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Economic evaluation of prevention of cystoid macular edema after cataract surgery in diabetic patients: ESCRS PREMED study report 6

Rob W.P. Simons, Laura H.P. Wielders, Rudy M.M.A. Nuijts, Claudette A. Veldhuizen, Frank J.H.M. van den Biggelaar, Björn Winkens, Jan Schouten, Carmen D. Dirksen, on behalf of the ESCRS PREMED Study Group

2021Journal of Cataract & Refractive Surgery13 citationsDOI

Abstract

PURPOSE: To investigate the cost-effectiveness of prophylactic treatments against cystoid macular edema after cataract surgery in diabetic patients. SETTING: 7 ophthalmology clinics in the Netherlands and Belgium. DESIGN: Prospective trial-based cost-effectiveness analysis using data from a European multicenter randomized clinical trial. METHODS: Diabetic patients (n = 163) undergoing uneventful cataract surgery were randomized to perioperative subconjunctival triamcinolone acetonide (n = 36), perioperative intravitreal bevacizumab (n = 36), combination treatment (n = 45), or no additional treatment (control group, n = 46). The cost analysis was performed from a healthcare perspective within a 12-week postoperative time horizon. The main effectiveness outcome was quality-adjusted life years (QALYs). The main cost-effectiveness outcome was the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER; cost per QALY). RESULTS: The mean total healthcare costs and QALYs were as follows: triamcinolone group €1827 (U.S. dollars [$] 2295)/0.166; bevacizumab group €2050 ($2575)/0.144; combination group €2027 ($2546)/0.166; and control group €2041 ($2564)/0.156. Bevacizumab and control treatment were most costly and least effective. The ICER was €321 984 ($404 503) per QALY for the combination group compared with that of the triamcinolone group. Assuming the willingness-to-pay as €20 000 ($25 126) per QALY, the cost-effectiveness probability was 70% and 23% in the triamcinolone and combination groups, respectively. No patient who received triamcinolone developed clinically significant macular edema (CSME). A secondary cost-effectiveness analysis based on this outcome showed a clear preference for triamcinolone. CONCLUSIONS: In diabetic patients, subconjunctival triamcinolone was effective in preventing CSME after cataract surgery. The cost-effectiveness analysis showed that triamcinolone is also cost-effective.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineTriamcinolone acetonideMacular edemaCataract surgeryBevacizumabRandomized controlled trialPerioperativeCost effectivenessSurgeryDiabetic retinopathyClinical trialOphthalmologyDiabetes mellitusVisual acuityInternal medicineChemotherapyRisk analysis (engineering)EndocrinologyRetinal Diseases and TreatmentsOcular Infections and TreatmentsCorneal surgery and disorders
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