Abstract
Due to increased interest in economic evaluation and the rapid international spread of new healthcare technologies across borders, there is a need to interpret economic evaluations on a worldwide basis. We conducted a multinational cost-effectiveness analysis, from a government payer perspective, comparing four primary oral treatment regimens for onychomycosis of the fingernails and toenails: griseofulvin, itraconazole, ketoconazole and terbinafine. We used a four-step pharmacoeconomic research model which includes all relevant factors affecting costs in 13 countries: Austria, Belgium, Canada, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, The Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Switzerland and the U.K. A worldwide meta-analysis of published clinical data served as the statistical input for the pharmacoeconomic model, and demonstrated that terbinafine had the highest success rates (95.0% and 78.3%) of the clinical comparators for fingernails and toenails, respectively. We found that terbinafine was the most effective therapy in relation to cost (therefore giving it the lowest cost-effectiveness ratio) for both infections in all health-care systems analysed.
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