Abstract

In 2004, the Brazilian National Health Surveillance Agency (Agência Nacional de Vigilância Sanitária, ANVISA) published a resolution establishing guidelines for albumin use. Although the published data do not indicate any definitive conclusions about the benefits of albumin use in patients with nephrotic syndrome (NS), the guidelines recommend this procedure only in cases of edema that is refractory to use of diuretics. The aim here was to analyze albumin use among patients with nephrotic syndrome. Pharmacoeconomic study conducted in four large public referral hospitals for nephrology services in northeastern Brazil. Cost-effectiveness and cost-utility economic evaluations were performed on a concurrent cohort of patients with nephrotic syndrome, who were divided into two groups according to compliance or noncompliance with the guidelines. Quality-of-life data were obtained from the SF36 and CHQ-PF50 questionnaires. This study enrolled 109 patients (60% adults and 56% women); 41.3% were using albumin in accordance with the guidelines. The weight, diuresis and fluid balance parameters were more cost-effective for patients who adhered to the guidelines. Regarding days of hospitalization avoided, the incremental ratio showed a daily cost of R$ 55.33, and guideline-compliant patients were hospitalized for five days or fewer. The quality of life improved by 8%, and savings of R$ 3,458.13/QALY (quality-adjusted life year) for the healthcare system were generated through guideline compliance. The economic analyses of this study demonstrated that there were greater cost benefits for patients whose treatment followed the guidelines.

Highlights

  • Healthcare needs have expanded exponentially over recent years, increasing the demand for more effective results

  • Population and data source Cost-effectiveness and cost-utility economic evaluations were performed on a concurrent cohort of patients with nephrotic syndrome that was observed between December 2010 and July 2012

  • Group 1: patients whose treatment followed the instructions for human albumin use, as recommended by Agência Nacional de Vigilância Sanitária (ANVISA), i.e. human albumin was only used in cases of large-scale edema that was refractory to diuretics;

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Summary

Introduction

Healthcare needs have expanded exponentially over recent years, increasing the demand for more effective results. A number of analysis tools are available to public policy managers, to enable justification of decisions that are made. One of these tools is economic evaluation, which is characterized by comparative analysis of different interventions in terms of costs and their consequences. It is present at high concentrations in human plasma and is primarily responsible for maintaining intravascular oncotic pressure.[7,8,9,10] As a pharmaceutical product, human albumin is an injectable blood product from human plasma that is found at hyperosmotic concentrations in plasma (4% to 25%). Its primary therapeutic indications are for restoration of oncotic and iso-osmotic pressure (4%), and less indicated, for plasma volume restoration.[7,10]

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