Abstract

The present health economic analysis investigated the cost-effectiveness-ratios of either (1) rituximab or (2) an alternative TNF-alpha-inhibiting agent as second line biological treatment in patients with active rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and an inadequate response to etanercept therapy. Incremental cost per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) gained by rituximab treatment of RA is compared to TNF-inhibitor change (standard sequence) in a Markov-model (perspective: health care payer, full life-time approach). Direct cost components taken into account were treatment costs (medication-, administration- and monitoring costs) and resource utilisation (outpatient costs, inpatient costs). Indirect costs were estimated separately by the assessment of impaired work capacity due to RA (2008 Euro currency, discount rate 3.5%). Utility measures for the different treatment options were obtained from the ACR-response rates of published pivotal clinical trials. Direct costs amount to euro 178,373 (standard sequence) and euro 192,295 (rituximab sequence), respectively, rendering incremental direct costs of euro 13,922. Incremental utilities yield 0.57 QALYs and the incremental cost-effectiveness-ratio (ICER) of rituximab compared to the standard sequence amounts to euro 24,517. Inclusion of indirect costs leads to less incremental costs and a lower ICER of euro 15,565/QALY. Thus, ICERs stay beneath the accepted threshold of euro 50,000/QALY. Rituximab appears to be a cost-effective treatment alternative compared to the switch between TNF-inhibitors as second line biological treatment in patients with active RA having failed etanercept.

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