Cost-Effectiveness of Buprenorphine-Naloxone Versus Extended-Release Naltrexone to Prevent Opioid Relapse
- PMID: 30557443
- PMCID: PMC6581635
- DOI: 10.7326/M18-0227
Cost-Effectiveness of Buprenorphine-Naloxone Versus Extended-Release Naltrexone to Prevent Opioid Relapse
Abstract
Background: Not enough evidence exists to compare buprenorphine-naloxone with extended-release naltrexone for treating opioid use disorder.
Objective: To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of buprenorphine-naloxone versus extended-release naltrexone.
Design: Cost-effectiveness analysis alongside a previously reported randomized clinical trial of 570 adults in 8 U.S. inpatient or residential treatment programs.
Data sources: Study instruments.
Target population: Adults with opioid use disorder.
Time horizon: 24-week intervention with an additional 12 weeks of observation.
Perspective: Health care sector and societal.
Interventions: Buprenorphine-naloxone and extended-release naltrexone.
Outcome measures: Incremental costs combined with incremental quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) and incremental time abstinent from opioids.
Results of base-case analysis: Use of the health care sector perspective and a willingness-to-pay threshold of $100 000 per QALY showed buprenorphine-naloxone to be preferable to extended-release naltrexone in 97% of bootstrap replications at 24 weeks and in 85% at 36 weeks. Similar results were obtained with incremental time abstinent from opioids as an outcome and with use of the societal perspective.
Results of sensitivity analysis: The base-case results were sensitive to the cost of the 2 treatments and the success of randomized treatment initiation.
Limitation: Relatively short follow-up for a chronic condition, substantial missing data, no information on patient out-of-pocket and social service costs.
Conclusion: Buprenorphine-naloxone is preferred to extended-release naltrexone as first-line treatment when both options are clinically appropriate and patients require detoxification before initiating extended-release naltrexone.
Primary funding source: National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institutes of Health.
Figures
Comment in
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Being Explicit About Decisions: Prescribe Medications for Opioid Use Disorder on the Basis of Proven Effectiveness, Not Beliefs.Ann Intern Med. 2019 Jan 15;170(2):127-128. doi: 10.7326/M18-3293. Epub 2018 Dec 18. Ann Intern Med. 2019. PMID: 30557444 No abstract available.
References
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- Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation. Global Burden of Disease Study 2016 (GBD 2016) data resources. 2017. Accessed at http://ghdx.healthdata.org/gbd-2016 on 12 November 2017.
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- Gruber SA, Silveri MM, Yurgelun-Todd DA. Neuropsychological consequences of opiate use. Neuropsychol Rev. 2007;17:299–315. [PMID: ] - PubMed
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- Manchikanti L, Fellows B, Ailinani H, Pampati V. Therapeutic use, abuse, and nonmedical use of opioids: a ten-year perspective. Pain Physician. 2010;13:401–35. [PMID: ] - PubMed
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