Abstract

To determine whether alvimopan for prevention of postoperative ileus in patients undergoing small- or large-bowel resection by laparotomy is associated with lower total costs compared with standard care. Pharmacoeconomic analysis using a formal decision model. Four phase III clinical trials, two pooled analyses, and one meta-analysis. A cohort of patients who underwent bowel resection with primary anastomosis by laparotomy and received either standardized, accelerated postoperative care (usual care) or usual care plus alvimopan. Clinical outcomes, obtained from pooled analyses of published studies, were time to discharge order written, postoperative nasogastric tube insertion, postoperative ileus-related readmission within 7days, and occurrence of nausea and vomiting. Cost inputs included drugs, nursing labor, readmissions, and hospitalizations. Costs were assessed by determining the net cost of alvimopan use and subsequent reduction in length of stay. Sensitivity and scenario analyses were conducted. Costs for alvimopan were $570 based on an average of 9.5 doses. Given the 18.4-hour mean reduction in time to discharge order written, use of alvimopan reduced hospitalization costs by $2021. Mean difference in overall cost of care, as determined by Monte Carlo simulation, was $1168 (95% certainty interval -$437 to $5879), favoring the use of alvimopan. In the sensitivity analysis, association of alvimopan with lower costs was robust to several changes in key parameters including cost and number of doses of alvimopan, time to discharge order written, readmission rates, and hospitalization cost. In the scenario analyses, alvimopan use yielded a net cost of $226 when no difference in time to discharge order written was assumed. In the scenario analysis using data from a study that did not enforce opioid use, alvimopan resulted in a cost saving of $65/patient. Alvimopan was cost saving for prevention of postoperative ileus in patients undergoing bowel resection by laparotomy, although these potential cost savings were highly dependent on a difference in time to discharge order written. This finding is not applicable to the less-invasive laparoscopic surgical approach for which quality data on alvimopan use are lacking. Limitations of this analysis included use of time to discharge order written as a proxy for length of stay and difficulty interpreting study results due to inconsistent reporting and conduct of the clinical trials evaluating alvimopan. More research is needed to determine the cost-effectiveness of alvimopan.

Highlights

  • Corresponding Author: Daniel Touchette, Assistant Professor University of Illinois at Chicago College of Pharmacy 833 S

  • The association of alvimopan with lower costs was robust to several changes in key parameters including the cost and number of doses of alvimopan, discharge order written (DCO), readmission rates, and hospitalization cost

  • For the base case, alvimopan was cost-saving for prevention of post-operative ileus (POI) among patients undergoing bowel resection via laparotomy, these potential cost-savings were highly dependent on a difference in DCO

Read more

Summary

Methods

We constructed a formal decision model from the healthcare system perspective. Clinical outcomes (time to discharge order written [DCO], post-operative nasogastric tube insertion, POI-related readmission within 7 days, nausea and vomiting) were obtained from meta-analyses of published studies. The standardized accelerated post-operative care pathway consisted of the removal of nasogastric tube no later than noon on postoperative day one, introduction of liquid diet and ambulation on post-operative day one, and introduction of solid food by post-operative day two This multimodal approach to accelerate recovery is currently regarded as best practice in post-operative management of patients undergoing major bowel surgeries.[20,21,22,23] The alvimopan comparison arm was based on the following regimen: alvimopan 12 mg administered 30 minutes to 5 hours prior to surgery, followed by subsequent maintenance dose of 12 mg given every 12 hours for a maximum of 7 days post-operatively (15 maximum total doses)

Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call