Abstract
Early pregnancy loss (EPL) is the most common complication of pregnancy. A multicenter randomized clinical trial compared 2 strategies for medical management and found that mifepristone pretreatment is 25% more effective than the standard of care, misoprostol alone. The cost of mifepristone may be a barrier to implementation of the regimen. To assess the cost-effectiveness of medical management of EPL with mifepristone pretreatment plus misoprostol vs misoprostol alone in the United States. This preplanned. prospective economic evaluation was performed concurrently with a randomized clinical trial in 3 US sites from May 1, 2014, through April 30, 2017. Participants included 300 women with anembryonic gestation or embryonic or fetal demise. Cost-effectiveness was computed from the health care sector and societal perspectives, with a 30-day time horizon. Data were analyzed from July 1, 2018, to July 3, 2019. Mifepristone pretreatment plus misoprostol administration vs misoprostol alone. Costs in 2018 US dollars, effectiveness in quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs), and treatment efficacy. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) of mifepristone and misoprostol vs misoprostol alone were calculated, and cost-effectiveness acceptability curves were generated. Among the 300 women included in the randomized clinical trial (mean [SD] age, 30.4 [6.2] years), mean costs were similar for groups receiving mifepristone pretreatment and misoprostol alone from the health care sector perspective ($696.75 [95% CI, $591.88-$801.62] vs $690.88 [95% CI, $562.38-$819.38]; P = .94) and the societal perspective ($3846.30 [95% CI, $2783.01-$4909.58] vs $4845.62 [95% CI, $3186.84-$6504.41]; P = .32). The mifepristone pretreatment group had higher QALYs (0.0820 [95% CI, 0.0815-0.0825] vs 0.0806 [95% CI, 0.0800-0.0812]; P = .001) and a higher completion rate after first treatment (83.8% vs 67.1%; P < .001) than the group receiving misoprostol alone. From the health care sector perspective, mifepristone pretreatment was cost-effective relative to misoprostol alone with an ICER of $4225.43 (95% CI, -$195 053.30 to $367 625.10) per QALY gained. From the societal perspective, mifepristone pretreatment dominated misoprostol alone (95% CI, -$5 111 629 to $1 801 384). The probabilities that mifepristone pretreatment was cost-effective compared with misoprostol alone at a willingness-to-pay of $150 000 per QALY gained from the health care sector and societal perspectives were approximately 90% and 80%, respectively. This study found that medical management of EPL with mifepristone pretreatment was cost-effective when compared with misoprostol alone. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02012491.
Highlights
Pregnancy loss (EPL) is the most common complication in pregnancy and affects approximately 1 million women in the United States annually.[1,2] Women in the first trimester of pregnancy are often diagnosed with a nonviable pregnancy by means of ultrasonography and may prefer or require a clinical intervention to aid in completion of the miscarriage process.[3]
Among the 300 women included in the randomized clinical trial, mean costs were similar for groups receiving mifepristone pretreatment and misoprostol alone from the health care sector perspective ($696.75 [95% CI, $591.88-$801.62] vs $690.88 [95% CI, $562.38-$819.38]; P = .94) and the societal perspective ($3846.30 [95% CI, $2783.01-$4909.58] vs $4845.62 [95% CI, $3186.84-$6504.41]; P = .32)
The mifepristone pretreatment group had higher quality-adjusted life year (QALY) (0.0820 [95% CI, 0.0815-0.0825] vs 0.0806 [95% CI, 0.0800-0.0812]; P = .001) and a higher completion rate after first treatment (83.8% vs 67.1%; P < .001) than the group receiving misoprostol alone
Summary
Pregnancy loss (EPL) is the most common complication in pregnancy and affects approximately 1 million women in the United States annually.[1,2] Women in the first trimester of pregnancy are often diagnosed with a nonviable pregnancy by means of ultrasonography and may prefer or require a clinical intervention to aid in completion of the miscarriage process.[3] Current intervention options are classified as surgical (uterine aspiration) or medical (the use of medications to induce uterine contractions and tissue expulsion). Misoprostol failures result in a prolonged treatment course with multiple doses of medication or in surgical management, all of which, despite the low cost of the drug itself, diminish the cost-effectiveness of medical management of EPL when compared with surgical management.[5]
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