Abstract

BackgroundAn estimated 20–30% of end-stage lung disease patients awaiting lung transplant die whilst on the waiting list due to a shortage of suitable donor lungs. Ex-Vivo Lung Perfusion is a technique that reconditions donor lungs initially not deemed usable in order to make them suitable for transplantation, thereby increasing the donor pool. In this study, an economic evaluation was conducted as part of DEVELOP-UK, a multi-centre study assessing the clinical and cost-effectiveness of the Ex-Vivo Lung Perfusion technique in the United Kingdom.MethodsWe estimated the cost-effectiveness of a UK adult lung transplant service combining both standard and Ex-Vivo Lung Perfusion transplants compared to a service including only standard lung transplants. A Markov model was developed and populated with a combination of DEVELOP-UK, published and clinical routine data, and extrapolated to a lifetime horizon. Probabilistic sensitivity and scenario analyses were used to explore uncertainty in the final outcomes.ResultsBase-case model results estimated life years gained of 0.040, quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) gained of 0.045 and an incremental cost per QALY of £90,000 for Ex-Vivo Lung Perfusion. Scenario analyses carried out suggest that an improved rate of converting unusable donor lungs using Ex-Vivo Lung Perfusion, similar resource use post-transplant for both standard and EVLP lung transplant and applying increased waiting list costs would reduce ICERs to approximately £30,000 or below.ConclusionDEVELOP-UK base-case results suggest that incorporating Ex-Vivo Lung Perfusion into the UK adult lung transplant service is more effective, increasing the number of donor lungs available for transplant, but would not currently be considered cost-effective in the UK using the present NICE threshold. However, results were sensitive to change in some model parameters and in several plausible scenario analyses results indicate that a service incorporating Ex-vivo lung perfusion would be considered cost-effective .Trial registrationISRCTN registry number: ISRCTN44922411.Date of registration: 06/02/2012.Retrospectively registered.

Highlights

  • An estimated 20–30% of end-stage lung disease patients awaiting lung transplant die whilst on the waiting list due to a shortage of suitable donor lungs

  • Main findings According to the findings of the study, the estimated incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) for the Ex-Vivo Lung Perfusion (EVLP) procedure was £90,000/Quality adjusted life-year (QALY) suggesting that at the current National Health Service (NHS) cost-effectiveness threshold, the ‘EVLP service’ would not be considered cost-effective [9], it might be approved based on the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) end-of-life criteria [8]

  • The aim of the economic evaluation of the DEVELOPUK study was to determine the cost-effectiveness of a UK adult Lung transplant (LTx) service including EVLP compared to one without, and the objective of including EVLP was to increase the pool of donor lungs

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Summary

Introduction

An estimated 20–30% of end-stage lung disease patients awaiting lung transplant die whilst on the waiting list due to a shortage of suitable donor lungs. The number of potential donors is limited, the primary cause of this shortage is that approximately 80% of potential donor lungs are felt to be unusable for standard LTx due to irreversible pre-existing lung disease or by reversible damage occurring during end-of-life care [3]. One solution to this problem is Ex-Vivo Lung Perfusion (EVLP), a novel technique used to increase the existing donor pool by assessing and reconditioning donor lungs felt to be unusable in order to make them clinically safe for LTx [4]. A definitive study would be needed to establish the safety, effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of this technique compared with standard transplant

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