亨廷顿病的长期健康结果和未来疾病修饰治疗的影响:决策模型分析

IF 2.3 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Neurology. Clinical practice Pub Date : 2024-10-01 Epub Date: 2024-08-15 DOI:10.1212/CPJ.0000000000200340
Gregory F Guzauskas, Sarah J Tabrizi, Jeffrey D Long, Astri Arnesen, Jamie L Hamilton, Daniel O Claassen, Lorraine R Munetsi, Shahid Malik, Idaira Rodríguez-Santana, Talaha M Ali, Frank Zhang
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景和目的:目前正在研究基因治疗等疾病改变疗法(DMT)作为亨廷顿病(HD)的潜在治疗方法。我们的目标是估算 HD 进展的长期自然史,并使用决策分析建模框架探讨假设的 DMT 的潜在疗效影响和价值:方法:我们建立了一个健康状态转换模型,对 40 岁的功能衰退前期(PFD,HD 综合分期系统 [HD-ISS] 阶段)患者进行单独分析:40岁PFD、SF1和SF2人群的预期寿命年数分别为20.46(95%可信范围[CR]:19.05-22.30)、13.93(10.82-19.08)和10.99(8.28-22.07)。PFD、SF1和SF2人群的预期QALY分别为15.93(14.91-17.44)、8.29(6.36-11.79)和5.79(4.14-12.91)。PFD人群终生的HD成本为50.82万美元(31.03-80.37万美元),SF1人群为115万美元(68.45-189万美元),SF2人群为107万美元(57.17-226万美元)。尽管假定的 DMTs 通过延迟功能衰退的成本负担而为 PFD 群体节省了成本,但它们通过延长昂贵的渐进性 HD 状态的时间而增加了 SF1 和 SF2 群体的成本:我们的新型 HD 模型框架可估算出 HD 在患者一生中的进展情况以及相关成本和 QALY。在获得积极的 DMT 临床试验证据后,我们的方法可用于未来的成本效益模型。
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Long-Term Health Outcomes of Huntington Disease and the Impact of Future Disease-Modifying Treatments: A Decision-Modeling Analysis.

Background and objectives: Disease-modifying treatments (DMTs) such as gene therapy are currently under investigation as a potential treatment for Huntington disease (HD). Our objective was to estimate the long-term natural history of HD progression and explore the potential efficacy impacts and value of a hypothetical DMT using a decision-analytic modeling framework.

Methods: We developed a health state transition model that separately analyzed 40-year-old individuals with prefunctional decline (PFD, HD Integrated Staging System [HD-ISS] stage <3, total functional score [TFC] 13), active functional decline Shoulson and Fahn category 1 (SF1, HD-ISS stage 3, TFC 13-11), and SF2 (HD-ISS stage 3, TFC 10-7). Three-year outcomes from the TRACK-HD longitudinal study were linearly extrapolated to estimate the long-term health outcomes and costs of each population. For PFD individuals, we used the HD-ISS to predict the onset of functional decline. HD costs and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) were estimated over a lifetime horizon by applying health state-specific costs and utilities derived from a related HD burden-of-illness study. We then estimated the long-term health impacts of hypothetical DMTs that slowed or delayed onset of functional decline. We conducted sensitivity analyses to assess model uncertainties.

Results: The expected life years for 40-year-old PFD, SF1, and SF2 populations were 20.46 (95% credible range [CR]: 19.05-22.30), 13.93 (10.82-19.08), and 10.99 (8.28-22.07), respectively. The expected QALYs for PFD, SF1, and SF2 populations were 15.93 (14.91-17.44), 8.29 (6.36-11.79), and 5.79 (4.14-12.91), respectively. The lifetime costs of HD were $508,200 ($310,300 to $803,700) for the PFD population, $1.15 million ($684,500 to $1.89 million) for SF1 individuals, and $1.07 million ($571,700 to $2.26 million) for SF2 individuals. Although hypothetical DMTs led to cost savings in the PFD population by delaying the cost burdens of functional decline, they increased costs in SF1 and SF2 populations by prolonging time spent in expensive progressive HD states.

Discussion: Our novel HD-modeling framework estimates HD progression over a lifetime and the associated costs and QALYs. Our approach can be used for future cost-effectiveness models as positive DMT clinical trial evidence becomes available.

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来源期刊
Neurology. Clinical practice
Neurology. Clinical practice CLINICAL NEUROLOGY-
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
77
期刊介绍: Neurology® Genetics is an online open access journal publishing peer-reviewed reports in the field of neurogenetics. The journal publishes original articles in all areas of neurogenetics including rare and common genetic variations, genotype-phenotype correlations, outlier phenotypes as a result of mutations in known disease genes, and genetic variations with a putative link to diseases. Articles include studies reporting on genetic disease risk, pharmacogenomics, and results of gene-based clinical trials (viral, ASO, etc.). Genetically engineered model systems are not a primary focus of Neurology® Genetics, but studies using model systems for treatment trials, including well-powered studies reporting negative results, are welcome.
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