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Cost‐effectiveness of recombinant factor <scp>VIII Fc</scp> versus emicizumab for prophylaxis in adults and adolescents with haemophilia <scp>A</scp> without inhibitors in the <scp>UK</scp>

Nana Kragh, Anna Tytula, Michał Pochopien, Samuel Aballéa, Mondher Toumi, Zalmaï Hakimi, Jameel Nazir, Linda Bystrická, Francis Fatoye

2022European Journal Of Haematology10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: The economic and clinical burden of haemophilia A is high. Primary prophylaxis with factor VIII replacement therapy is the recognised standard of care, but the emergence of non-factor therapies, such as emicizumab, is extending treatment options for people with haemophilia A. AIM: There are currently no direct comparisons of efficacy or cost between recombinant factor FVIII Fc-fusion protein efmoroctocog alfa (a recombinant factor FVIII Fc-fusion protein referred to herein as rFVIIIFc) and emicizumab; therefore, a cost-effectiveness model was developed to compare prophylactic treatment with rFVIIIFc versus emicizumab in patients with haemophilia A without inhibitors in the UK. METHODS: The cost-effectiveness model was based on a matching-adjusted indirect comparison and included male patients, aged ≥12 years, with haemophilia A without inhibitors. The model was designed as a Markov process with a flexible lifelong time horizon, and cost-effectiveness was presented as an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio. Base-case analysis and sensitivity analyses (including scenario analyses, one-way deterministic sensitivity analysis [DSA] and probability sensitivity analysis [PSA]) were performed using the following treatment strategies: individualised prophylaxis with rFVIIIFc and prophylaxis with emicizumab administered once weekly (scenario analyses used regimens of once every 2 weeks or once every 4 weeks). RESULTS: Base-case analysis, DSA and PSA indicated that, compared with emicizumab administered once weekly, rFVIIIFc individualised prophylaxis was the dominant treatment strategy, with lower costs, a greater number of quality-adjusted life years, and a lower number of bleeds. CONCLUSIONS: rFVIIIFc has proven efficacy and is cost-effective compared with emicizumab, providing clinicians with a viable treatment option to improve the health outcomes for adults and adolescents with haemophilia A in the UK.

Topics & Concepts

Haemophilia AHaemophiliaMedicineCost effectivenessHaemophilia BInternal medicinePediatricsRisk analysis (engineering)Hemophilia Treatment and ResearchBlood transfusion and managementProtein purification and stability
Cost‐effectiveness of recombinant factor <scp>VIII Fc</scp> versus emicizumab for prophylaxis in adults and adolescents with haemophilia <scp>A</scp> without inhibitors in the <scp>UK</scp> | Litcius