Abstract

BackgroundHealth systems face challenges to accelerate access to innovations that add value and avoid those unlikely to do so. This is very timely to the field of age-related sensorineural hearing loss (ARHL), where a significant unmet market need has been identified and sizeable investments made to promote the development of novel hearing therapeutics (NT). This study aims to apply health economic modeling to inform the development of cost-effective NT.MethodsWe developed a decision-analytic model to assess the potential costs and effects of using regenerative NT in patients ≥50 with ARHL. This was compared to the current standard of care including hearing aids and cochlear implants. Input data was collected from systematic literature searches and expert opinion. A UK NHS healthcare perspective was adopted. Three different but related analyses were performed using probabilistic modeling: (1) headroom analysis, (2) scenario analyses, and (3) threshold analyses.ResultsThe headroom analysis shows an incremental net monetary benefit (iNMB) of £20,017[£11,299–£28,737] compared to the standard of care due to quality-adjusted life-years (QALY) gains and cost savings. Higher therapeutic efficacy and access for patients with all degrees of hearing loss yields higher iNMBs. Threshold analyses shows that the ceiling price of the therapeutic increases with more severe degrees of hearing loss.ConclusionNT for ARHL are potentially cost-effective under current willingness-to-pay (WTP) thresholds with considerable room for improvement in the current standard of care pathway. Our model can be used to help decision makers decide which therapeutics represent value for money and are worth commissioning, thereby paving the way for urgently needed NT.

Highlights

  • MATERIALS AND METHODSHearing loss currently affects almost 500 million people worldwide and this number is anticipated to rise to 900 million by 2050 as the world’s population ages and the number of individuals with age-related hearing loss (ARHL) increases (Blevins, 2018; WHO, 2018)

  • This study shows that there is significant potential room for improvement in the current standard care pathway for patients with ARHL and that novel regenerative hearing therapeutics could become cost-effective in the NHS

  • This model can be used by both industry and policy makers to evaluate: (1) the maximum price of a novel regenerative therapeutic in ARHL for different levels of effectiveness, (2) the minimum effectiveness required at each pricing target for the therapeutic to remain cost-effective, and (3) the impact of limiting treatment to certain subgroups of patients with hearing loss

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Summary

Introduction

Hearing loss currently affects almost 500 million people worldwide and this number is anticipated to rise to 900 million by 2050 as the world’s population ages and the number of individuals with age-related hearing loss (ARHL) increases (Blevins, 2018; WHO, 2018). Health systems face challenges to accelerate access to innovations that add value and avoid those unlikely to do so This is very timely to the field of age-related sensorineural hearing loss (ARHL), where a significant unmet market need has been identified and sizeable investments made to promote the development of novel hearing therapeutics (NT). This study aims to apply health economic modeling to inform the development of cost-effective NT

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