A cost-utility analysis of two Clostridioides difficile infection guideline treatment pathways
- PMID: 37356620
- DOI: 10.1016/j.cmi.2023.06.018
A cost-utility analysis of two Clostridioides difficile infection guideline treatment pathways
Abstract
Objectives: Treatment guidelines are key drivers of prescribing practice in the management of Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI), but recommendations on best practice can vary. We conducted a cost-utility analysis to compare the treatment pathway recommended by the European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases (ESCMID) guideline with the pathway proposed by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guideline, from the perspective of the UK National Health Service.
Methods: A decision tree modelling approach was adopted to reflect the treatment pathway for CDI as outlined in ESCMID and NICE guidelines. Patients experiencing a CDI infection received up to three treatments per infection to achieve a response and could subsequently experience up to two recurrences. Data on patient demographics, treatment response, recurrence, utilities, CDI-related mortality, and costs were taken from published literature.
Results: The ESCMID treatment pathway was cost-effective versus the NICE treatment pathway at a threshold of £20 000 per quality-adjusted life year gained, with an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of £4931. Cost-effectiveness was driven by differences in index infection recommendations (ESCMID recommends fidaxomicin as first-line treatment whereas NICE recommends vancomycin). The model results were robust to variations in inputs investigated in scenarios and sensitivity analyses, and probabilistic sensitivity analysis demonstrated that the ESCMID guideline treatment strategy had a 100% likelihood of being cost-effective versus the NICE treatment strategy.
Discussion: Compared with the NICE guideline, the ESCMID guideline recommendations for treating an index CDI represent the most cost-effective use of healthcare resources from the perspective of the UK National Health Service.
Keywords: C. difficile; Cost-effectiveness; ESCMID; Fidaxomicin; ICER; NICE.
Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Transparency declaration NS, AMS, AB, and HS are employees of Mtech Access who received consultancy payments from Tillotts Pharma AG for the development of the model and drafting of the manuscript. SC is an employee of Tillotts Pharma AB and GS is an employee of Tillotts Pharma AG who funded the study. MHW has not received fees specifically for development of the manuscript but has received research support, consulting fees, and lecture fees from Tillotts Pharma.
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