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Cost-Effectiveness of Solitaire Stent Retriever Thrombectomy for Acute Ischemic Stroke
- Shireman, Theresa I;
- Wang, Kaijun;
- Saver, Jeffrey L;
- Goyal, Mayank;
- Bonafé, Alain;
- Diener, Hans-Christoph;
- Levy, Elad I;
- Pereira, Vitor M;
- Albers, Gregory W;
- Cognard, Christophe;
- Hacke, Werner;
- Jansen, Olav;
- Jovin, Tudor G;
- Mattle, Heinrich P;
- Nogueira, Raul G;
- Siddiqui, Adnan H;
- Yavagal, Dileep R;
- Devlin, Thomas G;
- Lopes, Demetrius K;
- Reddy, Vivek K;
- du Mesnil de Rochemont, Richard;
- Jahan, Reza;
- Vilain, Katherine A;
- House, John;
- Lee, Jin-Moo;
- Cohen, David J
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1161/strokeaha.116.014735Abstract
Background and purpose
Clinical trials have demonstrated improved 90-day outcomes for patients with acute ischemic stroke treated with stent retriever thrombectomy plus tissue-type plasminogen activator (SST+tPA) compared with tPA. Previous studies suggested that this strategy may be cost-effective, but models were derived from pooled data and older assumptions.Methods
In this prospective economic substudy conducted alongside the SWIFT-PRIME trial (Solitaire With the Intention for Thrombectomy as Primary Endovascular Treatment for Acute Ischemic Stroke), in-trial costs were measured for patients using detailed medical resource utilization and hospital billing data. Utility weights were assessed at 30 and 90 days using the EuroQol-5 dimension questionnaire. Post-trial costs and life-expectancy were estimated for each surviving patient using a model based on trial data and inputs derived from a contemporary cohort of ischemic stroke survivors.Results
Index hospitalization costs were $17 183 per patient higher for SST+tPA than for tPA ($45 761 versus $28 578; P<0.001), driven by initial procedure costs. Between discharge and 90 days, costs were $4904 per patient lower for SST+tPA than for tPA ($11 270 versus $16 174; P=0.014); total 90-day costs remained higher with SST+tPA ($57 031 versus $44 752; P<0.001). Higher utility values for SST+tPA led to higher in-trial quality-adjusted life years (0.131 versus 0.105; P=0.005). In lifetime projections, SST+tPA was associated with substantial gains in quality-adjusted life years (6.79 versus 5.05), cost savings of $23 203 per patient and was economically dominant when compared with tPA in 90% of bootstrap replicates.Conclusions
Among patients with acute ischemic stroke enrolled in the SWIFT-PRIME trial, SST increased initial treatment costs, but was projected to improve quality-adjusted life-expectancy and reduce healthcare costs over a lifetime horizon compared with tPA.Clinical trial registration
URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT01657461.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
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