Abstract

ObjectivesThe clinical and cost-saving benefits of transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) over surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR) in patients with severe aortic stenosis who are at high or intermediate risk of surgical mortality are supported by a growing evidence base. The PARTNER 3 trial (Placement of AoRTic TraNscathetER Valve Trial) demonstrated clinical benefits with SAPIEN 3 TAVI compared with SAVR in selected patients at low risk of surgical mortality. This study uses PARTNER 3 outcomes in combination with a French national hospital claim database to inform a cost-utility model and examine the cost implications of TAVI over SAVR in a low-risk population. MethodsA 2-stage cost-utility analysis was developed to estimate changes in both direct healthcare costs and health-related quality of life using TAVI with SAPIEN 3 compared with SAVR. Early adverse events associated with TAVI were captured using the PARTNER 3 data set. These data fed into a Markov model that captured longer-term outcomes of patients, after TAVI or SAVR intervention. ResultsTAVI with SAPIEN 3 offers meaningful benefits over SAVR in providing both cost saving (€12 742 per patient) and generating greater quality-adjusted life-years (0.89 per patient). These results are robust with TAVI with SAPIEN 3 remaining dominant across several scenarios and deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analyses. ConclusionsThis model demonstrated that TAVI with SAPIEN 3 was dominant compared with SAVR in the treatment of patients with severe symptomatic aortic stenosis who are at low risk of surgical mortality. These findings should help policy makers in developing informed approaches to intervention selection for this patient population.

Highlights

  • Since the first intervention was performed in Rouen, France, by Alain Cribier in 2002, transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) has emerged as the first option therapy in inoperable or patients at high risk of surgical mortality with severe aortic stenosis

  • The study demonstrated that TAVI with SAPIEN 3 reduced death, stroke, or rehospitalization after 1 year in this low-risk population compared with surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR).[3]

  • TAVI with SAPIEN 3 offers meaningful benefits compared with SAVR in that it is both cost saving and generates greater quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs)

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Summary

Introduction

Since the first intervention was performed in Rouen, France, by Alain Cribier in 2002, transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) has emerged as the first option therapy in inoperable or patients at high risk of surgical mortality with severe aortic stenosis. An improvement in efficacy over previous versions of the device used in the original PARTNER trial (SAPIEN valve, in patients ineligible for surgery or at high risk of mortality) and in PARTNER 2 (SAPIEN-XT valve, in patients at intermediate risk) was demonstrated.[4,5,6]

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