slow virologic responders. The aim of this study was to evaluate the economic impact of an extended course of treatment. A Markov cohort model of hepatitis C was designed in order to demonstrate the clinical states, based on the assigned transition probabilities over 30 years. The slow virologic responders treated with an extended 72-week course of therapy could increase by 0.55 the quality-adjusted life years (=15.35-14.80) and reduce the lifetime cost by $2762 (=71 559-69 438) in comparison with those treated by the standard 48-week course. One-way sensitivity analyses did not change the cost-effectiveness. Therefore, the extended 72 weeks of treatment with peginterferon alpha-2a plus ribavirin for slow virologic responders could be cost-effective in comparison with the standard 48 weeks of treatment.
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